Dataset: Mixed-layer averaged O2 and optically-based POC from Profiling Floats in the North Pacific from R/V Kilo Moana from June to September 2017

This dataset has not been validatedData not availableVersion 0 (2020-04-10)Dataset Type:Cruise Results

Principal Investigator: Angelicque E. White (Oregon State University)

Co-Principal Investigator: Paul Quay (University of Washington)

BCO-DMO Data Manager: Mathew Biddle (Woods Hole Oceanographic Institution)


Project: Collaborative Research: Measuring Ocean Productivity from the Diurnal Change in Oxygen and Carbon (ProdChangeO2Carb)


Abstract

Time series of Winkler calibrated mixed-layer averaged O2 concentrations obtained from repeated float profiles. The cruise (KM1713) transited from Seward, AK to Honolulu, HI from 3-26 September 2017 onboard the R/V Kilo Moana. Six extended stations (Stn), three in subpolar waters (Stn 1 at 55°N, Stn 2 at 50°N, and Stn 3 at 46°N), one in the transition zone between subpolar and subtropical waters (Stn 4 at 42°N), and two in the subtropical gyre (Stn 5 at 34°N, and Stn 6 at 24°N) were occupied for...

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The cruise (KM1713) transited from Seward, AK to Honolulu, HI from 3-26 September 2017 onboard the R/V Kilo Moana. Six extended stations (Stn), three in subpolar waters (Stn 1 at 55°N, Stn 2 at 50°N, and Stn 3 at 46°N), one in the transition zone between subpolar and subtropical waters (Stn 4 at 42°N), and two in the subtropical gyre (Stn 5 at 34°N, and Stn 6 at 24°N) were occupied for 2-3 day periods during which continuous measurements of conductivity, temperature, O2, O2/Ar and beam attenuation were measured continuously on surface seawater supplied via the ships’ intake line and using CTD profiles of conductivity, temperature, pressure, oxygen, and the particulate beam attenuation coefficient conducted at ~2-hr intervals. An autonomous profiling float was deployed for ~ 2 days at four stations, retrieving CTD and oxygen profiles at approximately 3-hour intervals. Another float with same mission design was deployed near station ALOHA (22.45° N, 158° W) during July 2017 to provide mixed-layer averaged O2 near station 6. When available, the ship followed the trajectory of the profiling float, yielding a near-Lagrangian sampling strategy with the aim to minimize horizontal mixing effects.


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