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Metadata Report for BODC Series Reference Number 2083022


Metadata Summary

Data Description

Data Category Water sample data
Instrument Type
NameCategories
General Oceanics GO-FLO water sampler  discrete water samplers
Instrument Mounting lowered unmanned submersible
Originating Country United Kingdom
Originator Dr Alan Tappin
Originating Organization University of Southampton Department of Oceanography (now University of Southampton School of Ocean and Earth Science)
Processing Status banked
Online delivery of data Download available - Ocean Data View (ODV) format
Project(s) North Sea Project 1987-1992
 

Data Identifiers

Originator's Identifier CH51_CTD_TMXX_29:1764
BODC Series Reference 2083022
 

Time Co-ordinates(UT)

Start Time (yyyy-mm-dd hh:mm) 1989-04-28 09:56
End Time (yyyy-mm-dd hh:mm) -
Nominal Cycle Interval -
 

Spatial Co-ordinates

Latitude 52.61971 N ( 52° 37.2' N )
Longitude 3.77075 E ( 3° 46.2' E )
Positional Uncertainty 0.05 to 0.1 n.miles
Minimum Sensor or Sampling Depth 9.7 m
Maximum Sensor or Sampling Depth 9.7 m
Minimum Sensor or Sampling Height 20.6 m
Maximum Sensor or Sampling Height 20.6 m
Sea Floor Depth 30.3 m
Sea Floor Depth Source PEVENT
Sensor or Sampling Distribution Unspecified -
Sensor or Sampling Depth Datum Unspecified -
Sea Floor Depth Datum Unspecified -
 

Parameters

BODC CODERankUnitsTitle
ADEPZZ011MetresDepth (spatial coordinate) relative to water surface in the water body
BOTTFLAG1Not applicableSampling process quality flag (BODC C22)
CDXXFXD21Nanomoles per litreConcentration of cadmium {Cd CAS 7440-43-9} per unit volume of the water body [dissolved plus reactive particulate <0.4/0.45um phase] by filtration, acidification, chelation, solvent extraction and atomic absorption spectroscopy
COXXFXD21Nanomoles per litreConcentration of cobalt {Co CAS 7440-48-4} per unit volume of the water body [dissolved plus reactive particulate <0.4/0.45um phase] by filtration, acidification, chelation, solvent extraction and atomic absorption spectroscopy
CUXXFXD21Nanomoles per litreConcentration of copper {Cu CAS 7440-50-8} per unit volume of the water body [dissolved plus reactive particulate <0.4/0.45um phase] by filtration, acidification, chelation, solvent extraction and atomic absorption spectroscopy
FEXXFXD21Nanomoles per litreConcentration of total iron {total_Fe CAS 7439-89-6} per unit volume of the water body [dissolved plus reactive particulate <0.4/0.45um phase] by filtration, acidification, chelation, solvent extraction and atomic absorption spectroscopy
MNXXFXD21Nanomoles per litreConcentration of total manganese {total_Mn CAS 7439-96-5} per unit volume of the water body [dissolved plus reactive particulate <0.4/0.45um phase] by filtration, acidification, chelation, solvent extraction and atomic absorption spectroscopy
NIXXFXD21Nanomoles per litreConcentration of nickel {Ni CAS 7440-02-0} per unit volume of the water body [dissolved plus reactive particulate <0.4/0.45um phase] by filtration, acidification, chelation, solvent extraction and atomic absorption spectroscopy
PBXXFXD21Nanomoles per litreConcentration of lead {Pb CAS 7439-92-1} per unit volume of the water body [dissolved plus reactive particulate <0.4/0.45um phase] by filtration, acidification, chelation, solvent extraction and atomic absorption spectroscopy
SAMPRFNM1DimensionlessSample reference number
ZNXXFXD21Nanomoles per litreConcentration of zinc {Zn CAS 7440-66-6} per unit volume of the water body [dissolved plus reactive particulate <0.4/0.45um phase] by filtration, acidification, chelation, solvent extraction and atomic absorption spectroscopy

