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Metadata Report for BODC Series Reference Number 2118146


Metadata Summary

Data Description

Data Category Water sample data
Instrument Type
NameCategories
Niskin bottle  discrete water samplers
Marianda VINDTA 3C total inorganic carbon and titration alkalinity analyser  titrators
Instrument Mounting lowered unmanned submersible
Originating Country United Kingdom
Originator Dr Matthew Humphreys
Originating Organization 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) SSB CaNDyFloSS
 

Data Identifiers

Originator's Identifier DY026A_CTD_CO2X_3705:044
BODC Series Reference 2118146
 

Time Co-ordinates(UT)

Start Time (yyyy-mm-dd hh:mm) 2014-08-07 11:29
End Time (yyyy-mm-dd hh:mm) -
Nominal Cycle Interval -
 

Spatial Co-ordinates

Latitude 48.57648 N ( 48° 34.6' N )
Longitude 9.51540 W ( 9° 30.9' W )
Positional Uncertainty 0.0 to 0.01 n.miles
Minimum Sensor or Sampling Depth 5.0 m
Maximum Sensor or Sampling Depth 169.8 m
Minimum Sensor or Sampling Height 12.4 m
Maximum Sensor or Sampling Height 177.2 m
Sea Floor Depth 182.2 m
Sea Floor Depth Source BUDS
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)
FIRSEQID1DimensionlessBottle firing sequence number
MDMAP0141Micromoles per kilogramTotal alkalinity per unit mass of the water body
ROSPOSID1DimensionlessBottle rosette position identifier
SAMPRFNM1DimensionlessSample reference number
TCO2MSXX1Micromoles per kilogramConcentration of total inorganic carbon {TCO2 CAS 7440-44-0} per unit mass of the water body [dissolved plus reactive particulate phase]

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

These data have no specific confidentiality restrictions for users. However, users must acknowledge data sources as it is not ethical to publish data without proper attribution. Any publication or other output resulting from usage of the data should include an acknowledgment.

If the Information Provider does not provide a specific attribution statement, or if you are using Information from several Information Providers and multiple attributions are not practical in your product or application, you may consider using the following:

"Contains public sector information licensed under the Open Government Licence v1.0."


Narrative Documents

Marianda Versatile INstrument for the Determination of Total inorganic carbon and titration Alkalinity (VINDTA) 3C

The VINDTA 3C (Versatile INstrument for the Determination of Total inorganic carbon and titration Alkalinity) is a laboratory alkalinity titration system combined with an extraction unit for coulometric titration, which simultaneously determines the alkalinity and dissolved inorganic carbon content of a sample. The sample transport is performed with peristaltic pumps and acid is added to the sample using a membrane pump. No pressurizing system is required and only one gas supply (nitrogen or dry and CO2-free air) is necessary. The system uses a Metrohm Titrino 719S, an ORION-Ross pH electrode and a Metrohm reference electrode. The burette, the pipette and the analysis cell have a water jacket around them. Precision is typically ± 1 µmol kg-1 for TA and/or DIC in open ocean water.

Further details can be found in the manufacturer's brochure.

Niskin Bottle

The Niskin bottle is a device used by oceanographers to collect subsurface seawater samples. It is a plastic bottle with caps and rubber seals at each end and is deployed with the caps held open, allowing free-flushing of the bottle as it moves through the water column.

Standard Niskin

The standard version of the bottle includes a plastic-coated metal spring or elastic cord running through the interior of the bottle that joins the two caps, and the caps are held open against the spring by plastic lanyards. When the bottle reaches the desired depth the lanyards are released by a pressure-actuated switch, command signal or messenger weight and the caps are forced shut and sealed, trapping the seawater sample.

Lever Action Niskin

The Lever Action Niskin Bottle differs from the standard version, in that the caps are held open during deployment by externally mounted stainless steel springs rather than an internal spring or cord. Lever Action Niskins are recommended for applications where a completely clear sample chamber is critical or for use in deep cold water.

Clean Sampling

A modified version of the standard Niskin bottle has been developed for clean sampling. This is teflon-coated and uses a latex cord to close the caps rather than a metal spring. The clean version of the Levered Action Niskin bottle is also teflon-coated and uses epoxy covered springs in place of the stainless steel springs. These bottles are specifically designed to minimise metal contamination when sampling trace metals.

Deployment

Bottles may be deployed singly clamped to a wire or in groups of up to 48 on a rosette. Standard bottles and Lever Action bottles have a capacity between 1.7 and 30 L. Reversing thermometers may be attached to a spring-loaded disk that rotates through 180° on bottle closure.

Shelf Sea Biogeochemistry (SSB) dissolved inorganic carbon and total alkalinity from CTD bottles during RRS Discovery cruise DY026A

Originator's Protocol for Data Acquisition and Analysis

This dataset contains 118 individual measurements of seawater dissolved inorganic carbon (DIC) and total alkalinity (TA) from the Celtic Sea (50°N 8°W). The samples were collected during RRS Discovery cruise DY026A in August 2014, as part of the UK Shelf Sea Biogeochemistry research programme.

Samples for DIC and TA were collected from the water samplers via silicone tubing, following established best-practice protocols (Dickson et al., 2007). The sample bottles (250 ml borosilicate glass bottles with ground glass stoppers) were thoroughly rinsed with excess sample directly before filling until overflowing with seawater, taking care not to generate or trap any air bubbles. A 2.5 ml air headspace and 50 µl of saturated mercuric chloride solution were introduced to each bottle before sealing shut with Apiezon L grease and tape. The samples were stored in the dark until analysis.

