Bottle data along with US GEOTRACES North Atlantic Transect from the R/V Knorr KN204-01 cruise in the subtropical N. Atlantic during 2011 (U.S. GEOTRACES NAT project)

Website: https://www.bco-dmo.org/dataset/3662
Version: 30 January 2013
Version Date: 2013-02-13

Project
» U.S. GEOTRACES North Atlantic Transect (GA03) (U.S. GEOTRACES NAT)

Program
» U.S. GEOTRACES (U.S. GEOTRACES)
ContributorsAffiliationRole
Boyle, Edward A.Massachusetts Institute of Technology (MIT)Principal Investigator, Contact
Gegg, Stephen R.Woods Hole Oceanographic Institution (WHOI BCO-DMO)BCO-DMO Data Manager


Dataset Description

CTD bottle data from 30-ODF/SIOR (Ocean Data Facility 12 bottle, 30 liter Niskin rosette)  GT11 Transect


Methods & Sampling

Refer to KN204-01 A/B  Cruise Report for detailed descriptions of acquisition and processing methodologies


Data Processing Description

Refer to KN204-01 A/B  Cruise Report for detailed descriptions of acquisition and processing methodologies.

Processing Notes:
13 Feb 2013: BCO-DMO corrected the event number of CTD cast 6 at station 18. The correct event number was verified in the original cast sheets.

The restriction on this dataset was removed according to instructions from the Chief Scientist on April 26, 2013.


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Data Files

File
CTD_ODF_Bottle_GT11.csv
(Comma Separated Values (.csv), 524.76 KB)
MD5:20660d716af2d9ba4670378f409a1c51
Primary data file for dataset ID 3662