Definition of BOTTFLAG

BOTTFLAGDefinition
0The sampling event occurred without any incident being reported to BODC.
1The filter in an in-situ sampling pump physically ruptured during sample resulting in an unquantifiable loss of sampled material.
2Analytical evidence (e.g. surface water salinity measured on a sample collected at depth) indicates that the water sample has been contaminated by water from depths other than the depths of sampling.
3The feedback indicator on the deck unit reported that the bottle closure command had failed. General Oceanics deck units used on NERC vessels in the 80s and 90s were renowned for reporting misfires when the bottle had been closed. This flag is also suitable for when a trigger command is mistakenly sent to a bottle that has previously been fired.
4During the sampling deployment the bottle was fired in an order other than incrementing rosette position. Indicative of the potential for errors in the assignment of bottle firing depth, especially with General Oceanics rosettes.
5Water was reported to be escaping from the bottle as the rosette was being recovered.
6The bottle seals were observed to be incorrectly seated and the bottle was only part full of water on recovery.
7Either the bottle was found to contain no sample on recovery or there was no bottle fitted to the rosette position fired (but SBE35 record may exist).
8There is reason to doubt the accuracy of the sampling depth associated with the sample.
9The bottle air vent had not been closed prior to deployment giving rise to a risk of sample contamination through leakage.

Definition of Rank

  • Rank 1 is a one-dimensional parameter
  • Rank 2 is a two-dimensional parameter
  • Rank 0 is a one-dimensional parameter describing the second dimension of a two-dimensional parameter (e.g. bin depths for moored ADCP data)

Problem Reports

No Problem Report Found in the Database


Data Access Policy

Open Data supplied by Natural Environment Research Council (NERC)

You must always use the following attribution statement to acknowledge the source of the information: "Contains data supplied by Natural Environment Research Council."


Narrative Documents

GO-FLO Bottle

A water sampling bottle featuring close-open-close operation. The bottle opens automatically at approximately 10 metres and flushes until closed. Sampling with these bottles avoids contamination at the surface, internal spring contamination, loss of sample on deck and exchange of water from different depths.

There are several sizes available, from 1.7 to 100 litres and are made of PVC with a depth rating of up to 500 m. These bottles can be attached to a rosette or placed on a cable at selected positions.

Dissolved Trace Metals (Cd, Co, Cu, Fe, Mn, Ni, Pb, Zn, Al, Hg) and arsenic species as part of the North Sea Project

Document History

Converted from CDROM documentation

Sampling strategy and methodology

Samples for trace metal analysis were collected, using clean techniques, in 10 litre Teflon-lined Go-Flo bottles, modified to reduce the contamination potential for trace metals, fitted to the CTD rosette sampler. Initial sample handling for trace metals was carried out on board using the facilities of the RVS clean chemistry container (Morley et al., 1988).

Each sea water sample was pressure-filtered (ca. 0.7 bar) in-line through a 0.4 µm Nuclepore membrane filter. The filtrate (samples for dissolved metal analysis) were acidified to ca. pH 2 by the addition of sub-boiled nitric acid (1 ml per litre of sea water) in order to stabilise the total-dissolved concentrations of metals. For a substantial proportion of the samples large volume filtration systems were used to obtain sufficient suspended particulate material for trace metal analysis.

The filters were stored and processed for particulate trace metals. Consequently, the particulate and dissolved trace metal data form an integrated data set from a single set of samples using compatible analytical procedures which greatly enhances their value.

Analysis of Cd, Co, Cu, Fe, Mn, Ni, Pb, Zn

This was undertaken using the specialised clean facilities in the Department of Oceanography, University of Southampton. Dissolved metals were extracted and preconcentrated following the dithiocarbamate complexation-freon extraction method of Danielsson et al. (1978), as modified by Statham (1985) and Tappin (1988), and were determined by graphite furnace atomic absorption spectrophotometry (GFAAS). Within batch analytical precision of the method is generally less than 10% (coefficient of variation) for each metal. More details of the method are given in Tappin et al. (1992).

Quality control (i.e. accuracy and between batch analytical precision) of the data was assessed by regularly analysing aliquots of the CASS-1 coastal sea water reference sample for dissolved trace metals and a bulk filtered acidified sea water sample which was used for batch-to-batch quality control. Results of these analyses were satisfactory, with very few exceptions, and ensure that the data are of high quality.

Additionally, the data set was examined to identify any values which appeared to have been affected by contamination on the basis of supporting data. Only an insignificant fraction of the total data were shown to have been contaminated and rejected.

Analysis of aluminium

An aliquot of the water sample was separately vacuum filtered through a 0.4 µm Nucleopore membrane and analysed for aluminium using the method of Hydes and Liss (1972). The complete analytical procedure was undertaken at sea, usually in the general laboratory.

