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Featured researches published by Mashkoor Malik.


Eos, Transactions American Geophysical Union | 2009

Plume 1400 Meters High Discovered at the Seafloor off the Northern California Margin

James V. Gardner; Mashkoor Malik; Sharon L. Walker

On 17 May 2009, the Kongsberg EM302 multibeam echo sounder on board the U.S. National Oceanic and Atmospheric Administrations (NOAA) Okeanos Explorer was collecting bathymetry and water column acoustic data offshore of northern California when it suddenly imaged a previously undiscovered 1400-meter-high plume (Figure 1) rising from the seafloor at 40°32.13′N, 124°47.01′W. The ship was mapping in water depths of approximately 1830 meters and heading east up the northern California continental margin 20 kilometers north of the Gorda escarpment. The continental shelf in this area is known to have subsurface and water column thermogenic and methane gas, although no plumes from this area previously have been reported from deeper than the continental shelf.


Marine Geophysical Researches | 2018

User expectations for multibeam echo sounders backscatter strength data-looking back into the future

Lucieer; M Roche; K Degrendele; Mashkoor Malik; M Dolan; G Larmarche

With the ability of multibeam echo sounders (MBES) to measure backscatter strength (BS) as a function of true angle of insonification across the seafloor, came a new recognition of the potential of backscatter measurements to remotely characterize the properties of the seafloor. Advances in transducer design, digital electronics, signal processing capabilities, navigation, and graphic display devices, have improved the resolution and particularly the dynamic range available to sonar and processing software manufacturers. Alongside these improvements the expectations of what the data can deliver has also grown. In this paper, we identify these user-expectations and explore how MBES backscatter is utilized by different communities involved in marine seabed research at present, and the aspirations that these communities have for the data in the future. The results presented here are based on a user survey conducted by the GeoHab (Marine Geological and Biological Habitat Mapping) association. This paper summarises the different processing procedures employed to extract useful information from MBES backscatter data and the various intentions for which the user community collect the data. We show how a range of backscatter output products are generated from the different processing procedures, and how these results are taken up by different scientific disciplines, and also identify common constraints in handling MBES BS data. Finally, we outline our expectations for the future of this unique and important data source for seafloor mapping and characterisation.


Marine Geophysical Researches | 2018

A framework to quantify uncertainties of seafloor backscatter from swath mapping echosounders

Mashkoor Malik; Xavier Lurton; Larry A. Mayer

Multibeam echosounders (MBES) have become a widely used acoustic remote sensing tool to map and study the seafloor, providing co-located bathymetry and seafloor backscatter. Although the uncertainty associated with MBES-derived bathymetric data has been studied extensively, the question of backscatter uncertainty has been addressed only minimally and hinders the quantitative use of MBES seafloor backscatter. This paper explores approaches to identifying uncertainty sources associated with MBES-derived backscatter measurements. The major sources of uncertainty are catalogued and the magnitudes of their relative contributions to the backscatter uncertainty budget are evaluated. These major uncertainty sources include seafloor insonified area (1–3 dB), absorption coefficient (up to > 6 dB), random fluctuations in echo level (5.5 dB for a Rayleigh distribution), and sonar calibration (device dependent). The magnitudes of these uncertainty sources vary based on how these effects are compensated for during data acquisition and processing. Various cases (no compensation, partial compensation and full compensation) for seafloor insonified area, transmission losses and random fluctuations were modeled to estimate their uncertainties in different scenarios. Uncertainty related to the seafloor insonified area can be reduced significantly by accounting for seafloor slope during backscatter processing while transmission losses can be constrained by collecting full water column absorption coefficient profiles (temperature and salinity profiles). To reduce random fluctuations to below 1 dB, at least 20 samples are recommended to be used while computing mean values. The estimation of uncertainty in backscatter measurements is constrained by the fact that not all instrumental components are characterized and documented sufficiently for commercially available MBES. Further involvement from manufacturers in providing this essential information is critically required.


Ices Journal of Marine Science | 2007

Investigation of seabed fishing impacts on benthic structure using multi-beam sonar, sidescan sonar, and video

Mashkoor Malik; Larry A. Mayer


Archive | 2012

Mapping Gas Seeps with the Deepwater Multibeam Echosounder on Okeanos Explorer

Thomas C. Weber; Larry A. Mayer; Jonathan Beaudoin; Kevin W. Jerram; Mashkoor Malik; Bill Shedd; Glen Rice


Fishery Bulletin | 2009

Effects of a large fishing closure on benthic communities in the western Gulf of Maine: recovery from the effects of gillnets and otter trawls

Raymond E. Grizzle; Larry G. Ward; Larry A. Mayer; Mashkoor Malik; Andrew B. Cooper; Holly Abeels; Jennifer K. Greene; Melissa Brodeur; Andrew A. Rosenberg


Marine Geology | 2013

Geomorphometry and processes that built Necker Ridge, central North Pacific Ocean

James V. Gardner; Brian R. Calder; Mashkoor Malik


oceans conference | 2009

Advanced mid-water tools for 4D marine data fusion and analysis

Maurice Doucet; Colin Ware; Roland J. Arsenault; Thomas C. Weber; Mashkoor Malik; Larry A. Mayer; Lindsay Gee


Archive | 2010

Video Observations by Telepresence Reveal Two Types of Hydrothermal Venting on Kawio Barat Seamount

D. A. Butterfield; James F. Holden; Timothy M. Shank; Verena Tunnicliffe; J. Sherrin; Santiago Herrera; Edward T. Baker; Dave Lovalvo; S. Makarim; Mashkoor Malik; S. Wirasantosa; Stephen R. Hammond


Archive | 2006

Effects of the Western Gulf of Maine Closure Area on Bottom Habitats: A Preliminary GIS-based Assessment

Raymond E. Grizzle; Larry G. Ward; Larry A. Mayer; Andrew B. Cooper; Andrew A. Rosenberg; Melissa Brodeur; Jennifer K. Greene; Holly Abeels; Mashkoor Malik

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Larry A. Mayer

University of New Hampshire

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James V. Gardner

University of New Hampshire

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Thomas C. Weber

University of New Hampshire

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Larry G. Ward

University of New Hampshire

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Adam Skarke

Mississippi State University

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Jonathan Beaudoin

University of New Hampshire

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Raymond E. Grizzle

University of New Hampshire

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Brian R. Calder

University of New Hampshire

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Glen Rice

University of New Hampshire

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Kevin W. Jerram

University of New Hampshire

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