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Parameters

ParameterDescriptionUnits
cruise_partIdentifier for a segment of a cruise leg, where a leg may have been broken into parts text
EXPOCODEEXPOCODE text
SECT_IDSECT ID text
STNNBRSTNNBR integer
CASTNOCASTNO integer
GEOTRC_EVENTNOGEOTRACES Event Number integer
DATEDate YYYYMMDD
TIMETime HHMM
LATITUDE Latitude (South is negative) decimal degrees
LONGITUDELongitude (West is negative) decimal degrees
GEOTRC_SAMPNOGEOTRC SAMPNO integer
SAMPNOSAMPNO integer
BTLNBRBTLNBR text
BTLNBR_FLAG_WBTLNBR FLAG W integer
BTL_DATEBTL DATE YYYYMMDD
BTL_TIMEBTL TIME HHMM
BTL_LATBTL LAT (South is negative) decimal degrees
BTL_LONBTL LON (West is negative) decimal degrees
BTMDEPTHBTMDEPTH CORR.M
CTDPRSCTDPRS DBARS
CTDDEPTHCTDDEPTH METERS
CTDTMPCTDTMP ITS-90
CTDSALCTDSAL PSS-78
CTDSAL_FLAG_WCTDSAL FLAG W integer
SALNTYSALNTY PSS-78
SALNTY_FLAG_WSALNTY FLAG W integer
CTDOXYCTDOXY UMOL/KG
CTDOXY_FLAG_WCTDOXY FLAG W integer
OXYGENOXYGEN UMOL/KG
OXYGEN_FLAG_WOXYGEN FLAG W integer
SILCATSILCAT UMOL/KG
SILCAT_FLAG_WSILCAT FLAG W integer
NITRATNITRAT UMOL/KG
NITRAT_FLAG_WNITRAT FLAG W integer
NITRITNITRIT UMOL/KG
NITRIT_FLAG_WNITRIT FLAG W integer
PHSPHTPHSPHT UMOL/KG
PHSPHT_FLAG_WPHSPHT FLAG W integer
REFTEMPREFTEMP ITS-90
REFTEMP_FLAG_WREFTEMP FLAG W integer
CFC11CFC-11 PMOL/KG
CFC11_FLAG_WCFC-11 FLAG W integer
CFC12CFC-12 PMOL/KG
CFC12_FLAG_WCFC-12 FLAG W integer
CFC113CFC113 PMOL/KG
CFC113_FLAG_WCFC113 FLAG W integer
SF6SF6 FMOL/KG
SF6_FLAG_WSF6 FLAG W integer
FE_UHFE UH NMOL/L
FE_UH_FLAG_WFE UH FLAG W integer
AL_UHAL UH NMOL/L
AL_UH_FLAG_WAL UH FLAG W integer
MN_UHMN UH NMOL/L
MN_UH_FLAG_WMN UH FLAG W integer
ZN_UHZN UH NMOL/L
ZN_UH_FLAG_WZN UH FLAG W integer
TCARBN_MTCARBN M UMOL/KG
TCARBN_M_FLAG_WTCARBN M FLAG W integer
ALKALI_MALKALI M UMOL/KG
ALKALI_M_FLAG_WALKALI M FLAG W integer
TCARBN_BTCARBN B UMOL/KG
TCARBN_B_FLAG_WTCARBN B FLAG W integer
ALKALI_BALKALI B UMOL/KG
ALKALI_B_FLAG_WALKALI B FLAG W integer
TRITUMTRITUM TU
TRITUM_FLAG_WTRITUM FLAG W integer
HELIUMHELIUM NMOL/KG
HELIUM_FLAG_WHELIUM FLAG W integer
DELHE3DELHE3 PERCNT
DELHE3_FLAG_WDELHE3 FLAG W integer
DELC13DELC13 /MILLE
DELC13_FLAG_WDELC13 FLAG W integer
DELC14DELC14 /MILLE
DELC14_FLAG_WDELC14 FLAG W integer
O17_O217O-O2 /MEGvsAIR
O17_O2_FLAG_W17O-O2 FLAG W integer
OXYAROXYAR /MILLEvsAIR
OXYAR_FLAG_WOXYAR FLAG W integer
DELO17DELO17 /MILLEvsAIR
DELO17_FLAG_WDELO17 FLAG W integer
D15N_minus_NO3D15N-NO3 /MILLEvsAIR
D15N_minus_NO3_FLAG_WD15N-NO3 FLAG W integer
D18O_minus_NO3D18O-NO3 /MILLEvsVSMOW
D18O_minus_NO3_FLAG_WD18O-NO3 FLAG W integer
O18_H2O18O H2O /MILLE
O18_H2O_FLAG_W18O H2O FLAG W integer
SI_SW_DISSSI SW DISS /MILLE
SI_SW_DISS_FLAG_WSI SW DISS FLAG W integer
SI_PMSI PM /MILLE
SI_PM_FLAG_WSI PM FLAG W integer
HPLC_PIGMENTSHPLC PIGMENTS UG/L
