RSS James Cook Cruise JC032, 07 Mar – 21 Apr 2009. Hydrographic sections across the Brazil Current and at 24°S in the Atlantic.

Hydrographic sections were occupied in the South Atlantic Ocean and during March - April 2009 aboard the RRS James Cook (JC032). Three of these sections intersected the Brazil current at three separate latitudes during the steam northwards from Montevideo. The main trans-Atlantic section was occupie...

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Bibliographic Details
Main Author: King, B.A.
Other Authors: Hamersley, D.R.C.
Format: Book
Language:English
Published: National Oceanography Centre 2010
Subjects:
Online Access:https://eprints.soton.ac.uk/159061/
https://eprints.soton.ac.uk/159061/1/nocscr048_corrected.pdf
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spelling ftsouthampton:oai:eprints.soton.ac.uk:159061 2024-04-28T08:38:17+00:00 RSS James Cook Cruise JC032, 07 Mar – 21 Apr 2009. Hydrographic sections across the Brazil Current and at 24°S in the Atlantic. King, B.A. Hamersley, D.R.C. 2010 text https://eprints.soton.ac.uk/159061/ https://eprints.soton.ac.uk/159061/1/nocscr048_corrected.pdf en eng National Oceanography Centre https://eprints.soton.ac.uk/159061/1/nocscr048_corrected.pdf King, B.A. and et al, , Hamersley, D.R.C. (ed.) (2010) RSS James Cook Cruise JC032, 07 Mar – 21 Apr 2009. Hydrographic sections across the Brazil Current and at 24°S in the Atlantic. (National Oceanography Centre Southampton Cruise Report, 48) Southampton, UK. National Oceanography Centre 173pp. Monograph NonPeerReviewed 2010 ftsouthampton 2024-04-09T23:34:29Z Hydrographic sections were occupied in the South Atlantic Ocean and during March - April 2009 aboard the RRS James Cook (JC032). Three of these sections intersected the Brazil current at three separate latitudes during the steam northwards from Montevideo. The main trans-Atlantic section was occupied at 24°S. The primary objective of this cruise was to measure ocean physical, chemical and biological parameters in order to establish regional budgets of heat freshwater and carbon. The main section completed an overall aim, devised under the Oceans 2025 project, to create a box around the South Atlantic and Southern Ocean region to expose the regional circulation scheme and basin-scale budgets of physical and biogeochemical properties by performing a box-inverse analysis of the new observations. A total of 118 CTD/LADCP stations were sampled across the South Atlantic. In addition to temperature, salinity and oxygen profiles from the sensors on the CTD package, water samples from a 24-bottle rosette were analysed for salinity, dissolved oxygen and inorganic nutrients at each station. Water samples were collected from strategically selected stations and analysed onboard ship for SF6, CFC’s, pCO2, TIC, alkalinity, and nutrient biogeochemistry. In addition, samples were collected from the ship’s underway system to calibrate and compliment the data continually collected by the TSG (thermosalinograph). Full depth velocity measurements were made at every station by an LADCP (Lowered Acoustic Doppler Current Profiler) mounted on the frame of the rosette. Throughout the cruise, velocity data in the upper few hundred metres of the water column were collected by the ship’s VMADCP (vessel mounted acoustic Doppler current profiler) transducers (75Hz and 150Hz) mounted on the hull. Meteorological variables were monitored using the onboard surface water and meteorological sampling system (SURFMET). Bathymetric data was collected using the EA600 echo sounder and EM120 swath system, which is attached to the hull. This report ... Book South Atlantic Ocean Southern Ocean University of Southampton: e-Prints Soton
institution Open Polar
collection University of Southampton: e-Prints Soton
op_collection_id ftsouthampton
language English
description Hydrographic sections were occupied in the South Atlantic Ocean and during March - April 2009 aboard the RRS James Cook (JC032). Three of these sections intersected the Brazil current at three separate latitudes during the steam northwards from Montevideo. The main trans-Atlantic section was occupied at 24°S. The primary objective of this cruise was to measure ocean physical, chemical and biological parameters in order to establish regional budgets of heat freshwater and carbon. The main section completed an overall aim, devised under the Oceans 2025 project, to create a box around the South Atlantic and Southern Ocean region to expose the regional circulation scheme and basin-scale budgets of physical and biogeochemical properties by performing a box-inverse analysis of the new observations. A total of 118 CTD/LADCP stations were sampled across the South Atlantic. In addition to temperature, salinity and oxygen profiles from the sensors on the CTD package, water samples from a 24-bottle rosette were analysed for salinity, dissolved oxygen and inorganic nutrients at each station. Water samples were collected from strategically selected stations and analysed onboard ship for SF6, CFC’s, pCO2, TIC, alkalinity, and nutrient biogeochemistry. In addition, samples were collected from the ship’s underway system to calibrate and compliment the data continually collected by the TSG (thermosalinograph). Full depth velocity measurements were made at every station by an LADCP (Lowered Acoustic Doppler Current Profiler) mounted on the frame of the rosette. Throughout the cruise, velocity data in the upper few hundred metres of the water column were collected by the ship’s VMADCP (vessel mounted acoustic Doppler current profiler) transducers (75Hz and 150Hz) mounted on the hull. Meteorological variables were monitored using the onboard surface water and meteorological sampling system (SURFMET). Bathymetric data was collected using the EA600 echo sounder and EM120 swath system, which is attached to the hull. This report ...
author2 Hamersley, D.R.C.
format Book
author King, B.A.
spellingShingle King, B.A.
RSS James Cook Cruise JC032, 07 Mar – 21 Apr 2009. Hydrographic sections across the Brazil Current and at 24°S in the Atlantic.
author_facet King, B.A.
author_sort King, B.A.
title RSS James Cook Cruise JC032, 07 Mar – 21 Apr 2009. Hydrographic sections across the Brazil Current and at 24°S in the Atlantic.
title_short RSS James Cook Cruise JC032, 07 Mar – 21 Apr 2009. Hydrographic sections across the Brazil Current and at 24°S in the Atlantic.
title_full RSS James Cook Cruise JC032, 07 Mar – 21 Apr 2009. Hydrographic sections across the Brazil Current and at 24°S in the Atlantic.
title_fullStr RSS James Cook Cruise JC032, 07 Mar – 21 Apr 2009. Hydrographic sections across the Brazil Current and at 24°S in the Atlantic.
title_full_unstemmed RSS James Cook Cruise JC032, 07 Mar – 21 Apr 2009. Hydrographic sections across the Brazil Current and at 24°S in the Atlantic.
title_sort rss james cook cruise jc032, 07 mar – 21 apr 2009. hydrographic sections across the brazil current and at 24°s in the atlantic.
publisher National Oceanography Centre
publishDate 2010
url https://eprints.soton.ac.uk/159061/
https://eprints.soton.ac.uk/159061/1/nocscr048_corrected.pdf
genre South Atlantic Ocean
Southern Ocean
genre_facet South Atlantic Ocean
Southern Ocean
op_relation https://eprints.soton.ac.uk/159061/1/nocscr048_corrected.pdf
King, B.A. and et al, , Hamersley, D.R.C. (ed.) (2010) RSS James Cook Cruise JC032, 07 Mar – 21 Apr 2009. Hydrographic sections across the Brazil Current and at 24°S in the Atlantic. (National Oceanography Centre Southampton Cruise Report, 48) Southampton, UK. National Oceanography Centre 173pp.
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