All measurements of both DIC and TA were calibrated using batches 136 and 142 certified reference material (CRM) obtained from Prof AG Dickson (Scripps Institution of Oceanography, USA) (Dickson et al., 2003). DIC samples were measured using a VINDTA 3C #024 and #038 (Marianda, Germany) which draws a 20 ml subsample, again mixes with excess 10% phosphoric acid and carries CO2 out with nitrogen gas, but measurement is instead by colourimetric titration.

TA samples were also measured using a VINDTA 3C #024 and #038 (Marianda, Germany) which draws a 80-100 ml subsample and performs potentiometric titration with 0.1M HCl; TA is calculated from titration results via a modified Gran plot technique (Bradshaw et al., 1981).

The CTD package was configured as follows:

Stainless Steel CTD

References Cited

A.G. Dickson, J.D. Afghan and G.C. Anderson, 2003. Reference materials for oceanic CO2 analysis: a method for the certification of total alkalinity. Mar Chem 80. doi:10.1016/S0304-4203(02)00133-0

A.L. Bradshaw, P.G. Brewer, D.K. Shafer and R.T. Williams, 1981. Measurements of total carbon dioxide and alkalinity by potentiometric titration in the GEOSECS program. Earth Planet Sci Lett 55. doi:10.1016/0012-821X(81)90090-X

A.G. Dickson, C.L. Sabine and J.R. Christian, 2007. Guide to best practices for ocean CO2 measurements. PICES Special Publication 3. pp 191

M.P. Humphreys, 2015. Calculating seawater total alkalinity from open-cell titration data using a modified Gran plot technique, in: Measurements and Concepts in Marine Carbonate Chemistry, PhD thesis, Ocean and Earth Science, University of Southampton, UK, pp. 25-44

BODC Data Processing Procedures

Data were provided in an Excel spreadsheet and archived at BODC. The file contained the water sample data from CTD bottles. Data received were loaded into the BODC database using established BODC data banking procedures. The data were loaded into BODC's database without any changes.

The originator variables were mapped to appropriate BODC parameter codes as follows:

Originator's Variable Units Description BODC Parameter Code Units Comments
DIC µmol/kg Concentration of total inorganic carbon {TCO2 CAS 7440-44-0} per unit mass of the water body [dissolved plus reactive particulate phase] TCO2MSXX µmol/kg -
TA µmol/kg Total alkalinity per unit mass of the water body MDMAP014 µmol/kg -

Data Quality Report

Bad results resulting from technical issues during analysis have been removed from these results, so there are no recognised issues (Originator's assessment).

Problem Report

None. (BODC assessment).


Project Information

Shelf Sea Biogeochemistry (SSB) Programme Work Package 1: CaNDyFloSS

Carbon and Nutrient Dynamics and Fluxes over Shelf Systems (CaNDyFloSS) is a £2.76 million component of the Natural Environment Research Council (NERC) Shelf Sea Biogeochemistry (SSB) research programme, running from 2013 to 2017. It is jointly funded by NERC and the Department for Environment, Food and Rural Affairs (DEFRA). The aim of the research is to perform a comprehensive study of the cycling of nutrients and carbon throughout the water column over the whole north-west European shelf. This will allow the fluxes of nutrients and carbon between the shelf and the deep ocean and atmosphere to be quantified, establishing the role of the north-west European continental shelf in the global carbon cycle.

Background

Shelf seas are the primary regions of human marine resource exploitation, including both renewable and fossil fuel energy sources, recreation, trade and food production. They provide 90% of global fish catches which form an important source of food to much of the global population. They also play an important role in the ecosystem services provided by the oceans as a whole, in particular in storing carbon away from the atmosphere.

Physical and biochemical processes in shelf seas influence the removal of CO2 from the atmosphere and the subsequent storage of carbon in the deep ocean. Biological growth draws carbon out of the water, which is then replaced by carbon in CO2 from the atmosphere. In the shelf seas this growth is supported by terrestrial and open ocean sources of nutrients, implying intimate roles for both the terrestrial biosphere and the open ocean environment in regulating shelf sea climate services. The oceans can also be a major source or sink for other greenhouse gases, including nitrous oxide (N2O), with the shallow shelf sea thought to play a key role.

The spatial extent of the submerged continental shelves varies greatly. The NW European shelf sea is one of the largest and hence is likely to play a significant role in marine biogeochemical cycling, alongside providing a useful model for other systems. However, even in this relatively well studied region, there is a lack of detailed understanding of the principal controls on the cycling of carbon and the major nutrient elements, nitrogen, phosphorus and silicon. Consequently it is also difficult to predict how the cycling of these elements and hence the carbon removal they support may be altered by ongoing and potential future global change. This work package aims to address these uncertainties through a comprehensive study of the cycling of the major nutrients and carbon throughout the water column over the NW European shelf sea system.

Further details are available on the SSB website.