HPLC_PIGMENTS_FLAG_WHPLC PIGMENTS FLAG W integer
AP_ACTIVAP ACTIV /HR
AP_ACTIV_FLAG_WAP ACTIV FLAG W integer
CYSTEINECYSTEINE PMOL/L
CYSTEINE_FLAG_WCYSTEINE FLAG W integer
GLUTATHIONEGLUTATHIONE PMOL/L
GLUTATHIONE_FLAG_WGLUTATHIONE FLAG W integer
GAMMA_minus_GLU_minus_CYSTGAMMA-GLU-CYST PMOL/L
GAMMA_minus_GLU_minus_CYST_FLAG_WGAMMA-GLU-CYST FLAG W integer
ARG_minus_CYSARG-CYS PMOL/L
ARG_minus_CYS_FLAG_WARG-CYS FLAG W integer
HOMOCYSTEINEHOMOCYSTEINE PMOL/L
HOMOCYSTEINE_FLAG_WHOMOCYSTEINE FLAG W integer
PHYTOCHELATINSPHYTOCHELATINS PMOL/L
PHYTOCHELATINS_FLAG_WPHYTOCHELATINS FLAG W integer
METALLOTHEIONINEMETALLOTHEIONINE PMOL/L
METALLOTHEIONINE_FLAG_WMETALLOTHEIONINE FLAG W integer
DNA_CHISHOLMDNA CHISHOLM (tbd)
DNA_CHISHOLM_FLAG_WDNA CHISHOLM FLAG W integer
DNA_LAROCHEDNA LAROCHE (tbd)
DNA_LAROCHE_FLAG_WDNA LAROCHE FLAG W integer
BABA NMOL/L
BA_FLAG_WBA FLAG W integer
ND143_to_ND144ND-143/ND-144 RATIO
ND143_to_ND144_FLAG_WND-143/ND-144 FLAG W integer
EPSILON_NDEPSILON ND (tbd)
EPSILON_ND_FLAG_WEPSILON ND FLAG W integer
PO210PO-210 DPM/100L
PO210_FLAG_WPO-210 FLAG W integer
PB210PB-210 DPM/100L
PB210_FLAG_WPB-210 FLAG W integer
RA226RA-226 DPM/100L
RA226_FLAG_WRA-226 FLAG W integer
PA231PA-231 FG/KG
PA231_FLAG_WPA-231 FLAG W integer
TH230TH-230 FG/KG
TH230_FLAG_WTH-230 FLAG W integer
TH232TH-232 PG/KG
TH232_FLAG_WTH-232 FLAG W integer
TH232_COLLOIDSTH-232 COLLOIDS PG/KG
TH232_COLLOIDS_FLAG_WTH-232 COLLOIDS FLAG W integer
TH234TH-234 DPM/L
TH234_FLAG_WTH-234 FLAG W integer
U238U-238 (tbd)
U238_FLAG_WU-238 FLAG W integer
CS137CS-137 BQ/M^3
CS137_FLAG_WCS-137 FLAG W integer
NP237NP-237 MBQ/M^3
NP237_FLAG_WNP-237 FLAG W integer
PU239PU-239 MBQ/M^3
PU239_FLAG_WPU-239 FLAG W integer
PU240PU-240 MBQ/M^3
PU240_FLAG_WPU-240 FLAG W integer
PU240_to_PU239PU-240/PU-239 RATIO
PU240_to_PU239_FLAG_WPU-240/PU-239 FLAG W integer
REE_LA_UHREE LA UH PMOL/KG
REE_LA_UH_FLAG_WREE LA UH FLAG W integer
REE_CE_UHREE CE UH PMOL/KG
REE_CE_UH_FLAG_WREE CE UH FLAG W integer
REE_PR_UHREE PR UH PMOL/KG
REE_PR_UH_FLAG_WREE PR UH FLAG W integer
REE_ND_UHREE ND UH PMOL/KG
REE_ND_UH_FLAG_WREE ND UH FLAG W integer
REE_SM_UHREE SM UH PMOL/KG
REE_SM_UH_FLAG_WREE SM UH FLAG W integer
REE_EU_UHREE EU UH PMOL/KG
REE_EU_UH_FLAG_WREE EU UH FLAG W integer
REE_GD_UHREE GD UH PMOL/KG
REE_GD_UH_FLAG_WREE GD UH FLAG W integer
REE_TB_UHREE TB UH PMOL/KG
REE_TB_UH_FLAG_WREE TB UH FLAG W integer
REE_DY_UHREE DY UH PMOL/KG
REE_DY_UH_FLAG_WREE DY UH FLAG W integer
REE_HO_UHREE HO UH PMOL/KG
REE_HO_UH_FLAG_WREE HO UH FLAG W integer
REE_ER_UHREE ER UH PMOL/KG
REE_ER_UH_FLAG_WREE ER UH FLAG W integer
REE_TM_UHREE TM UH PMOL/KG
REE_TM_UH_FLAG_WREE TM UH FLAG W integer
REE_YB_UHREE YB UH PMOL/KG
REE_YB_UH_FLAG_WREE YB UH FLAG W integer
REE_LU_UHREE LU UH PMOL/KG
REE_LU_UH_FLAG_WREE LU UH FLAG W integer


