UV climate over the Southern Ocean south of Australia, and its biological impact - 1994 data

Ozone depletion over Antarctica increases UVB irradiances reaching the Earth's surface in the region. Marine microbes, that support the Antarctic food web and play an integral part in carbon cycling, are damaged by UVB. This research determines Antarctic UV climate, biological responses to UV f...

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Bibliographic Details
Other Authors: Australian Antarctic Division (isOwnedBy)
Format: Dataset
Language:unknown
Published: data.gov.au
Subjects:
AMD
UV
Online Access:https://researchdata.edu.au/uv-climate-southern-1994-data/1934073
http://data.gov.au/dataset/d3d4a7f3-3f9d-42a3-8b9d-6d99366d9edc
id ftands:oai:ands.org.au::1934073
record_format openpolar
spelling ftands:oai:ands.org.au::1934073 2023-09-05T13:13:43+02:00 UV climate over the Southern Ocean south of Australia, and its biological impact - 1994 data Australian Antarctic Division (isOwnedBy) Spatial: 77.0,-68.0 79.0,-68.0 79.0,-66.0 77.0,-66.0 77.0,-68.0 Spatial: true https://researchdata.edu.au/uv-climate-southern-1994-data/1934073 http://data.gov.au/dataset/d3d4a7f3-3f9d-42a3-8b9d-6d99366d9edc unknown data.gov.au https://researchdata.edu.au/uv-climate-southern-1994-data/1934073 http://data.gov.au/dataset/d3d4a7f3-3f9d-42a3-8b9d-6d99366d9edc uv-climate-over-the-southern-ocean-south-of-australia-and-its-biological-impact-1994-data Australian Antarctic Division AMD CEOS FIELD INVESTIGATION FIELD SURVEYS GROUND-BASED OBSERVATIONS Macam spectral radiometer Radiometers UV wavelength dataset ftands 2023-08-14T23:00:23Z Ozone depletion over Antarctica increases UVB irradiances reaching the Earth's surface in the region. Marine microbes, that support the Antarctic food web and play an integral part in carbon cycling, are damaged by UVB. This research determines Antarctic UV climate, biological responses to UV from the molecular to community level, and combines these elements to predict UV-induced changes in Antarctic marine microbiology.\n\nA season of field work was undertaken over November and December 1994 based from Davis Station with the intention of making field measurements of ultraviolet radiation in the fast ice environment, as well as some of the lakes in the Vestfold Hills.\n\nInstrumentation\nThe instrument for the measurements was a Macam spectral radiometer, owned by Geography and Environmental Studies, University of Tasmania. Field personnel were Dr Kelvin Michael (IASOS) and Mr Michael Wall (Honours student, Geography and Environmental Studies, UTas).\n\nThe radiometer was equipped with a 25-metre quartz light pipe, with a cosine sensor attachment at the end. To make a measurement of ultraviolet irradiance, the sensor would be oriented so that its sensing surface was horizontal, and it would collect light which was then transmitted along the light pipe to the radiometer - a suitcase-sized unit which ran on battery power in the field. The radiometer was encased in a wooden box lined with polystyrene foam to provide protection from the elements and heat insulation. The radiometer was controlled via a laptop PC and the data were stored on the hard disk of the PC.\n\nMeasurements\nMeasurements of the attenuation of ultraviolet and visible radiation as a function of wavelength in water were made at the ice edge and lake measurement sites. At the ice edge, the light pipe was spooled over a wheel and lowered to preset depths (typically 1,2,4,8,16 and 32 m below the water surface). On a lake, a 25-cm augur hole was drilled, and the light pipe was lowered by hand to various depths, the exact depths chosen depended on the ... Dataset Antarc* Antarctic Antarctica Southern Ocean Research Data Australia (Australian National Data Service - ANDS) Antarctic Davis Station ENVELOPE(77.968,77.968,-68.576,-68.576) Davis-Station ENVELOPE(77.968,77.968,-68.576,-68.576) Southern Ocean The Antarctic Vestfold Vestfold Hills
institution Open Polar
collection Research Data Australia (Australian National Data Service - ANDS)
op_collection_id ftands
language unknown
topic AMD
CEOS
FIELD INVESTIGATION
FIELD SURVEYS
