Sonde data of continuous surface water flow-through system for the West Florida Shelf: USGS Cruise 11BHM04

The United States Geological Survey (USGS) is conducting a study on the effects of climate change on ocean acidification within the Gulf of Mexico; dealing specifically with the effect of ocean acidification on marine organisms and habitats. To investigate this, the USGS participated in two cruises...

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Bibliographic Details
Main Authors: Lisa L. Robbins, Paul O. Knorr, Kira E. Barrera, Kendra L. Daly
Format: Dataset
Language:unknown
Published: USGS Science Data Catalog 2013
Subjects:
pH
Online Access:https://search.dataone.org/view/d6b6e4d7-51de-4e8f-8ac8-9318e4f0a0ec
id dataone:d6b6e4d7-51de-4e8f-8ac8-9318e4f0a0ec
record_format openpolar
spelling dataone:d6b6e4d7-51de-4e8f-8ac8-9318e4f0a0ec 2024-10-03T18:46:22+00:00 Sonde data of continuous surface water flow-through system for the West Florida Shelf: USGS Cruise 11BHM04 Lisa L. Robbins Paul O. Knorr Kira E. Barrera Kendra L. Daly ENVELOPE(-85.33238,-82.68477,27.61297,27.04722) BEGINDATE: 2011-11-02T00:00:00Z ENDDATE: 2011-11-04T00:00:00Z 2013-01-01T00:00:00Z https://search.dataone.org/view/d6b6e4d7-51de-4e8f-8ac8-9318e4f0a0ec unknown USGS Science Data Catalog pH total carbon Salinity carbon flux Ocean Acidification pCO2 Temperature Ocean Chemistry assessments physical/chemical features chemical analysis chemical oceanography environmental chemistry ocean acidification marine chemistry West Florida Shelf Florida United States Dataset 2013 dataone:urn:node:USGS_SDC 2024-10-03T18:10:40Z The United States Geological Survey (USGS) is conducting a study on the effects of climate change on ocean acidification within the Gulf of Mexico; dealing specifically with the effect of ocean acidification on marine organisms and habitats. To investigate this, the USGS participated in two cruises in the West Florida Shelf and northern Gulf of Mexico regions aboard the R/V Weatherbird II, a ship of opportunity lead by Dr. Kendra Daly, of the University of South Florida (USF). The cruises occurred September 20 - 28 and November 2 - 4, 2011. Both left from and returned to Saint Petersburg, Florida, but followed different routes (see Trackline). On both cruises the USGS collected data pertaining to pH, dissolved inorganic carbon (DIC), and total alkalinity in discrete samples. Discrete surface samples were taken during transit approximatly hourly on both cruises, 95 in September were collected over a span of 2127 km, and 7 over a trackline of 732 km line on the November cruise. Along with the surface samples, another set of samples were taken at various depths at stations; 27 in September at four stations and 15 in November at five stations. In addition to the discrete samples flow-through data was also collected on both cruises in a variety of forms. Surface CTD data was collected every five minutes which includes temperature, salinity, and pH. In addition, two more flow-through instruments were setup on both cruises that recorded pH and CO2 every 15 minutes. Corroborating the USGS data is the vertical CTD profiles collected by USF, using the following sensors: CTD, oxygen, chlorophyll fluorescence, optical backscatter, and transmissometer. Additionally, discrete depth samples for nutrients, chlorophyll, and particulate organic carbon/nitrogen were collected. Dataset Ocean acidification USGS Science Data Catalog (via DataONE) Daly ENVELOPE(63.761,63.761,-67.513,-67.513) ENVELOPE(-85.33238,-82.68477,27.61297,27.04722)
institution Open Polar
collection USGS Science Data Catalog (via DataONE)
op_collection_id dataone:urn:node:USGS_SDC
language unknown
topic pH
total carbon
Salinity
carbon flux
Ocean Acidification
pCO2
Temperature
Ocean Chemistry
assessments
physical/chemical features
chemical analysis
chemical oceanography
environmental chemistry
ocean acidification
marine chemistry
West Florida Shelf
