2013 Barrow sea ice mass balance data

The Barrow Mass Balance Site (MBS) consists of the following sensors: in-ice thermistor string: temperatures at different positions above, through and below the ice above-ice temperature/humidity sensor: air temperature and humidity above-ice down-looking acoustic transducers: the position of the up...

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Format: Dataset
Language:unknown
Published: International Arctic Research Center (IARC) Data Archive
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Online Access:https://search.dataone.org/view/dcx_ebc2a5d3-99ac-486c-be77-885f52584548_2
id dataone:dcx_ebc2a5d3-99ac-486c-be77-885f52584548_2
record_format openpolar
spelling dataone:dcx_ebc2a5d3-99ac-486c-be77-885f52584548_2 2024-06-03T18:46:44+00:00 2013 Barrow sea ice mass balance data ENVELOPE(-156.54144,-156.50299,71.38779,71.36032) 2016-12-23T20:45:52.81Z https://search.dataone.org/view/dcx_ebc2a5d3-99ac-486c-be77-885f52584548_2 unknown International Arctic Research Center (IARC) Data Archive sea ice mass balance Barrow, Alaska Dataset dataone:urn:node:IARC 2024-06-03T18:09:11Z The Barrow Mass Balance Site (MBS) consists of the following sensors: in-ice thermistor string: temperatures at different positions above, through and below the ice above-ice temperature/humidity sensor: air temperature and humidity above-ice down-looking acoustic transducers: the position of the upper snow or ice surface below-ice upward-looking acoustic transducer: the position of the ice bottom below-ice down-looking acoustic transducer: local sea level at the Mass Balance Site below-ice thermistor: water temperature Ice thickness is calculated from the distance between the upper and lower surfaces of the ice In winter the positions of the upper and lower surfaces allow us to determine snow accumulation and ice growth, respectively In spring and summer, our measurements show the thinning that takes place from above and below. Measurements are performed every 15 minutes and transferred to a base station in Barrow through a 900 MHz UHF radio link, from where they are sent through an internet connection to Fairbanks for further processing. A detailed description of the set-up is available at: http://seaice.alaska.edu/gi/observatories/barrow_sealevel/brw2012/BRW12_MBS_metadata.txt Please read the metadata before using data from the Mass Balance Site. Note that data format and metadata file may change during the season without notice. The Barrow MBS was deployed on landfast sea ice in the Chukchi Sea at Barrow, Alaska on January 11, 2012. At the time, ice thickness was 0.97 m (38 in) and snow depth was 0.05 m (2 inches). Ice thickness, snow depth, sea level, and temperature profiles are recorded every 15 minutes, transferred to Fairbanks, processed and presented online with approximately 5 minutes delay. The probe will be recovered from the ice prior to break-up. Recovery is likely to take place in June 2012. Dataset Barrow Chukchi Chukchi Sea Sea ice Alaska International Arctic Research Center (IARC) Data Archive (via DataONE) Chukchi Sea Fairbanks ENVELOPE(-156.54144,-156.50299,71.38779,71.36032)
institution Open Polar
collection International Arctic Research Center (IARC) Data Archive (via DataONE)
op_collection_id dataone:urn:node:IARC
language unknown
topic sea ice mass balance
Barrow, Alaska
spellingShingle sea ice mass balance
Barrow, Alaska
2013 Barrow sea ice mass balance data
topic_facet sea ice mass balance
Barrow, Alaska
description The Barrow Mass Balance Site (MBS) consists of the following sensors: in-ice thermistor string: temperatures at different positions above, through and below the ice above-ice temperature/humidity sensor: air temperature and humidity above-ice down-looking acoustic transducers: the position of the upper snow or ice surface below-ice upward-looking acoustic transducer: the position of the ice bottom below-ice down-looking acoustic transducer: local sea level at the Mass Balance Site below-ice thermistor: water temperature Ice thickness is calculated from the distance between the upper and lower surfaces of the ice In winter the positions of the upper and lower surfaces allow us to determine snow accumulation and ice growth, respectively In spring and summer, our measurements show the thinning that takes place from above and below. Measurements are performed every 15 minutes and transferred to a base station in Barrow through a 900 MHz UHF radio link, from where they are sent through an internet connection to Fairbanks for further processing. A detailed description of the set-up is available at: http://seaice.alaska.edu/gi/observatories/barrow_sealevel/brw2012/BRW12_MBS_metadata.txt Please read the metadata before using data from the Mass Balance Site. Note that data format and metadata file may change during the season without notice. The Barrow MBS was deployed on landfast sea ice in the Chukchi Sea at Barrow, Alaska on January 11, 2012. At the time, ice thickness was 0.97 m (38 in) and snow depth was 0.05 m (2 inches). Ice thickness, snow depth, sea level, and temperature profiles are recorded every 15 minutes, transferred to Fairbanks, processed and presented online with approximately 5 minutes delay. The probe will be recovered from the ice prior to break-up. Recovery is likely to take place in June 2012.
format Dataset
title 2013 Barrow sea ice mass balance data
title_short 2013 Barrow sea ice mass balance data
title_full 2013 Barrow sea ice mass balance data
title_fullStr 2013 Barrow sea ice mass balance data
title_full_unstemmed 2013 Barrow sea ice mass balance data
title_sort 2013 barrow sea ice mass balance data
publisher International Arctic Research Center (IARC) Data Archive
publishDate
url https://search.dataone.org/view/dcx_ebc2a5d3-99ac-486c-be77-885f52584548_2
op_coverage ENVELOPE(-156.54144,-156.50299,71.38779,71.36032)
long_lat ENVELOPE(-156.54144,-156.50299,71.38779,71.36032)
geographic Chukchi Sea
Fairbanks
geographic_facet Chukchi Sea
Fairbanks
genre Barrow
Chukchi
Chukchi Sea
Sea ice
Alaska
genre_facet Barrow
Chukchi
Chukchi Sea
Sea ice
Alaska
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