Participants

9 different organisations are directly involved in research for SSB Work Package 1. These institutions are

  • Centre for Environment, Fisheries and Aquaculture Science (Cefas)
  • National Oceanography Centre (NOC)
  • Plymouth Marine Laboratory (PML)
  • Scottish Association for Marine Science (SAMS) / Scottish Marine Institute (SMI)
  • University of Aberdeen
  • University of Bangor
  • University of East Anglia (UEA)
  • University of Liverpool
  • University of Southampton

In addition, there are third party institutions carrying out sampling work for SSB Work Package 1, but who are not involved in the programme itself. These are:

  • The Agri-Food and Biosciences Institute (AFBI)
  • Irish Marine Institute (MI)
  • Marine Science Scotland (MSS)

Objectives

Two overarching objectives are defined for this Work Package.

  • Objective 1: Estimate the size of the continental shelf carbon pump over the whole north-west European shelf.
    This will consist of two principal activities. (1) Over a 12 month period, observations of air-sea CO2 fluxes will be made to provide a synoptic estimate of the magnitude of carbon update by the whole shelf system. (2) Concentrations of carbon (C), nitrogen (N), phosphate (P) and silicate (Si) will be estimated in water flowing on and off the shelf. These estimates will be coupled to estimates of flow and dispersion along the shelf edge, through collaboration with the NERC Fluxes across Sloping Topography of the North East Atlantic (FASTNEt) programme to allow an observational estimate of the net off-shelf transport of C, N, P and Si.

  • Objective 2: Determine the relative importance of external nutrient sources and internal biogeochemical cycling in maintaining the continental shelf pump.
    Estimates of the flux of nutrients and carbon generated in Objective 1 will be used to determine the estimation of any excess of on-shelf nutrient supply, relative to that of carbon. Work Package 1 will then quantify the processes which govern internal biogeochemical cycling by measuring the uptake ratios of N, P, Si and C into phytoplankton and the element and energy balance of organic matter production by autotrophs. Potential modifications to the relative concentrations and uptake of C, N, P and Si in the thermocline and sediment food webs will also be assessed, as will the relative importance of microbial and zooplankton turnover in controlling C, N, P and Si.

Fieldwork and data collection

Data for Objective 1 will be provided using pCO2 systems aboard third party vessels and ferry boxes, along with measurements made through the FASTNEt programme and through the Work Package 1 process cruises detailed below. The third party cruises will be undertaken by Cefas, MI, MSS, University of Bangor and AFBI, spanning the shelf seas and shelf-edges around the United Kingdom and the Republic of Ireland.

The Work Package 1 process cruises will provide data for Objective 1 and Objective 2 and are listed in the table below. The study area is the marine shelf (and shelf-edge) of the Celtic Sea. Work will be carried out on board the NERC research vessels RRS Discovery and RRS James Cook. These cruises will focus on the physics and biogeochemistry of the benthic and pelagic zones of the water column, primarily around four main sampling sites in this area.

Cruise identifier Research ship Cruise dates Work packages
JC105 RRS James Cook June 2014 WP 1, WP 2 and WP 3
DY026 RRS Discovery August 2014 WP1, WP 2 and WP 3
DY018 RRS Discovery November - December 2014 WP 1 and WP 3
DY029 RRS Discovery April 2015 WP 1 and WP 3
DY033 RRS Discovery July 2015 WP 1 and WP 3

Activities will include Conductivity Temperature and Depth (CTD) deployments, Acoustic Doppler Current Profilers (ADCP) surveys, moorings and wire-walker deployments, autonomous gliders and submersible surveys, Marine Snow Catcher particulate matter analysis, plankton net hauls and laboratory incubations with sea water samples.


Data Activity or Cruise Information

Data Activity

Start Date (yyyy-mm-dd) 2014-08-07
End Date (yyyy-mm-dd) 2014-08-07
Organization Undertaking ActivityNational Oceanography Centre, Southampton
Country of OrganizationUnited Kingdom
Originator's Data Activity IdentifierDY026A_CTD_044
Platform Categorylowered unmanned submersible

No Document Information Held for the Series

Related Data Activity activities are detailed in Appendix 1

Cruise

Cruise Name DY026A
Departure Date 2014-08-03
Arrival Date 2014-08-14
Principal Scientist(s)Richard Sanders (National Oceanography Centre, Southampton)
Ship RRS Discovery

Complete Cruise Metadata Report is available here


Fixed Station Information

Fixed Station Information

Station NameCS2
CategoryOffshore area
Latitude48° 33.23' N
Longitude9° 29.17' W
Water depth below MSL200.0 m

Physical-Biological Control of New Production within the Seasonal Thermocline: Fixed Station CS2

This station is positioned close to the edge of the north-west European shelf edge (see figure below). It was first visited by the RRS James Clark Ross (JR98) in 2003 and then by the RRS Charles Darwin (CD173) in 2005. This station was then re-visited in 2014 during the RRS Discovery cruise DY018, as part of work package I of the Shelf Seas Biogeochemistry project. The station has a mean water depth 201 m at the following co-ordinates:

Box Corner Latitude Longitude
North-west corner 48.5838° -9.5497°
South-east corner 48.4998° -9.4364°

The position of this station relative to the other sites visited during JR98, CD173 and DY018 can be seen from the figure below.

