An ice-tethered, non-floating Trident Sensors Helix Beacon during SCALE 2019 Spring Cruise

Brief data description A Trident Sensors Helix Beacon identical to the one described in Womack et al. (2022), was deployed on sea ice at latitude 59.47 o S and longitude 10.89 o E, on 30October 2019, as part of the Southern oCean seAsonal Experiment (SCALE; Ryan-Keogh and Vichi, 2022) aboard the SA...

Full description

Bibliographic Details
Main Authors: Womack, Ashleigh, Verrinder, Robyn, Vichi, Marcello, Alberello, Alberto, MacHutchon, Keith, Skatulla, Sebastian, Toffoli, Alessandro
Format: Other/Unknown Material
Language:unknown
Published: Zenodo 2023
Subjects:
Online Access:https://doi.org/10.5281/zenodo.7954841
Description
Summary:Brief data description A Trident Sensors Helix Beacon identical to the one described in Womack et al. (2022), was deployed on sea ice at latitude 59.47 o S and longitude 10.89 o E, on 30October 2019, as part of the Southern oCean seAsonal Experiment (SCALE; Ryan-Keogh and Vichi, 2022) aboard the SA Agulhas II. The region where the Trident was deployed (Antarctic marginal ice zone) consisted of first-year ice conditions, with an average thickness of 80-90 cm. The device was deployed by hand by three people, lowered by crane from the ship to the ice on a basket cradle. The temporal resolution was approximately fourhours. The survival of the Trident depended on staying fixed to the ice floe and its battery life. The Trident recorded GPS positionand air temperature, and transmitted data until 2 December 2019, where it sank due to sea-ice melting. Buoy nameand raw data: Trident: Unit4.xlsx Related code: The buoy data has been processed usinghttps://github.com/mvichi/antarctic-buoys/. This research has been supported by the National Research Foundation of South Africa (grant no. 118745). This work has received funding from the European Union's Horizon 2020 research and innovation programme under grant agreement no. 101003826 via project CRiceS (Climate Relevant interactions and feedbacks: the key role of sea ice and Snow in the polar and global climate system). A.T. acknowledges the support from the Australian Research Council (DP200102828). A.A acknowledges the support from the London Mathematical Society (Scheme 5 – Ref. 52206). We acknowledge the Southern oCean seAsonaL Experiment (SCALE), and thank the captain and the crew of the SA Agulhas II for the assistance during the deployments.