Measurements of total alkalinity and inorganic dissolved carbon in the Atlantic Ocean and adjacent Southern Ocean between 2008 and 2010

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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 in detail the dissolved inorganic carbon and total alkalinity data collected along east"west sections at 47° N to 60° N, 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, and relevant standard operating procedures are mentioned here. Over 95% of dissolved inorganic carbon and total alkalinity samples taken during the 24.5° N, 24° S, and the Drake Passage sections were analysed onboard and subjected to a first-level quality control addressing technical and analytical issues. Samples taken along 47° N to 60° N were analysed and subjected to quality control back in the laboratory. Complete post-cruise second-level quality control was performed using crossover analysis with historical data in the vicinity of measurements, and data were submitted to the CLIVAR and Carbon Hydrographic Data Office (CCHDO), the Carbon Dioxide Information Analysis Center (CDIAC) and and will be included in the Global Ocean Data Analyses Project, version 2 (GLODAP 2), the upcoming update of Key et al. (2004). © Author(s) 2014.

Figures

  • Table 1. Data coverage and parameter measured.
  • Table 2. Geographic region (WOCE section), Expocode, cruise name, year, ship, and carbon PI for each cruise.
  • Figure 1. Positions of stations at which DIC and TA samples were taken in the Atlantic and Drake Passage during (a) DI332, (b) DI346, (c) JC032, and (d) JC031 (A21 in the west and SR1b in the east).
  • Table 3. Total number of (i) stations sampled, (ii) depths sampled, (iii) DIC and TA samples left after first- and second-level quality control for each cruise.
  • Table 4. Precision of DIC and TA measurements, defined as the standard deviation of in-bottle duplicate measurements during DI346, JC032, and JC031, and of same-depth duplicate measurements during DI332.
  • Table 5. Accuracy of DIC and TA measurements for each instrument and section. The accuracy is defined as the standard deviation of CRM values around the mean, after first-level QC and second-level QC using the CARINA dataset. A second-level QC with new data in GLODAP 2 recommends to lower TA during JC031 by 10 µmol kg−1 (R. Key, personal communication, 2014).
  • Figure 2. DIC and TA values of CRM analyses over time for (a) DI332, (b) DI346, (c) JC032, and (d) JC031. Solid symbols are DIC and TA values analysed on VINDTA #007, whilst open symbols are from VINDTA #004 during DI346 and from the stand-alone extractor during JC031 and JC032; only one instrument was used for samples from DI332. Please note that these values are plotted after outliers were identified and removed (see text in Sect. 4.1), but prior to re-calibration; offsets in these plots indicate for example a change in CRM (e.g. JC031) or a change in sample pipette volume (DI346), and different acid batches for TA.

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CITATION STYLE

APA

Schuster, U., Watson, A. J., Bakker, D. C. E., De Boer, A. M., Jones, E. M., Lee, G. A., … Scally, S. (2014). Measurements of total alkalinity and inorganic dissolved carbon in the Atlantic Ocean and adjacent Southern Ocean between 2008 and 2010. Earth System Science Data, 6(1), 175–183. https://doi.org/10.5194/essd-6-175-2014

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