Anthropogenic carbon and water masses in the Bay of Biscay

As part of the VACLAN (Climate Variability in the North Atlantic) project, a section covering the Bay of Biscay was sampled in September 2005. This work estimates the distribution of the different water masses in the region using an extended optimum multiparametric method and analyzes water mass dis...

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Main Authors: Castano-Carrera, M, Pardo, PC, Alvarez, M, Lavin, A, Rodriguez, C, Carballo, R, Rios, AF, Perez, FF
Format: Article in Journal/Newspaper
Language:unknown
Published: 2012
Subjects:
Online Access:https://figshare.com/articles/journal_contribution/Anthropogenic_carbon_and_water_masses_in_the_Bay_of_Biscay/22928318
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author Castano-Carrera, M
Pardo, PC
Alvarez, M
Lavin, A
Rodriguez, C
Carballo, R
Rios, AF
Perez, FF
author_facet Castano-Carrera, M
Pardo, PC
Alvarez, M
Lavin, A
Rodriguez, C
Carballo, R
Rios, AF
Perez, FF
author_sort Castano-Carrera, M
collection Research from University Of Tasmania
description As part of the VACLAN (Climate Variability in the North Atlantic) project, a section covering the Bay of Biscay was sampled in September 2005. This work estimates the distribution of the different water masses in the region using an extended optimum multiparametric method and analyzes water mass distribution of anthropogenic carbon as calculated using two different approaches. The Eastern North Atlantic Central Water layer is mainly constituted by its subpolar component and Mediterranean Water appears very diluted, its dilution increasing northeastward. In relation to the anthropogenic carbon inventory, small differences were found between the two different methods used, 95 vs 87 mol C m–2, though both show the same distribution pattern, the concentration decreasing with depth. Eastern North Atlantic Central Water presents the highest anthropogenic carbon inventory, supporting more than 50% of the total column (52%). This work confirms the relevant role of the Bay of Biscay as a sink zone in the oceanic circulation.
format Article in Journal/Newspaper
genre North Atlantic
genre_facet North Atlantic
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institution Open Polar
language unknown
op_collection_id ftunivtasmanfig
op_relation 102.100.100/572246
https://figshare.com/articles/journal_contribution/Anthropogenic_carbon_and_water_masses_in_the_Bay_of_Biscay/22928318
op_rights In Copyright
publishDate 2012
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spelling ftunivtasmanfig:oai:figshare.com:article/22928318 2025-03-16T15:30:46+00:00 Anthropogenic carbon and water masses in the Bay of Biscay Castano-Carrera, M Pardo, PC Alvarez, M Lavin, A Rodriguez, C Carballo, R Rios, AF Perez, FF 2012-01-01T00:00:00Z https://figshare.com/articles/journal_contribution/Anthropogenic_carbon_and_water_masses_in_the_Bay_of_Biscay/22928318 unknown 102.100.100/572246 https://figshare.com/articles/journal_contribution/Anthropogenic_carbon_and_water_masses_in_the_Bay_of_Biscay/22928318 In Copyright Climate change processes No keyword provided Text Journal contribution 2012 ftunivtasmanfig 2025-02-17T09:48:23Z As part of the VACLAN (Climate Variability in the North Atlantic) project, a section covering the Bay of Biscay was sampled in September 2005. This work estimates the distribution of the different water masses in the region using an extended optimum multiparametric method and analyzes water mass distribution of anthropogenic carbon as calculated using two different approaches. The Eastern North Atlantic Central Water layer is mainly constituted by its subpolar component and Mediterranean Water appears very diluted, its dilution increasing northeastward. In relation to the anthropogenic carbon inventory, small differences were found between the two different methods used, 95 vs 87 mol C m–2, though both show the same distribution pattern, the concentration decreasing with depth. Eastern North Atlantic Central Water presents the highest anthropogenic carbon inventory, supporting more than 50% of the total column (52%). This work confirms the relevant role of the Bay of Biscay as a sink zone in the oceanic circulation. Article in Journal/Newspaper North Atlantic Research from University Of Tasmania
spellingShingle Climate change processes
No keyword provided
Castano-Carrera, M
Pardo, PC
Alvarez, M
Lavin, A
Rodriguez, C
Carballo, R
Rios, AF
Perez, FF
Anthropogenic carbon and water masses in the Bay of Biscay
title Anthropogenic carbon and water masses in the Bay of Biscay
title_full Anthropogenic carbon and water masses in the Bay of Biscay
title_fullStr Anthropogenic carbon and water masses in the Bay of Biscay
title_full_unstemmed Anthropogenic carbon and water masses in the Bay of Biscay
title_short Anthropogenic carbon and water masses in the Bay of Biscay
title_sort anthropogenic carbon and water masses in the bay of biscay
topic Climate change processes
No keyword provided
topic_facet Climate change processes
No keyword provided
url https://figshare.com/articles/journal_contribution/Anthropogenic_carbon_and_water_masses_in_the_Bay_of_Biscay/22928318