GROUND-BASED OBSERVATIONS
Macam spectral radiometer
Radiometers
UV
wavelength
spellingShingle AMD
CEOS
FIELD INVESTIGATION
FIELD SURVEYS
GROUND-BASED OBSERVATIONS
Macam spectral radiometer
Radiometers
UV
wavelength
UV climate over the Southern Ocean south of Australia, and its biological impact - 1994 data
topic_facet AMD
CEOS
FIELD INVESTIGATION
FIELD SURVEYS
GROUND-BASED OBSERVATIONS
Macam spectral radiometer
Radiometers
UV
wavelength
description Ozone depletion over Antarctica increases UVB irradiances reaching the Earth's surface in the region. Marine microbes, that support the Antarctic food web and play an integral part in carbon cycling, are damaged by UVB. This research determines Antarctic UV climate, biological responses to UV from the molecular to community level, and combines these elements to predict UV-induced changes in Antarctic marine microbiology.\n\nA season of field work was undertaken over November and December 1994 based from Davis Station with the intention of making field measurements of ultraviolet radiation in the fast ice environment, as well as some of the lakes in the Vestfold Hills.\n\nInstrumentation\nThe instrument for the measurements was a Macam spectral radiometer, owned by Geography and Environmental Studies, University of Tasmania. Field personnel were Dr Kelvin Michael (IASOS) and Mr Michael Wall (Honours student, Geography and Environmental Studies, UTas).\n\nThe radiometer was equipped with a 25-metre quartz light pipe, with a cosine sensor attachment at the end. To make a measurement of ultraviolet irradiance, the sensor would be oriented so that its sensing surface was horizontal, and it would collect light which was then transmitted along the light pipe to the radiometer - a suitcase-sized unit which ran on battery power in the field. The radiometer was encased in a wooden box lined with polystyrene foam to provide protection from the elements and heat insulation. The radiometer was controlled via a laptop PC and the data were stored on the hard disk of the PC.\n\nMeasurements\nMeasurements of the attenuation of ultraviolet and visible radiation as a function of wavelength in water were made at the ice edge and lake measurement sites. At the ice edge, the light pipe was spooled over a wheel and lowered to preset depths (typically 1,2,4,8,16 and 32 m below the water surface). On a lake, a 25-cm augur hole was drilled, and the light pipe was lowered by hand to various depths, the exact depths chosen depended on the ...
author2 Australian Antarctic Division (isOwnedBy)
format Dataset
title UV climate over the Southern Ocean south of Australia, and its biological impact - 1994 data
title_short UV climate over the Southern Ocean south of Australia, and its biological impact - 1994 data
title_full UV climate over the Southern Ocean south of Australia, and its biological impact - 1994 data
title_fullStr UV climate over the Southern Ocean south of Australia, and its biological impact - 1994 data
title_full_unstemmed UV climate over the Southern Ocean south of Australia, and its biological impact - 1994 data
title_sort uv climate over the southern ocean south of australia, and its biological impact - 1994 data
publisher data.gov.au
url https://researchdata.edu.au/uv-climate-southern-1994-data/1934073
http://data.gov.au/dataset/d3d4a7f3-3f9d-42a3-8b9d-6d99366d9edc
op_coverage Spatial: 77.0,-68.0 79.0,-68.0 79.0,-66.0 77.0,-66.0 77.0,-68.0
Spatial: true
long_lat ENVELOPE(77.968,77.968,-68.576,-68.576)
ENVELOPE(77.968,77.968,-68.576,-68.576)
geographic Antarctic
Davis Station
Davis-Station
Southern Ocean
The Antarctic
Vestfold
Vestfold Hills
geographic_facet Antarctic
Davis Station
Davis-Station
Southern Ocean
The Antarctic
Vestfold
Vestfold Hills
genre Antarc*
Antarctic
Antarctica
Southern Ocean
genre_facet Antarc*
Antarctic
Antarctica
Southern Ocean
op_source Australian Antarctic Division
op_relation https://researchdata.edu.au/uv-climate-southern-1994-data/1934073
http://data.gov.au/dataset/d3d4a7f3-3f9d-42a3-8b9d-6d99366d9edc
uv-climate-over-the-southern-ocean-south-of-australia-and-its-biological-impact-1994-data
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