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Instruments

Dataset-specific Instrument Name
GO-FLO Bottle
Generic Instrument Name
GO-FLO Bottle
Generic Instrument Description
GO-FLO bottle cast used to collect water samples for pigment, nutrient, plankton, etc. The GO-FLO sampling bottle is specially designed to avoid sample contamination at the surface, internal spring contamination, loss of sample on deck (internal seals), and exchange of water from different depths.

Dataset-specific Instrument Name
Niskin bottle
Generic Instrument Name
Niskin bottle
Generic Instrument Description
A Niskin bottle (a next generation water sampler based on the Nansen bottle) is a cylindrical, non-metallic water collection device with stoppers at both ends. The bottles can be attached individually on a hydrowire or deployed in 12, 24, or 36 bottle Rosette systems mounted on a frame and combined with a CTD. Niskin bottles are used to collect discrete water samples for a range of measurements including pigments, nutrients, plankton, etc.


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Deployments

KN204-01

Website
Platform
R/V Knorr
Report
Start Date
2011-11-06
End Date
2011-12-11
Description
The US GEOTRACES North Atlantic cruise aboard the R/V Knorr completed the section between Lisbon and Woods Hole that began in October 2010 but was rescheduled for November-December 2011. The R/V Knorr made a brief stop in Bermuda to exchange samples and personnel before continuing across the basin. Scientists disembarked in Praia, Cape Verde, on 11 December. The cruise was identified as KN204-01A (first part before Bermuda) and KN204-01B (after the Bermuda stop). However, the official deployment name for this cruise is KN204-01 and includes both part A and B. Science activities included: ODF 30 liter rosette CTD casts, ODU Trace metal rosette CTD casts, McLane particulate pump casts, underway sampling with towed fish and sampling from the shipboard "uncontaminated" flow-through system. Full depth stations are shown in the accompanying figure (see below). Additional stations to sample for selected trace metals to a depth of 1000 m are not shown. Standard stations are shown in red (as are the ports) and "super" stations, with extra casts to provide large-volume samples for selected parameters, are shown in green. Station spacing is concentrated along the western margin to evaluate the transport of trace elements and isotopes by western boundary currents. Stations across the gyre will allow scientists to examine trace element supply by Saharan dust, while also contrasting trace element and isotope distributions in the oligotrophic gyre with conditions near biologically productive ocean margins, both in the west, to be sampled now, and within the eastern boundary upwelling system off Mauritania, sampled last year. Funding: The cruise was funded by NSF OCE awards 0926204, 0926433 and 0926659. Additional cruise information is available from the Rolling Deck to Repository (R2R): https://www.rvdata.us/search/cruise/KN204-01 Other Relevant Links: ADCP data are available from the Currents ADCP group at the University of Hawaii at the links below:KN204-01A (part 1 of 2011 cruise; Woods Hole, MA to Bermuda)KN204-01B (part 2 of 2011 cruise; Bermuda to Cape Verde)

Methods & Sampling
Refer to KN204-01 A/B  Cruise Report for detailed descriptions of acquisition and processing methodologies

Processing Description
Refer to http://bcodata.whoi.edu/US_GEOTRACES/AtlanticSection/STS_Prelim_GT11_Doc... target="_blank">KN204-01 A/B  Cruise Report for detailed descriptions of acquisition and processing methodologies


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Project Information

U.S. GEOTRACES North Atlantic Transect (GA03) (U.S. GEOTRACES NAT)


Coverage: Subtropical western and eastern North Atlantic Ocean (GA03)


Much of this text appeared in an article published in OCB News, October 2008, by the OCB Project Office.

The first U.S. GEOTRACES Atlantic Section will be specifically centered around a sampling cruise to be carried out in the North Atlantic in 2010. Ed Boyle (MIT) and Bill Jenkins (WHOI) organized a three-day planning workshop that was held September 22-24, 2008 at the Woods Hole Oceanographic Institution. The main goal of the workshop, sponsored by the National Science Foundation and the U.S. GEOTRACES Scientific Steering Committee, was to design the implementation plan for the first U.S. GEOTRACES Atlantic Section. The primary cruise design motivation was to improve knowledge of the sources, sinks and internal cycling of Trace Elements and their Isotopes (TEIs) by studying their distributions along a section in the North Atlantic (Figure 1). The North Atlantic has the full suite of processes that affect TEIs, including strong meridional advection, boundary scavenging and source effects, aeolian deposition, and the salty Mediterranean Outflow. The North Atlantic is particularly important as it lies at the "origin" of the global Meridional Overturning Circulation.

It is well understood that many trace metals play important roles in biogeochemical processes and the carbon cycle, yet very little is known about their large-scale distributions and the regional scale processes that affect them. Recent advances in sampling and analytical techniques, along with advances in our understanding of their roles in enzymatic and catalytic processes in the open ocean provide a natural opportunity to make substantial advances in our understanding of these important elements. Moreover, we are motivated by the prospect of global change and the need to understand the present and future workings of the ocean's biogeochemistry. The GEOTRACES strategy is to measure a broad suite of TEIs to constrain the critical biogeochemical processes that influence their distributions. In addition to these "exotic" substances, more traditional properties, including macronutrients (at micromolar and nanomolar levels), CTD, bio-optical parameters, and carbon system characteristics will be measured. The cruise starts at Line W, a repeat hydrographic section southeast of Cape Cod, extends to Bermuda and subsequently through the North Atlantic oligotrophic subtropical gyre, then transects into the African coast in the northern limb of the coastal upwelling region. From there, the cruise goes northward into the Mediterranean outflow. The station locations shown on the map are for the "fulldepth TEI" stations, and constitute approximately half of the stations to be ultimately occupied.