It should be noted that whilst most samples were collected using the ultra-clean trace metal bottles described above, a few were collected using standard 10 litre Go-Flo bottles. As a general rule if there is aluminium data for a sample but no other trace metals then it should be assumed that a standard bottle was used to collect the sample.

Analysis of arsenic

A separate aliquot of water was filtered, in the clean laboratory, through a 0.45 µm Millipore filter for arsenic analysis. The samples were stored at 4°C to reduce biological activity and keep losses of monomethyl arsenic (MMA) and dimethyl arsenic (DMA) to a minimum. Nevertheless, some losses were inevitable as the samples had to be stored on board ship for the cruise duration (up to 2 weeks) and subjected to a 2-3 week analytical procedure. These losses have been quantified for samples from the Tamar Estuary in Kitts (1991).

The technique used for inorganic arsenic was to add 6M Analar HCl and 2 per cent Spectrosol NaBH4 solution to the water sample to generate arsines. These were purged from the apparatus by a stream of nitrogen for analysis by flame atomic absorption spectroscopy.

MMA and DMA were analysed using a similar technique using a lower acid concentration (1M) to favour the formation of organic arsines. The lower concentrations required the incorporation of an arsine trapping procedure. The nitrogen purgative, dried by NaOH traps, was passed through a glass U tube packed with glass beads cooled to -196°C by liquid nitrogen. The trap was allowed to gradually warm to room temperature giving up the trapped arsines as a series of pulses, thus achieving separation of the arsenic species. Each species was analysed by flame atomic absorption spectroscopy.

A full description and discussion of the analytical techniques is given in Kitts, 1991.

Analysis of mercury

Reactive mercury, i.e. mercury which can be determined without prior oxidation, was determined by the reduction of the mercury in the acidified sample to elemental form by the addition of tin (II) chloride. This was then removed from solution by purging with oxygen-free nitrogen and the mercury vapour trapped as an amalgam on gold chips. Once purging was complete, the gold chips were inductively heated to vaporize the mercury as a pulse which was quantified by atomic absorption spectroscopy.

Total mercury was measured by the above method on samples which had been oxidised by addition of hydrochloric acid, potassium bromide and potassium bromate. Samples were left to oxidise for at least an hour before the bromine was reduced by the addition of excess hydroxylammonium chloride solution.

Total mercury was determined on both unfiltered sea water and on sea water which had been filtered through an ashed (450°C for 24 hours) GFF filter paper. Reactive mercury was determined on filtered samples only. Full details of the methodology are given in Harper et al (1989).

References

Danielsson, L.-G., B. Magnusson and S. Westerlund (1978) An improved metal extraction procedure for the determination of trace metals in sea water by atomic absorption spectrometry with electrothermal atomization. Analytica Chimica Acta 98, 47-57.

Harper, D.J., C.F. Fileman, P.V. May and J.E. Portmann (1989). Methods of analysis for trace metals in marine and other samples. Aquatic environment protection: analytical methods number 3. MAFF Directorate of Fisheries Research, 38pp.

Hydes, D.J. and P.S. Liss (1976). A fluorometric method for the determination of low concentrations of dissolved aluminium in natural waters. The Analyst 101, 922-931.

Kitts, H. (1991). Estuaries as sources of methylated arsenic to the North Sea. Ph.D. thesis, Polytechnic South West.

Morley, N.H., P.J. Statham and C. Fay (1988) Design and use of a clean shipboard handling system for sea water samples. In: Advances in Underwater Technology, Ocean Science and Offshore Engineering, Volume 16 (Oceanology '88), Graham and Trotman, London, 283-290.

Statham, P.J. (1985) The determination of dissolved manganese and cadmium in sea water at low nmol/l concentrations by chelation and extraction followed by electrothermal atomic absorption spectrophotometry. Analytica Chimica Acta 169, 149-159.

Tappin, A.D. (1988) Trace metals in shelf seas of the British Isles, Ph.D. Thesis, University of Southampton, 279pp.

Tappin A.D., D.J. Hydes, P.J. Statham and J.D. Burton (1992) Concentrations, distributions and seasonal variability of dissolved Cd, Co, Cu, Mn, Ni, Pb and Zn in the English Channel. Continental Shelf Research (vol 12, in press).