BODC image

The following table describes which sites were visited during which cruises

JB3 Bank 2 OB IS1b CS1 CS2 CS3 U2 Candyfloss/CCS Benthic A Benthic H Benthic I Benthic G East of Haig Fras Nymph Bank Celtic Deep East of Celtic Deep
JR98 - - - X X X X X - - - - - - - - -
CD173 X X X - - - - X - - - - - - - - -
DY018 - - - - - X - - X X X X X X X X X

The deployment and sampling history, to date, for this station is summarised below:

Sampling History

JR98 CD173 DY018
CTD casts 30 15 15
Free-fall light yo-yo profiles - 153 -
Profiling radiometer - 16 -
Zooplankton net hauls - - 32
Box cores - - 5
Marine snow catcher deployments - - 17
Stand Alone Pump Systems (SAPS) - - 2

Mooring deployments

Latitude Longitude Water depth (m) Moored instrument Deployment date Recovery date Deployment cruise Recovery cruise Comments
48.532° -9.463° 200 Surface temperature toroid 2003-07-28 2003-08-12 JR98 JR98 -
48.532° -9.463° 200 Thermistor chain throughout water column 2003-07-28 2003-08-12 JR98 JR98 -
48.532° -9.463° 200 Sub-surface 600 kHz ADCP 2003-07-28 2003-08-12 JR98 JR98 -
48.532° -9.463° 200 Aanderaa RCM7 current meter/CTD 2003-07-28 2003-08-12 JR98 JR98 -
48.532° -9.463° 200 Seabed frame 150 kHz ADCP 2003-07-28 2003-08-12 JR98 JR98 -
48.532° -9.463° 200 Seabed frame 300 kHz ADCP 2003-07-28 2003-08-12 JR98 JR98 -
48.571° -9.509° 200 Thermistor chain throughout water column 2005-07-17 2005-07-24 CD173 CD173 -
48.573° -9.51° 194 Sub-surface 300 kHz ADCP 2005-07-17 2005-07-24 CD173 CD173 -
48.572° -9.508° 196 Seabed frame 300 kHz ADCP 2005-07-17 2005-07-24 CD173 CD173 -
48.571° -9.507° 202 Seabed frame 150 kHz ADCP 2005-07-17 2005-07-24 CD173 CD173 -
- - 205 T-F chain 2014-11-17 09:03 UTC 2014-11-19 17:07 UTC DY018 DY018 -

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: DY026A_CTD_044

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
2127518Water sample data2014-08-07 11:29:3048.57648 N, 9.5154 WRRS Discovery DY026A

