Measurements of total alkalinity and inorganic dissolved carbon in the Atlantic Ocean and adjacent Southern Ocean between 2008 and 2010
Author:
Schuster U., Watson A. J.ORCID, Bakker D. C. E.ORCID, de Boer A. M., Jones E. M., Lee G. A., Legge O., Louwerse A., Riley J., Scally S.
Abstract
Abstract. Water column dissolved inorganic carbon and total alkalinity were measured during five hydrographic sections in the Atlantic Ocean and Drake Passage. The work was funded through the Strategic Funding Initiative of the UK's Oceans2025 programme, which ran from 2007 to 2012. The aims of this programme were to establish the regional budgets of natural and anthropogenic carbon in the North Atlantic, the South Atlantic, and the Atlantic sector of the Southern Ocean, as well as the rates of change of these budgets. This paper describes the dissolved inorganic carbon and total alkalinity data collected along east-west sections at 55–60° N (Arctic Gateway), 24.5° N, and 24° S in the Atlantic and across two Drake Passage sections. Other hydrographic and biogeochemical parameters were measured during these sections, yet are not covered in this paper. Over 95% of samples taken during the 24.5° N, 24° S, and the Drake Passage sections were analysed onboard and subjected to a 1st level quality control addressing technical and analytical issues. Samples taken during Arctic Gateway were analysed and subjected to quality control back in the laboratory. Complete post-cruise 2nd level quality control was performed using cross-over analysis with historical data in the vicinity of measurements, and data are available through the Carbon Dioxide Information Analysis Center (CDIAC) and are included in the Global Ocean Data Analyses Project, version 2 (GLODAP 2).
Publisher
Copernicus GmbH
Reference18 articles.
1. Bacon, S.: RRS Discovery cruise 332, 21 August to 25 September 2008. Arctic Gateway (WOCE AR7), National Oceanography Centre Southampton, Southampton, UK, National Oceanography Centre Southampton Cruise Report 53, 129 pp., 2010. 2. Brown, P. J., Bakker, D. C. E., Schuster, U., and Watson, A. J.: Anthropogenic carbon accumulation in the subtropical North Atlantic, J. Geophys. Res., 115, C04016, https://doi.org/10.1029/2008JC005043, 2010. 3. Chipman, D. W., Takahashi, T., Breger, D., and Sutherland, S.: Carbon dioxide, hydrographic, and chemical data obtained during the R/V Meteor cruise 11/5 in the South Atlantic and northern Weddell Sea areas (WOCE sections A-12 and A-21), Oak Ridge National Laboratory (ORNL)/Carbon Dioxide Information Analysis Center (CDIAC), Oak Ridge, Tennessee, USA, NDP 045, 61 pp., 1994. 4. Dickson, A. G., Sabine, C. L., and Christian, J. R.: Guide to best practices for ocean CO2 measurements, in: PICES Special Publication, PICES Special Publication 3, 191, Sidney, British Columbia, Canada, 2007. 5. Johnson, K. M., King, A. E., and Sieburth, J. M.: Coulometric TCO2 analyses for marine studies; an introduction, Mar. Chem., 16, 61–82, 1985.
|
|