Figure 1. The proposed 2010 Atlantic GEOTRACES cruise track plotted on dissolved oxygen at 400 m depth. Data from the World Ocean Atlas (Levitus et al., 2005) were plotted using Ocean Data View (courtesy Reiner Schlitzer). [click on the image to view a larger version]

Hydrography, CTD and nutrient measurements will be supported by the Ocean Data Facility (J. Swift) at Scripps Institution of Oceanography and funded through NSF Facilities. They will be providing an additional CTD rosette system along with nephelometer and LADCP. A trace metal clean Go-Flo Rosette and winch will be provided by the group at Old Dominion University (G. Cutter) along with a towed underway pumping system.

The North Atlantic Transect cruise began in 2010 with KN199 leg 4 (station sampling) and leg 5 (underway sampling only) (Figure 2).

KN199-04 Cruise Report (PDF)

Figure 2. The red line shows the cruise track for the first leg of the US Geotraces North Atlantic Transect on the R/V Knorr in October 2010.  The rest of the stations (beginning with 13) will be completed in October-December 2011 on the R/V Knorr (courtesy of Bill Jenkins, Chief Scientist, GNAT first leg). [click on the image to view a larger version]
Atlantic Transect Station location map

The section completion effort resumed again in November 2011 with KN204-01A,B (Figure 3).

KN204-01A,B Cruise Report (PDF)

Figure 3. Station locations occupied on the US Geotraces North Atlantic Transect on the R/V Knorr in November 2011.  [click on the image to view a larger version]
Atlantic Transect/Part 2 Station location map

Data from the North Atlantic Transect cruises are available under the Datasets heading below, and consensus values for the SAFe and North Atlantic GEOTRACES Reference Seawater Samples are available from the GEOTRACES Program Office: Standards and Reference Materials

ADCP data are available from the Currents ADCP group at the University of Hawaii at the links below:
KN199-04   (leg 1 of 2010 cruise; Lisbon to Cape Verde)
KN199-05   (leg 2 of 2010 cruise; Cape Verde to Charleston, NC)
KN204-01A (part 1 of 2011 cruise; Woods Hole, MA to Bermuda)
KN204-01B (part 2 of 2011 cruise; Bermuda to Cape Verde)



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Program Information

U.S. GEOTRACES (U.S. GEOTRACES)


Coverage: Global


GEOTRACES is a SCOR sponsored program; and funding for program infrastructure development is provided by the U.S. National Science Foundation.

GEOTRACES gained momentum following a special symposium, S02: Biogeochemical cycling of trace elements and isotopes in the ocean and applications to constrain contemporary marine processes (GEOSECS II), at a 2003 Goldschmidt meeting convened in Japan. The GEOSECS II acronym referred to the Geochemical Ocean Section Studies To determine full water column distributions of selected trace elements and isotopes, including their concentration, chemical speciation, and physical form, along a sufficient number of sections in each ocean basin to establish the principal relationships between these distributions and with more traditional hydrographic parameters;

* To evaluate the sources, sinks, and internal cycling of these species and thereby characterize more completely the physical, chemical and biological processes regulating their distributions, and the sensitivity of these processes to global change; and

* To understand the processes that control the concentrations of geochemical species used for proxies of the past environment, both in the water column and in the substrates that reflect the water column.

GEOTRACES will be global in scope, consisting of ocean sections complemented by regional process studies. Sections and process studies will combine fieldwork, laboratory experiments and modelling. Beyond realizing the scientific objectives identified above, a natural outcome of this work will be to build a community of marine scientists who understand the processes regulating trace element cycles sufficiently well to exploit this knowledge reliably in future interdisciplinary studies.

Expand "Projects" below for information about and data resulting from individual US GEOTRACES research projects.



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Funding

Funding SourceAward
NSF Division of Ocean Sciences (NSF OCE)
NSF Division of Ocean Sciences (NSF OCE)

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