Appendix 2: CS2

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
1106504CTD or STD cast2003-07-27 21:58:0248.49983 N, 9.54967 WRRS James Clark Ross JR20030725 (JR98)
1106528CTD or STD cast2003-07-29 02:56:5948.538 N, 9.46383 WRRS James Clark Ross JR20030725 (JR98)
1106541CTD or STD cast2003-07-29 03:58:0248.538 N, 9.46417 WRRS James Clark Ross JR20030725 (JR98)
1106553CTD or STD cast2003-07-29 05:20:5948.538 N, 9.46417 WRRS James Clark Ross JR20030725 (JR98)
1106565CTD or STD cast2003-07-29 06:01:0048.538 N, 9.464 WRRS James Clark Ross JR20030725 (JR98)
1106577CTD or STD cast2003-07-29 06:58:0248.538 N, 9.46417 WRRS James Clark Ross JR20030725 (JR98)
1106589CTD or STD cast2003-07-29 08:01:5848.538 N, 9.464 WRRS James Clark Ross JR20030725 (JR98)
1106590CTD or STD cast2003-07-29 09:17:0048.538 N, 9.46417 WRRS James Clark Ross JR20030725 (JR98)
1106608CTD or STD cast2003-07-29 10:22:5748.538 N, 9.464 WRRS James Clark Ross JR20030725 (JR98)
1106621CTD or STD cast2003-07-29 11:15:0448.53783 N, 9.464 WRRS James Clark Ross JR20030725 (JR98)
1106633CTD or STD cast2003-07-29 12:28:5748.53783 N, 9.464 WRRS James Clark Ross JR20030725 (JR98)
1106645CTD or STD cast2003-07-29 13:37:0348.53783 N, 9.464 WRRS James Clark Ross JR20030725 (JR98)
1106657CTD or STD cast2003-07-29 14:06:0048.53783 N, 9.464 WRRS James Clark Ross JR20030725 (JR98)
1106669CTD or STD cast2003-07-29 15:00:0048.538 N, 9.464 WRRS James Clark Ross JR20030725 (JR98)
1106670CTD or STD cast2003-07-29 16:12:0048.538 N, 9.464 WRRS James Clark Ross JR20030725 (JR98)
1106682CTD or STD cast2003-07-29 17:00:5848.538 N, 9.46417 WRRS James Clark Ross JR20030725 (JR98)
1106694CTD or STD cast2003-07-29 18:00:0048.53783 N, 9.464 WRRS James Clark Ross JR20030725 (JR98)
1106701CTD or STD cast2003-07-29 18:58:0248.53783 N, 9.46417 WRRS James Clark Ross JR20030725 (JR98)
1106713CTD or STD cast2003-07-29 19:59:5748.53783 N, 9.46417 WRRS James Clark Ross JR20030725 (JR98)
1106725CTD or STD cast2003-07-29 20:57:5948.53783 N, 9.464 WRRS James Clark Ross JR20030725 (JR98)
1106737CTD or STD cast2003-07-29 21:57:0148.538 N, 9.464 WRRS James Clark Ross JR20030725 (JR98)
1106749CTD or STD cast2003-07-29 23:07:0048.538 N, 9.46383 WRRS James Clark Ross JR20030725 (JR98)
1106750CTD or STD cast2003-07-29 23:56:5948.53783 N, 9.464 WRRS James Clark Ross JR20030725 (JR98)
1106762CTD or STD cast2003-07-30 00:58:0248.53783 N, 9.464 WRRS James Clark Ross JR20030725 (JR98)
1106774CTD or STD cast2003-07-30 01:57:0448.53783 N, 9.464 WRRS James Clark Ross JR20030725 (JR98)
1106786CTD or STD cast2003-07-30 02:56:5948.53833 N, 9.46317 WRRS James Clark Ross JR20030725 (JR98)
1106798CTD or STD cast2003-07-30 03:59:0248.538 N, 9.464 WRRS James Clark Ross JR20030725 (JR98)
1106805CTD or STD cast2003-07-30 05:09:0148.538 N, 9.464 WRRS James Clark Ross JR20030725 (JR98)
1108326CTD or STD cast2003-08-12 06:46:5748.52383 N, 9.45533 WRRS James Clark Ross JR20030725 (JR98)
1108338CTD or STD cast2003-08-12 11:25:0048.52883 N, 9.47533 WRRS James Clark Ross JR20030725 (JR98)
737376CTD or STD cast2005-07-17 18:57:0048.575 N, 9.51433 WRRS Charles Darwin CD173
737388CTD or STD cast2005-07-17 21:14:0048.57517 N, 9.515 WRRS Charles Darwin CD173
737407CTD or STD cast2005-07-17 23:07:0048.57617 N, 9.51083 WRRS Charles Darwin CD173
737419CTD or STD cast2005-07-18 00:58:0048.57533 N, 9.50133 WRRS Charles Darwin CD173
737420CTD or STD cast2005-07-18 07:19:0048.568 N, 9.50233 WRRS Charles Darwin CD173
1174790PAR radiance and irradiance2005-07-18 09:32:4748.532 N, 9.463 WRRS Charles Darwin CD173
1174808PAR radiance and irradiance2005-07-18 09:39:4548.532 N, 9.463 WRRS Charles Darwin CD173
737432CTD or STD cast2005-07-18 12:02:0048.56817 N, 9.5115 WRRS Charles Darwin CD173
1174821PAR radiance and irradiance2005-07-18 14:02:4548.532 N, 9.463 WRRS Charles Darwin CD173
1174833PAR radiance and irradiance2005-07-18 14:07:2248.532 N, 9.463 WRRS Charles Darwin CD173
737444CTD or STD cast2005-07-18 16:22:0048.5705 N, 9.49217 WRRS Charles Darwin CD173
737456CTD or STD cast2005-07-18 18:39:0048.56867 N, 9.48233 WRRS Charles Darwin CD173
737616CTD or STD cast2005-07-23 03:00:0048.57167 N, 9.48967 WRRS Charles Darwin CD173
737628CTD or STD cast2005-07-23 07:18:0048.57083 N, 9.48733 WRRS Charles Darwin CD173
1174845PAR radiance and irradiance2005-07-23 09:10:3748.532 N, 9.463 WRRS Charles Darwin CD173