Project Information

North Sea Project

The North Sea Project (NSP) was the first Marine Sciences Community Research project of the Natural Environment Research Council (NERC). It evolved from a NERC review of shelf sea research, which identified the need for a concerted multidisciplinary study of circulation, transport and production.

The ultimate aim of the NERC North Sea Project was the development of a suite of prognostic water quality models to aid management of the North Sea. To progress towards water quality models, three intermediate objectives were pursued in parallel:

  • Production of a 3-D transport model for any conservative passive constituent, incorporating improved representations of the necessary physics - hydrodynamics and dispersion;
  • Identifying and quantifying non-conservative processes - sources and sinks determining the cycling and fate of individual constituents;
  • Defining a complete seasonal cycle as a database for all the observational studies needed to formulate, drive and test models.

Proudman Oceanographic Laboratory hosted the project, which involved over 200 scientists and support staff from NERC and other Government funded laboratories, as well as seven universities and polytechnics.

The project ran from 1987 to 1992, with marine field data collection between April 1988 and October 1989. One shakedown (CH28) and fifteen survey cruises (Table 1), each lasting 12 days and following the same track, were repeated monthly. The track selected covered the summer-stratified waters of the north and the homogeneous waters in the Southern Bight in about equal lengths together with their separating frontal band from Flamborough head to Dogger Bank, the Friesian Islands and the German Bight. Mooring stations were maintained at six sites for the duration of the project.

Table 1: Details of NSP Survey Cruises on RRS Challenger
Cruise No. Date
CH28 29/04/88 - 15/05/88
CH33 04/08/88 - 16/08/88
CH35 03/09/88 - 15/09/88
CH37 02/10/88 - 14/10/88
CH39 01/11/88 - 13/11/88
CH41 01/12/88 - 13/12/88
CH43 30/12/88 - 12/01/89
CH45 28/01/89 - 10/02/89
CH47 27/02/89 - 12/03/89
CH49 29/03/89 - 10/04/89
CH51 27/04/89 - 09/05/89
CH53 26/05/89 - 07/06/89
CH55 24/06/89 - 07/07/89
CH57 24/07/89 - 06/08/89
CH59 23/08/89 - 04/09/89
CH61 21/09/89 - 03/10/89

Alternating with the survey cruises were process study cruises (Table 2), which investigated some particular aspect of the science of the North Sea. These included fronts (nearshore, circulation and mixing), sandwaves and sandbanks, plumes (Humber, Wash, Thames and Rhine), resuspension, air-sea exchange, primary productivity and blooms/chemistry.

Table 2: Details of NSP Process cruises on RRS Challenger
Cruise No. Date Process
CH34 18/08/88 - 01/09/88 Fronts - nearshore
CH36 16/09/88 - 30/09/88 Fronts - mixing
CH56 08/07/89 - 22/07/89 Fronts - circulation
CH58 07/08/89 - 21/08/89 Fronts - mixing
CH38 24/10/88 - 31/10/88 Sandwaves
CH40 15/11/88 - 29/11/88 Sandbanks
CH42 15/12/88 - 29/12/88 Plumes/Sandbanks
CH46 12/02/89 - 26/02/89 Plumes/Sandwaves
CH44 13/01/89 - 27/01/89 Resuspension
CH52 11/05/89 - 24/05/89 Resuspension
CH60 06/09/89 - 19/09/89 Resuspension
CH48 13/03/89 - 27/03/89 Air/sea exchanges
CH62 05/10/89 - 19/10/89 Air/sea exchanges
CH50 12/04/89 - 25/04/89 Blooms/chemistry
CH54 09/06/89 - 22/06/89 Production

In addition to the main data collection period, a series of cruises took place between October 1989 and October 1990 that followed up work done on previous cruises (Table 3). Process studies relating to blooms, plumes (Humber, Wash and Rhine), sandwaves and the flux of contaminants through the Dover Strait were carried out as well as two `survey' cruises.

Table 3: Details of NSP `Follow up' cruises on RRS Challenger
Cruise No. Date Process
CH62A 23/10/89 - 03/11/89 Blooms
CH64 03/04/90 - 03/05/90 Blooms
CH65 06/05/90 - 17/05/90 Humber plume
CH66A 20/05/90 - 31/05/90 Survey
CH66B 03/06/90 - 18/06/90 Contaminants through Dover Strait
CH69 26/07/90 - 07/08/90 Resuspension/Plumes
CH72A 20/09/90 - 02/10/90 Survey
CH72B 04/10/90 - 06/10/90 Sandwaves/STABLE
CH72C 06/10/90 - 19/10/90 Rhine plume

The data collected during the observational phase of the North Sea Project comprised one of the most detailed sets of observations ever undertaken in any shallow shelf sea at that time.