Florida
United States
spellingShingle pH
total carbon
Salinity
carbon flux
Ocean Acidification
pCO2
Temperature
Ocean Chemistry
assessments
physical/chemical features
chemical analysis
chemical oceanography
environmental chemistry
ocean acidification
marine chemistry
West Florida Shelf
Florida
United States
Lisa L. Robbins
Paul O. Knorr
Kira E. Barrera
Kendra L. Daly
Sonde data of continuous surface water flow-through system for the West Florida Shelf: USGS Cruise 11BHM04
topic_facet pH
total carbon
Salinity
carbon flux
Ocean Acidification
pCO2
Temperature
Ocean Chemistry
assessments
physical/chemical features
chemical analysis
chemical oceanography
environmental chemistry
ocean acidification
marine chemistry
West Florida Shelf
Florida
United States
description The United States Geological Survey (USGS) is conducting a study on the effects of climate change on ocean acidification within the Gulf of Mexico; dealing specifically with the effect of ocean acidification on marine organisms and habitats. To investigate this, the USGS participated in two cruises in the West Florida Shelf and northern Gulf of Mexico regions aboard the R/V Weatherbird II, a ship of opportunity lead by Dr. Kendra Daly, of the University of South Florida (USF). The cruises occurred September 20 - 28 and November 2 - 4, 2011. Both left from and returned to Saint Petersburg, Florida, but followed different routes (see Trackline). On both cruises the USGS collected data pertaining to pH, dissolved inorganic carbon (DIC), and total alkalinity in discrete samples. Discrete surface samples were taken during transit approximatly hourly on both cruises, 95 in September were collected over a span of 2127 km, and 7 over a trackline of 732 km line on the November cruise. Along with the surface samples, another set of samples were taken at various depths at stations; 27 in September at four stations and 15 in November at five stations. In addition to the discrete samples flow-through data was also collected on both cruises in a variety of forms. Surface CTD data was collected every five minutes which includes temperature, salinity, and pH. In addition, two more flow-through instruments were setup on both cruises that recorded pH and CO2 every 15 minutes. Corroborating the USGS data is the vertical CTD profiles collected by USF, using the following sensors: CTD, oxygen, chlorophyll fluorescence, optical backscatter, and transmissometer. Additionally, discrete depth samples for nutrients, chlorophyll, and particulate organic carbon/nitrogen were collected.
format Dataset
author Lisa L. Robbins
Paul O. Knorr
Kira E. Barrera
Kendra L. Daly
author_facet Lisa L. Robbins
Paul O. Knorr
Kira E. Barrera
Kendra L. Daly
author_sort Lisa L. Robbins
title Sonde data of continuous surface water flow-through system for the West Florida Shelf: USGS Cruise 11BHM04
title_short Sonde data of continuous surface water flow-through system for the West Florida Shelf: USGS Cruise 11BHM04
title_full Sonde data of continuous surface water flow-through system for the West Florida Shelf: USGS Cruise 11BHM04
title_fullStr Sonde data of continuous surface water flow-through system for the West Florida Shelf: USGS Cruise 11BHM04
title_full_unstemmed Sonde data of continuous surface water flow-through system for the West Florida Shelf: USGS Cruise 11BHM04
title_sort sonde data of continuous surface water flow-through system for the west florida shelf: usgs cruise 11bhm04
publisher USGS Science Data Catalog
publishDate 2013
url https://search.dataone.org/view/d6b6e4d7-51de-4e8f-8ac8-9318e4f0a0ec
op_coverage ENVELOPE(-85.33238,-82.68477,27.61297,27.04722)
BEGINDATE: 2011-11-02T00:00:00Z ENDDATE: 2011-11-04T00:00:00Z
long_lat ENVELOPE(63.761,63.761,-67.513,-67.513)
ENVELOPE(-85.33238,-82.68477,27.61297,27.04722)
geographic Daly
geographic_facet Daly
genre Ocean acidification
genre_facet Ocean acidification
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