1174857PAR radiance and irradiance2005-07-23 09:15:5148.532 N, 9.463 WRRS Charles Darwin CD173
1174869PAR radiance and irradiance2005-07-23 09:22:3748.532 N, 9.463 WRRS Charles Darwin CD173
737641CTD or STD cast2005-07-23 10:32:0048.5785 N, 9.50317 WRRS Charles Darwin CD173
737653CTD or STD cast2005-07-23 15:25:0048.57733 N, 9.48133 WRRS Charles Darwin CD173
1174870PAR radiance and irradiance2005-07-23 17:08:3248.532 N, 9.463 WRRS Charles Darwin CD173
1174882PAR radiance and irradiance2005-07-23 18:40:3548.532 N, 9.463 WRRS Charles Darwin CD173
737665CTD or STD cast2005-07-23 19:59:0048.57617 N, 9.48967 WRRS Charles Darwin CD173
737677CTD or STD cast2005-07-23 23:07:0048.58083 N, 9.50617 WRRS Charles Darwin CD173
737689CTD or STD cast2005-07-24 04:03:0048.5825 N, 9.512 WRRS Charles Darwin CD173
1371585CTD or STD cast2014-03-28 15:49:0048.57113 N, 9.5127 WRRS Discovery DY008
1336711Water sample data2014-03-28 15:55:0048.57113 N, 9.5127 WRRS Discovery DY008
2117548Water sample data2014-03-28 15:55:0048.57113 N, 9.5127 WRRS Discovery DY008
2119101Water sample data2014-03-28 15:55:0048.57113 N, 9.5127 WRRS Discovery DY008
1373057CTD or STD cast2014-08-07 06:04:0048.57 N, 9.51 WRRS Discovery DY026A
2127506Water sample data2014-08-07 06:20:0048.5699 N, 9.51027 WRRS Discovery DY026A
1373069CTD or STD cast2014-08-07 11:10:0048.57633 N, 9.51617 WRRS Discovery DY026A
2127518Water sample data2014-08-07 11:29:3048.57648 N, 9.5154 WRRS Discovery DY026A
1373070CTD or STD cast2014-08-07 15:00:0048.57167 N, 9.505 WRRS Discovery DY026A
2127531Water sample data2014-08-07 15:17:0048.5711 N, 9.5046 WRRS Discovery DY026A
1371849CTD or STD cast2014-11-14 13:15:0048.571 N, 9.50947 WRRS Discovery DY018 (GApr04)
2117689Water sample data2014-11-14 13:23:3048.57106 N, 9.50945 WRRS Discovery DY018 (GApr04)
1749283Fluorescence or pigments2014-11-17 10:00:0048.57086 N, 9.5097 WRRS Discovery DY018 (GApr04)
1749295Fluorescence or pigments2014-11-17 10:00:0048.57086 N, 9.5097 WRRS Discovery DY018 (GApr04)
1749302Fluorescence or pigments2014-11-17 10:00:0048.57086 N, 9.5097 WRRS Discovery DY018 (GApr04)
1749314Fluorescence or pigments2014-11-17 10:00:0048.57086 N, 9.5097 WRRS Discovery DY018 (GApr04)
1749326Fluorescence or pigments2014-11-17 10:00:0048.57086 N, 9.5097 WRRS Discovery DY018 (GApr04)
1749338Hydrography time series at depth2014-11-17 10:00:0048.57086 N, 9.5097 WRRS Discovery DY018 (GApr04)
1749351Hydrography time series at depth2014-11-17 10:00:0048.57086 N, 9.5097 WRRS Discovery DY018 (GApr04)
1749363Hydrography time series at depth2014-11-17 10:00:0048.57086 N, 9.5097 WRRS Discovery DY018 (GApr04)
1749375Hydrography time series at depth2014-11-17 10:00:0048.57086 N, 9.5097 WRRS Discovery DY018 (GApr04)
1749399Hydrography time series at depth2014-11-17 10:00:0048.57086 N, 9.5097 WRRS Discovery DY018 (GApr04)
1749406Hydrography time series at depth2014-11-17 10:00:0048.57086 N, 9.5097 WRRS Discovery DY018 (GApr04)
1749418Hydrography time series at depth2014-11-17 10:00:0048.57086 N, 9.5097 WRRS Discovery DY018 (GApr04)
1749431Hydrography time series at depth2014-11-17 10:00:0048.57086 N, 9.5097 WRRS Discovery DY018 (GApr04)
1749443Hydrography time series at depth2014-11-17 10:00:0048.57086 N, 9.5097 WRRS Discovery DY018 (GApr04)
1749455Hydrography time series at depth2014-11-17 10:00:0048.57086 N, 9.5097 WRRS Discovery DY018 (GApr04)
1749467Hydrography time series at depth2014-11-17 10:00:0048.57086 N, 9.5097 WRRS Discovery DY018 (GApr04)
1749479Hydrography time series at depth2014-11-17 10:00:0048.57086 N, 9.5097 WRRS Discovery DY018 (GApr04)
1749480Hydrography time series at depth2014-11-17 10:00:0048.57086 N, 9.5097 WRRS Discovery DY018 (GApr04)
1749492Hydrography time series at depth2014-11-17 10:00:0048.57086 N, 9.5097 WRRS Discovery DY018 (GApr04)
1749511Hydrography time series at depth2014-11-17 10:00:0048.57086 N, 9.5097 WRRS Discovery DY018 (GApr04)
1749523Hydrography time series at depth2014-11-17 10:00:0048.57086 N, 9.5097 WRRS Discovery DY018 (GApr04)
1749535Hydrography time series at depth2014-11-17 10:00:0048.57086 N, 9.5097 WRRS Discovery DY018 (GApr04)
1749547Hydrography time series at depth2014-11-17 10:00:0048.57086 N, 9.5097 WRRS Discovery DY018 (GApr04)
1749559Hydrography time series at depth2014-11-17 10:00:0048.57086 N, 9.5097 WRRS Discovery DY018 (GApr04)