Data Activity or Cruise Information

Data Activity

Start Date (yyyy-mm-dd) 1989-04-28
End Date (yyyy-mm-dd) 1989-04-28
Organization Undertaking ActivityPlymouth Marine Laboratory
Country of OrganizationUnited Kingdom
Originator's Data Activity IdentifierCH51_CTD_1764
Platform Categorylowered unmanned submersible

BODC Sample Metadata Report for CH51_CTD_1764

Sample reference number Nominal collection volume(l) Bottle rosette position Bottle firing sequence number Minimum pressure sampled (dbar) Maximum pressure sampled (dbar) Depth of sampling point (m) Bottle type Sample quality flag Bottle reference Comments
285079   10.00       24.60   25.00   21.70 Niskin bottle No problem reported    
285082   10.00       12.50   13.00    9.70 General Oceanics GO-FLO water sampler No problem reported    
285096   10.00        3.80    4.60    1.30 Niskin bottle No problem reported    

Please note:the supplied parameters may not have been sampled from all the bottle firings described in the table above. Cross-match the Sample Reference Number above against the SAMPRFNM value in the data file to identify the relevant metadata.

Related Data Activity activities are detailed in Appendix 1

Cruise

Cruise Name CH51
Departure Date 1989-04-27
Arrival Date 1989-05-09
Principal Scientist(s)Alan W Morris (Plymouth Marine Laboratory)
Ship RRS Challenger

Complete Cruise Metadata Report is available here


Fixed Station Information

Fixed Station Information

Station NameNSP Survey F and CTD Site AE
CategoryOffshore area
Latitude52° 37.00' N
Longitude3° 46.00' E
Water depth below MSL30.0 m

North Sea Project Survey Mooring Site F and CTD Site AE

Site F was one of six fixed stations where moorings were deployed during the North Sea Project survey. This location is also one of 123 North Sea Project CTD Sites.

The site was situated in a region of strong tidal currents, up to a maximum of 1.0 m/s and in relatively shallow (30 m) water. These factors produced well mixed conditions through the water column, throughout the year.

The rigs deployed here line within a box bounded by co-ordinates 52° 36.50'N, 003° 45.20'E at the southwest corner and 52° 37.10'N, 003° 46.14'E at the northeast corner. The magnetic variation at this site was 3.1°W.

The deployment history is summarised below:

Rig ID Meter
Type
Meter
Height
(m)
Start
Date
Data
Return
(Days)
Comments
C33FC CM (S4) 12.0 05/08/88 30.6 Good data
CM
(Aanderaa)
7.0
C35FC CM (S4) 12.7 06/09/88 26.4 Good data
CM
(Aanderaa)
7.0
C37FC CM (S4) 12.0 04/10/88 28.6 Good data
CM
(Aanderaa)
7.0
C39FC CM (S4) 12.0 20/11/88 29.8 Good data
CM
(Aanderaa)
7.0
C43FC CM (S4) 12.0 07/01/89 22.0 Good data
CM
(Aanderaa)
7.0 9.6 Short record
C51FC CM (S4) 12.0 28/04/89 0.0 No data recorded
CM
(Aanderaa)
7.0 0.7 Velocity record short, rotor fouled by fishing line
29.6 Good data for Temperature, Conductivity and Pressure
C53FC CM (S4) 12.0 29/05/89 27.1 Good data
CM
(Aanderaa)
7.0
C55FC CM (S4) 12.0 25/06/89 0.0 Data corrupt
CM
(Aanderaa)
7.0 30.1 Good data
C57FC CM (S4) 12.0 27/07/89 28.2 Good data
CM
(Aanderaa)
7.0
C59FC CM (S4) 12.0 25/08/89 27.3 Good data
CM
(Aanderaa)
7.0

Related Fixed Station activities are detailed in Appendix 2


BODC Quality Control Flags

The following single character qualifying flags may be associated with one or more individual parameters with a data cycle:

Flag Description
Blank Unqualified
< Below detection limit
> In excess of quoted value
A Taxonomic flag for affinis (aff.)
B Beginning of CTD Down/Up Cast
C Taxonomic flag for confer (cf.)
D Thermometric depth
E End of CTD Down/Up Cast
G Non-taxonomic biological characteristic uncertainty
H Extrapolated value
I Taxonomic flag for single species (sp.)
K Improbable value - unknown quality control source
L Improbable value - originator's quality control
M Improbable value - BODC quality control
N Null value
O Improbable value - user quality control
P Trace/calm
Q Indeterminate
R Replacement value
S Estimated value
T Interpolated value
U Uncalibrated
W Control value
X Excessive difference

SeaDataNet Quality Control Flags

The following single character qualifying flags may be associated with one or more individual parameters with a data cycle:

Flag Description
0 no quality control
1 good value
2 probably good value
3 probably bad value
4 bad value
5 changed value
6 value below detection
7 value in excess
8 interpolated value
9 missing value
A value phenomenon uncertain
B nominal value
Q value below limit of quantification

Appendix 1: CH51_CTD_1764

Related series for this Data Activity are presented in the table below. Further information can be found by following the appropriate links.

If you are interested in these series, please be aware we offer a multiple file download service. Should your credentials be insufficient for automatic download, the service also offers a referral to our Enquiries Officer who may be able to negotiate access.

Series IdentifierData CategoryStart date/timeStart positionCruise
1244353Water sample data1989-04-28 09:56:0052.61971 N, 3.77075 ERRS Challenger CH51
1705359Water sample data1989-04-28 09:56:0052.61971 N, 3.77075 ERRS Challenger CH51
2081887Water sample data1989-04-28 09:56:2252.61971 N, 3.77075 ERRS Challenger CH51
2096014Water sample data1989-04-28 09:56:2252.61971 N, 3.77075 ERRS Challenger CH51
2096665Water sample data1989-04-28 09:56:2252.61971 N, 3.77075 ERRS Challenger CH51

Appendix 2: NSP Survey F and CTD Site AE

Related series for this Fixed Station are presented in the table below. Further information can be found by following the appropriate links.

If you are interested in these series, please be aware we offer a multiple file download service. Should your credentials be insufficient for automatic download, the service also offers a referral to our Enquiries Officer who may be able to negotiate access.

