For the United States, the greatest opportunity for an extended continental shelf under UNCLOS is in the ice-covered regions of the Arctic north of Alaska. Since 2003, CCOM/JHC has been using the icebreaker Healy equipped with a multibeam echosounder, chirp subbottom profiler, and dredges, to map and sample the region of Chukchi Borderland and Alpha-Mendeleev Ridge complex. These data have led to the discovery of several new features, have radically changed our view of the bathymetry and geologic history of the area, and may have important ramifications for the determination of the limits of a U.S. extended continental shelf under Article 76
Coastal states may extend the limits of their juridically defined continental shelf beyond 200 nauti...
Since 2003, the University of New Hampshire\u27s Center for Coastal and Ocean Mapping�Joint Hydrogra...
As policymakers, academia, and the media have paid increased attention to the Arctic region, there i...
For the United States, the greatest opportunity for an extended continental shelf under UNCLOS is in...
Under Article 76 of The United Nations Convention on the Law of the Sea (UNCLOS; U.N. 1997), coastal...
Since CHC2006, the University of New Hampshire’s Center for Coastal & Ocean Mapping/Joint Hydrograph...
Since 2003, the Center for Coastal & Ocean Mapping/Joint Hydrographic Center at the University of Ne...
(UNCLOS; U.N. 1997), coastal states may, under certain circumstances, gain sovereign rights over the...
Despite the last decades of diminishing sea-ice cover in the Arctic Ocean, ship operations are only ...
U.S. Law of the Sea cruise to map the foot of the slope and 2500-m isobath of the US Arctic Ocean ma...
To legally exercise its sovereign rights over extended continental shelf, coastal States have toobta...
To legally exercise its sovereign rights over extended continental shelf, coastal States have toobta...
U.S. Law of the Sea cruise to map the foot of the slope and 2500-m isobath of the US Arctic Ocean ma...
U.S. Law of the Sea cruise to map the foot of the slope and 2500-m isobath of the US Arctic Ocean ma...
U.S. Law of the Sea cruise to map the foot of the slope and 2500-m isobath of the US Arctic Ocean ma...
Coastal states may extend the limits of their juridically defined continental shelf beyond 200 nauti...
Since 2003, the University of New Hampshire\u27s Center for Coastal and Ocean Mapping�Joint Hydrogra...
As policymakers, academia, and the media have paid increased attention to the Arctic region, there i...
For the United States, the greatest opportunity for an extended continental shelf under UNCLOS is in...
Under Article 76 of The United Nations Convention on the Law of the Sea (UNCLOS; U.N. 1997), coastal...
Since CHC2006, the University of New Hampshire’s Center for Coastal & Ocean Mapping/Joint Hydrograph...
Since 2003, the Center for Coastal & Ocean Mapping/Joint Hydrographic Center at the University of Ne...
(UNCLOS; U.N. 1997), coastal states may, under certain circumstances, gain sovereign rights over the...
Despite the last decades of diminishing sea-ice cover in the Arctic Ocean, ship operations are only ...
U.S. Law of the Sea cruise to map the foot of the slope and 2500-m isobath of the US Arctic Ocean ma...
To legally exercise its sovereign rights over extended continental shelf, coastal States have toobta...
To legally exercise its sovereign rights over extended continental shelf, coastal States have toobta...
U.S. Law of the Sea cruise to map the foot of the slope and 2500-m isobath of the US Arctic Ocean ma...
U.S. Law of the Sea cruise to map the foot of the slope and 2500-m isobath of the US Arctic Ocean ma...
U.S. Law of the Sea cruise to map the foot of the slope and 2500-m isobath of the US Arctic Ocean ma...
Coastal states may extend the limits of their juridically defined continental shelf beyond 200 nauti...
Since 2003, the University of New Hampshire\u27s Center for Coastal and Ocean Mapping�Joint Hydrogra...
As policymakers, academia, and the media have paid increased attention to the Arctic region, there i...