1749560Hydrography time series at depth2014-11-17 10:00:0048.57086 N, 9.5097 WRRS Discovery DY018 (GApr04)
1749572Hydrography time series at depth2014-11-17 10:00:0048.57086 N, 9.5097 WRRS Discovery DY018 (GApr04)
1749584Hydrography time series at depth2014-11-17 10:00:0048.57086 N, 9.5097 WRRS Discovery DY018 (GApr04)
1749596Hydrography time series at depth2014-11-17 10:00:0048.57086 N, 9.5097 WRRS Discovery DY018 (GApr04)
1749387Hydrography time series at depth2014-11-17 10:00:3048.57086 N, 9.5097 WRRS Discovery DY018 (GApr04)
1371978CTD or STD cast2014-11-17 12:25:0048.57087 N, 9.50968 WRRS Discovery DY018 (GApr04)
2117690Water sample data2014-11-17 12:35:3048.57086 N, 9.50969 WRRS Discovery DY018 (GApr04)
2119832Water sample data2014-11-17 12:35:3048.57086 N, 9.50969 WRRS Discovery DY018 (GApr04)
2126804Water sample data2014-11-17 12:35:3048.57086 N, 9.50969 WRRS Discovery DY018 (GApr04)
2136614Water sample data2014-11-17 12:35:3048.57086 N, 9.50969 WRRS Discovery DY018 (GApr04)
1371991CTD or STD cast2014-11-17 15:42:0048.57087 N, 9.50968 WRRS Discovery DY018 (GApr04)
1372005CTD or STD cast2014-11-18 05:16:0048.57107 N, 9.51052 WRRS Discovery DY018 (GApr04)
2117708Water sample data2014-11-18 05:28:0048.57107 N, 9.51051 WRRS Discovery DY018 (GApr04)
2126816Water sample data2014-11-18 05:28:0048.57107 N, 9.51051 WRRS Discovery DY018 (GApr04)
2136626Water sample data2014-11-18 05:28:0048.57107 N, 9.51051 WRRS Discovery DY018 (GApr04)
1372017CTD or STD cast2014-11-18 08:10:0048.57127 N, 9.51102 WRRS Discovery DY018 (GApr04)
1372460CTD or STD cast2014-11-18 09:15:0048.57127 N, 9.51102 WRRS Discovery DY018 (GApr04)
2120058Water sample data2014-11-18 09:19:0048.57127 N, 9.51102 WRRS Discovery DY018 (GApr04)
2121479Water sample data2014-11-18 09:19:0048.57127 N, 9.51102 WRRS Discovery DY018 (GApr04)
2127033Water sample data2014-11-18 09:19:0048.57127 N, 9.51102 WRRS Discovery DY018 (GApr04)
1372029CTD or STD cast2014-11-18 10:02:0048.57127 N, 9.51102 WRRS Discovery DY018 (GApr04)
1372030CTD or STD cast2014-11-18 12:11:0048.57123 N, 9.51103 WRRS Discovery DY018 (GApr04)
2117721Water sample data2014-11-18 12:21:3048.57125 N, 9.51104 WRRS Discovery DY018 (GApr04)
2119844Water sample data2014-11-18 12:21:3048.57125 N, 9.51104 WRRS Discovery DY018 (GApr04)
2126828Water sample data2014-11-18 12:21:3048.57125 N, 9.51104 WRRS Discovery DY018 (GApr04)
2136638Water sample data2014-11-18 12:21:3048.57125 N, 9.51104 WRRS Discovery DY018 (GApr04)
1372472CTD or STD cast2014-11-19 10:02:0048.57112 N, 9.5095 WRRS Discovery DY018 (GApr04)
2120071Water sample data2014-11-19 10:06:0048.57113 N, 9.50949 WRRS Discovery DY018 (GApr04)
2121480Water sample data2014-11-19 10:06:0048.57113 N, 9.50949 WRRS Discovery DY018 (GApr04)
2127045Water sample data2014-11-19 10:06:0048.57113 N, 9.50949 WRRS Discovery DY018 (GApr04)
1372042CTD or STD cast2014-11-19 12:17:0048.57113 N, 9.50952 WRRS Discovery DY018 (GApr04)
2117733Water sample data2014-11-19 12:27:0048.57112 N, 9.50949 WRRS Discovery DY018 (GApr04)
2119856Water sample data2014-11-19 12:27:0048.57112 N, 9.50949 WRRS Discovery DY018 (GApr04)
2126841Water sample data2014-11-19 12:27:0048.57112 N, 9.50949 WRRS Discovery DY018 (GApr04)
2136651Water sample data2014-11-19 12:27:0048.57112 N, 9.50949 WRRS Discovery DY018 (GApr04)
1372054CTD or STD cast2014-11-19 13:58:0048.57112 N, 9.50953 WRRS Discovery DY018 (GApr04)
1372066CTD or STD cast2014-11-20 02:11:0048.57352 N, 9.50627 WRRS Discovery DY018 (GApr04)
2117745Water sample data2014-11-20 02:21:3048.57351 N, 9.50628 WRRS Discovery DY018 (GApr04)
2126853Water sample data2014-11-20 02:21:3048.57351 N, 9.50628 WRRS Discovery DY018 (GApr04)
2136663Water sample data2014-11-20 02:21:3048.57351 N, 9.50628 WRRS Discovery DY018 (GApr04)
1372238CTD or STD cast2014-11-24 13:17:0048.571 N, 9.50945 WRRS Discovery DY018 (GApr04)
1372251CTD or STD cast2014-11-24 14:09:0048.571 N, 9.50947 WRRS Discovery DY018 (GApr04)
2119893Water sample data2014-11-24 14:12:3048.571 N, 9.50946 WRRS Discovery DY018 (GApr04)
1624461CTD or STD cast2015-03-24 05:51:0048.57065 N, 9.5093 WRRS Discovery DY021
2118091Water sample data2015-03-24 05:59:0048.57066 N, 9.5093 WRRS Discovery DY021
2127358Water sample data2015-03-24 05:59:0048.57066 N, 9.5093 WRRS Discovery DY021