Series IdentifierData CategoryStart date/timeStart positionCruise
782725CTD or STD cast1988-05-09 00:21:0053.51767 N, 0.68333 ERRS Challenger CH28
768977CTD or STD cast1988-08-05 06:33:0052.6215 N, 3.76883 ERRS Challenger CH33
248590Currents -subsurface Eulerian1988-08-05 14:10:0052.6117 N, 3.7533 ENot applicable
591959Currents -subsurface Eulerian1988-08-05 14:11:0052.6117 N, 3.7533 ENot applicable
769169CTD or STD cast1988-08-07 08:30:0052.622 N, 3.77583 ERRS Challenger CH33
783010CTD or STD cast1988-09-04 02:17:0052.61267 N, 3.7635 ERRS Challenger CH35
783243CTD or STD cast1988-09-06 01:01:0052.62033 N, 3.76667 ERRS Challenger CH35
592047Currents -subsurface Eulerian1988-09-06 06:27:0052.6083 N, 3.7533 ENot applicable
248750Currents -subsurface Eulerian1988-09-06 06:30:0052.6083 N, 3.7533 ENot applicable
784246CTD or STD cast1988-10-02 17:55:0052.62133 N, 3.76167 ERRS Challenger CH37
784467CTD or STD cast1988-10-04 20:20:0052.6175 N, 3.76617 ERRS Challenger CH37
248762Currents -subsurface Eulerian1988-10-04 21:00:0052.6155 N, 3.7687 ENot applicable
592035Currents -subsurface Eulerian1988-10-04 21:00:0052.6155 N, 3.7687 ENot applicable
821271CTD or STD cast1988-11-02 03:35:0052.615 N, 3.759 ERRS Challenger CH39
248608Currents -subsurface Eulerian1988-11-02 12:40:0052.617 N, 3.7657 ENot applicable
592023Currents -subsurface Eulerian1988-11-02 12:40:0052.617 N, 3.7657 ENot applicable
821480CTD or STD cast1988-11-04 02:58:0052.60867 N, 3.7605 ERRS Challenger CH39
785680CTD or STD cast1988-12-02 08:39:0052.6195 N, 3.76783 ERRS Challenger CH41
785145CTD or STD cast1988-12-04 08:56:0052.6155 N, 3.7705 ERRS Challenger CH41
786357CTD or STD cast1989-01-04 21:01:0052.6145 N, 3.76783 ERRS Challenger CH43
786554CTD or STD cast1989-01-07 08:30:0052.61533 N, 3.7625 ERRS Challenger CH43
248621Currents -subsurface Eulerian1989-01-07 09:15:0052.6183 N, 3.7583 ENot applicable
591972Currents -subsurface Eulerian1989-01-07 09:15:0052.6183 N, 3.7583 ENot applicable
791034CTD or STD cast1989-01-29 05:21:0052.6165 N, 3.76833 ERRS Challenger CH45
1859395Water sample data1989-01-29 05:26:0052.61658 N, 3.76834 ERRS Challenger CH45
791046CTD or STD cast1989-01-29 05:44:0052.61933 N, 3.775 ERRS Challenger CH45
1859402Water sample data1989-01-29 05:46:0052.61925 N, 3.775 ERRS Challenger CH45
791255CTD or STD cast1989-01-31 09:29:0052.61533 N, 3.76417 ERRS Challenger CH45
1859611Water sample data1989-01-31 09:32:0052.61537 N, 3.76422 ERRS Challenger CH45
792246CTD or STD cast1989-02-28 01:52:0052.613 N, 3.765 ERRS Challenger CH47
792479CTD or STD cast1989-03-02 03:33:0052.61517 N, 3.75883 ERRS Challenger CH47
1857339Water sample data1989-03-02 03:36:0052.61519 N, 3.7589 ERRS Challenger CH47
793772CTD or STD cast1989-03-30 03:52:0052.61333 N, 3.7665 ERRS Challenger CH49
1858459Water sample data1989-03-30 03:57:0052.61336 N, 3.7665 ERRS Challenger CH49
793993CTD or STD cast1989-04-01 04:44:0052.614 N, 3.76267 ERRS Challenger CH49
1858668Water sample data1989-04-01 04:48:0052.61395 N, 3.76264 ERRS Challenger CH49
794714CTD or STD cast1989-04-28 09:49:0052.61967 N, 3.77083 ERRS Challenger CH51
2081887Water sample data1989-04-28 09:56:2252.61971 N, 3.77075 ERRS Challenger CH51
2096014Water sample data1989-04-28 09:56:2252.61971 N, 3.77075 ERRS Challenger CH51
2096665Water sample data1989-04-28 09:56:2252.61971 N, 3.77075 ERRS Challenger CH51
592011Currents -subsurface Eulerian1989-04-28 10:50:0052.617 N, 3.7665 ENot applicable
794935CTD or STD cast1989-04-30 09:16:0052.62567 N, 3.77067 ERRS Challenger CH51
1860789Water sample data1989-04-30 09:22:0052.62575 N, 3.77065 ERRS Challenger CH51
2082080Water sample data1989-04-30 09:22:0852.62575 N, 3.77065 ERRS Challenger CH51
2083231Water sample data1989-04-30 09:22:0852.62575 N, 3.77065 ERRS Challenger CH51
2096155Water sample data1989-04-30 09:22:0852.62575 N, 3.77065 ERRS Challenger CH51
2096849Water sample data1989-04-30 09:22:0852.62575 N, 3.77065 ERRS Challenger CH51
796002CTD or STD cast1989-05-27 04:50:0052.61317 N, 3.76517 ERRS Challenger CH53
1863032Water sample data1989-05-27 04:53:0052.61322 N, 3.76522 ERRS Challenger CH53
796014CTD or STD cast1989-05-27 05:45:0052.61933 N, 3.77433 ERRS Challenger CH53
1863044Water sample data1989-05-27 05:48:0052.61935 N, 3.77433 ERRS Challenger CH53
796247CTD or STD cast1989-05-29 04:03:0052.61717 N, 3.7645 ERRS Challenger CH53
1863277Water sample data1989-05-29 04:08:0052.61719 N, 3.76454 ERRS Challenger CH53
248737Currents -subsurface Eulerian1989-05-29 05:10:0052.6157 N, 3.769 ENot applicable
591996Currents -subsurface Eulerian1989-05-29 05:10:0052.6157 N, 3.769 ENot applicable
797343CTD or STD cast1989-06-25 01:30:0052.61217 N, 3.77383 ERRS Challenger CH55
1656310Water sample data1989-06-25 01:33:0052.61211 N, 3.77385 ERRS Challenger CH55
1865548Water sample data1989-06-25 01:33:0052.61211 N, 3.77385 ERRS Challenger CH55
797380CTD or STD cast1989-06-25 08:30:0052.6155 N, 3.76967 ERRS Challenger CH55
1656358Water sample data1989-06-25 08:35:0052.61548 N, 3.76965 ERRS Challenger CH55
1865597Water sample data1989-06-25 08:35:0052.61548 N, 3.76965 ERRS Challenger CH55
591984Currents -subsurface Eulerian1989-06-25 09:10:0052.6147 N, 3.7658 ENot applicable
797552CTD or STD cast1989-06-26 23:38:0052.61733 N, 3.76333 ERRS Challenger CH55
1656543Water sample data1989-06-26 23:42:0052.61734 N, 3.7634 ERRS Challenger CH55
1865770Water sample data1989-06-26 23:42:0052.61734 N, 3.7634 ERRS Challenger CH55
798703CTD or STD cast1989-07-25 03:45:0052.61683 N, 3.76783 ERRS Challenger CH57
1245577Water sample data1989-07-25 03:47:0052.61676 N, 3.76788 ERRS Challenger CH57
1709035Water sample data1989-07-25 03:47:0052.61676 N, 3.76788 ERRS Challenger CH57
1864361Water sample data1989-07-25 03:47:0052.61676 N, 3.76788 ERRS Challenger CH57
248798Currents -subsurface Eulerian1989-07-27 05:10:0052.6167 N, 3.7658 ENot applicable
591960Currents -subsurface Eulerian1989-07-27 05:10:0052.6167 N, 3.7658 ENot applicable
798912CTD or STD cast1989-07-27 05:24:0052.61717 N, 3.77583 ERRS Challenger CH57
1245774Water sample data1989-07-27 05:26:0052.6171 N, 3.77581 ERRS Challenger CH57
1709232Water sample data1989-07-27 05:26:0052.6171 N, 3.77581 ERRS Challenger CH57
1864570Water sample data1989-07-27 05:26:0052.6171 N, 3.77581 ERRS Challenger CH57
801245CTD or STD cast1989-08-24 02:44:0052.6155 N, 3.75367 ERRS Challenger CH59
1855935Water sample data1989-08-24 02:48:0052.61552 N, 3.75363 ERRS Challenger CH59
801282CTD or STD cast1989-08-24 08:42:0052.61667 N, 3.78933 ERRS Challenger CH59
1855972Water sample data1989-08-24 08:44:0052.61665 N, 3.7894 ERRS Challenger CH59
801429CTD or STD cast1989-08-25 23:20:0052.618 N, 3.7665 ERRS Challenger CH59
1856127Water sample data1989-08-25 23:23:0052.61803 N, 3.7665 ERRS Challenger CH59
248805Currents -subsurface Eulerian1989-08-25 23:45:0052.6147 N, 3.7682 ENot applicable
592059Currents -subsurface Eulerian1989-08-25 23:45:0052.6147 N, 3.7682 ENot applicable
799927CTD or STD cast1989-09-22 08:19:0052.62 N, 3.76617 ERRS Challenger CH61
2087207Water sample data1989-09-22 08:23:3952.62001 N, 3.76616 ERRS Challenger CH61
1854692Water sample data1989-09-22 08:24:0052.62001 N, 3.76616 ERRS Challenger CH61
800101CTD or STD cast1989-09-23 21:23:0052.61817 N, 3.76933 ERRS Challenger CH61
1854864Water sample data1989-09-23 21:27:0052.61823 N, 3.76935 ERRS Challenger CH61
802562CTD or STD cast1990-05-21 11:50:0052.619 N, 3.76633 ERRS Challenger CH66A
802710CTD or STD cast1990-05-23 14:47:0052.61917 N, 3.77133 ERRS Challenger CH66A
827881CTD or STD cast1990-06-16 07:35:0052.63783 N, 3.77633 ERRS Challenger CH66B
804476CTD or STD cast1990-09-22 06:16:0052.61767 N, 3.77133 ERRS Challenger CH72A
804741CTD or STD cast1990-09-25 18:29:0052.62517 N, 3.76583 ERRS Challenger CH72A
829549CTD or STD cast1990-10-14 16:27:0052.6185 N, 3.76233 ERRS Challenger CH72C