1626271CTD or STD cast2015-04-09 02:07:0048.57113 N, 9.51593 WRRS Discovery DY029 (GApr04)
1626283CTD or STD cast2015-04-09 07:07:0048.57117 N, 9.50992 WRRS Discovery DY029 (GApr04)
1626258CTD or STD cast2015-04-09 18:06:0048.5742 N, 9.50827 WRRS Discovery DY029 (GApr04)
2136780Water sample data2015-04-10 02:23:0048.57114 N, 9.50994 WRRS Discovery DY029 (GApr04)
2118299Water sample data2015-04-10 07:25:0048.57116 N, 9.5099 WRRS Discovery DY029 (GApr04)
1626523CTD or STD cast2015-04-17 07:09:0048.57188 N, 9.51053 WRRS Discovery DY029 (GApr04)
2118411Water sample data2015-04-17 07:14:3048.57057 N, 9.51103 WRRS Discovery DY029 (GApr04)
2136903Water sample data2015-04-17 07:14:3048.57057 N, 9.51103 WRRS Discovery DY029 (GApr04)
2118472Water sample data2015-04-24 02:23:3048.57129 N, 9.50945 WRRS Discovery DY029 (GApr04)
2136940Water sample data2015-04-24 02:23:3048.57129 N, 9.50945 WRRS Discovery DY029 (GApr04)
1626812CTD or STD cast2015-04-24 02:41:0048.57132 N, 9.50962 WRRS Discovery DY029 (GApr04)
1627378CTD or STD cast2015-04-24 05:43:0048.52172 N, 9.45178 WRRS Discovery DY029 (GApr04)
1626824CTD or STD cast2015-04-24 09:04:0048.60553 N, 9.44478 WRRS Discovery DY029 (GApr04)
2118484Water sample data2015-04-24 13:35:3048.5697 N, 9.50944 WRRS Discovery DY029 (GApr04)
2136952Water sample data2015-04-24 13:35:3048.5697 N, 9.50944 WRRS Discovery DY029 (GApr04)
1626836CTD or STD cast2015-04-24 13:49:0048.56968 N, 9.50942 WRRS Discovery DY029 (GApr04)
1626848CTD or STD cast2015-04-24 15:45:0048.5666 N, 9.50927 WRRS Discovery DY029 (GApr04)
1627391CTD or STD cast2015-04-24 16:27:0048.56667 N, 9.50933 WRRS Discovery DY029 (GApr04)
1626861CTD or STD cast2015-04-24 17:25:0048.56647 N, 9.50928 WRRS Discovery DY029 (GApr04)
1624983CTD or STD cast2015-05-22 14:55:0048.57023 N, 9.5104 WRRS Discovery DY030
2132545Water sample data2015-05-22 15:11:0048.57023 N, 9.51038 WRRS Discovery DY030
2137838Water sample data2015-05-22 15:11:0048.57023 N, 9.51038 WRRS Discovery DY030
1624645CTD or STD cast2015-05-22 16:13:0048.57023 N, 9.5104 WRRS Discovery DY030
2123413Water sample data2015-05-22 16:26:3048.57023 N, 9.51039 WRRS Discovery DY030
1625199CTD or STD cast2015-07-19 01:15:0048.57085 N, 9.5098 WRRS Discovery DY033 (GApr04)
2118693Water sample data2015-07-19 01:21:3048.57086 N, 9.5099 WRRS Discovery DY033 (GApr04)
2120279Water sample data2015-07-19 01:21:3048.57086 N, 9.5099 WRRS Discovery DY033 (GApr04)
2123566Water sample data2015-07-19 01:21:3048.57086 N, 9.5099 WRRS Discovery DY033 (GApr04)
2137931Water sample data2015-07-19 01:21:3048.57086 N, 9.5099 WRRS Discovery DY033 (GApr04)
1625206CTD or STD cast2015-07-19 11:05:0048.57113 N, 9.50987 WRRS Discovery DY033 (GApr04)
2123578Water sample data2015-07-19 11:17:0048.57115 N, 9.50986 WRRS Discovery DY033 (GApr04)
2137943Water sample data2015-07-19 11:17:0048.57115 N, 9.50986 WRRS Discovery DY033 (GApr04)
1625218CTD or STD cast2015-07-19 15:50:0048.57122 N, 9.50985 WRRS Discovery DY033 (GApr04)
1625231CTD or STD cast2015-07-20 02:12:0048.57083 N, 9.50967 WRRS Discovery DY033 (GApr04)
2118700Water sample data2015-07-20 02:24:0048.57092 N, 9.50971 WRRS Discovery DY033 (GApr04)
2123591Water sample data2015-07-20 02:24:0048.57092 N, 9.50971 WRRS Discovery DY033 (GApr04)
2137955Water sample data2015-07-20 02:24:0048.57092 N, 9.50971 WRRS Discovery DY033 (GApr04)
1625685CTD or STD cast2015-07-20 03:29:0048.57083 N, 9.50967 WRRS Discovery DY033 (GApr04)
2120440Water sample data2015-07-20 03:39:0048.57093 N, 9.50975 WRRS Discovery DY033 (GApr04)
2123947Water sample data2015-07-20 03:39:0048.57093 N, 9.50975 WRRS Discovery DY033 (GApr04)
1625243CTD or STD cast2015-07-20 05:18:0048.57083 N, 9.50967 WRRS Discovery DY033 (GApr04)
1625255CTD or STD cast2015-07-20 10:04:0048.5711 N, 9.5093 WRRS Discovery DY033 (GApr04)
2120280Water sample data2015-07-20 11:15:0048.5711 N, 9.50929 WRRS Discovery DY033 (GApr04)
2123609Water sample data2015-07-20 11:15:0048.5711 N, 9.50929 WRRS Discovery DY033 (GApr04)
2137967Water sample data2015-07-20 11:15:0048.5711 N, 9.50929 WRRS Discovery DY033 (GApr04)
1625267CTD or STD cast2015-07-20 15:26:0048.57107 N, 9.50897 WRRS Discovery DY033 (GApr04)
2119752Water sample data2015-08-31 08:42:3048.57077 N, 9.50961 WRRS Discovery DY034
2122317Water sample data2015-08-31 10:10:0048.57082 N, 9.51127 WRRS Discovery DY034