If symbols do not display correctly change your browser character encoding to unicode CRUISE REPORT: A16C (Updated MAY 2012) HIGHLIGHTS CRUISE SUMMARY INFORMATION WOCE Section Designation A16C Expedition designation (ExpoCodes) 35A320080223 Chief Scientists Dr. Peter Brandt/IFM-GEOMAR Dates Sat Feb 23, 2008 - Sat Mar 15, 2008 Ship L'ATALANTE Ports of call Mindelo, Portugal 17° 35' N Geographic Boundaries 25° 6' W 21. 36' W 2° 3' S Stations 51? Floats and drifters deployed 0 Moorings deployed or recovered 8 mooring deployments 5 mooring recoveries Recent Contact Information: Dr. Peter Brandt Leibniz-Institut für Meereswissenschaften an der Universität Kiel Düsternbrooker Weg 20, 24105 Kiel - Germany e-mail: pbrandt@ifm-geomar.de IFM-GEOMAR Leibniz-Institut für Meereswissenschaften an der Universität Kiel R/V L'ATALANTE Fahrtbericht / Cruise Report IFM-GEOMAR-4 Circulation and Oxygen Distribution in the Tropical Atlantic Mindelo/Cape Verde - Mindelo/Cape Verde 23.02. - 15. 03.2008 Berichte aus dem Leibniz-Institut für Meereswissenschaften an der Christian-Albrechts-Universitãt zu Kiel Nr. 19 August 2008 Das Leibniz-Institut für The Leibniz-Institute of Meereswissenschaften ist Marine Sciences is a ein Institut der member of the Leibniz Wissenschaftsgemeinschaft Association Gottfried Wilhelm Leibniz (WGL) (Wissenschaftsgemeinschaft Gottfried Wilhelm Leibniz). Herausgeber / Editor: Peter Brandt et. al IFM-GEOMAR Report ISSN Nr.: 1614-6298 Leibniz-Institut für Meereswissenschaften / Leibniz-Institute of Marine Sciences IFM-GEOMAR Dienstgebäude Westufer I West Shore Building Düsternbrooker Weg 20 D-24105 Kiel Germany Leibniz-Institut für Meereswissenschaften / Leibniz-Institute of Marine Sciences IFM-GEOMAR Dienstgebäude Ostufer / East Shore Building Wischhofstr. 1-3 D-24148 Kiel Germany Tel.: ++49 431 600-0 Fax: ++49 431 600-2805 www.ifm-geomar.de Table of Contents (RV L'ATALANTE IFM-GEOMAR -4) 4.1 Participants IFM-GEOMAR -4 4.2 Research Program 4.3 Narrative of the Cruise 4.4 Preliminary Results 4.4.1 CTD and Oxygen Measurements 4.4.1.1 Technical Aspects 4.4.1.2 Water Masses and Oxygen Distribution along 23°W 4.4.1.3 Oxygen Optode Calibration 4.4.2 Current Observations 4.4.2.1 Vessel Mounted ADCP: Technical Aspects 4.4.2.2 Lowered ADCPs 4.4.2.3 Selected Results 4.4.3 Mooring Operations 4.4.3.1 Moored Instrument Performance During 2006-2008 4.4.3.2 Calibration of Moored Instruments 4.4.3.3 McLane Moored Profiler 4.4.3.4 Selected Results 4.4.4 Glider Recovery/Deployment 4.4.5 Microstructure Measurements 4.4.6 Chemical Measurements 4.4.7 Thermosalinograph Measurements 4.4.8 Film Coverage 4.5 Acknowledgements Appendix 4.1. Participants R/V L'ATALANTE IFM-GEOMAR - 4 1 Brandt, Peter, Prof. Dr. Chief Scientist IFM-GEOMAR 2 Banyte, Donata CTD/Glider IFM-GEOMAR 3 Brandt, Jens CTD/technology IFM-GEOMAR 4 Didwischus, Sven-Helge Microstructure IFM-GEOMAR 5 Fischer, Jürgen, Dr. Moorings IFM-GEOMAR 6 Fischer, Tim Microstructure/ADCP IFM-GEOMAR 7 Funk, Andreas, Dr. CTD/M icrostructure/ADCP IFM-GEOMAR 8 Gülzow, Michael Film making MKH 9 Hormann, Verena Salinometer/CTD/ADCP IFM-GEOMAR 10 Hummels, Rebecca Microstructure /LADCP IFM-GEOMAR II Komander-Hoepner, Sigrun CTD IFM-GEOMAR 12 Krahmann, Gerd, Dr. Glider/CTD/LADCP IFM-GEOMAR 13 Malien, Frank O2, nutrients/logistics IFM-GEOMAR 14 Müller, Mario Computer/moorings IFM-GEOMAR 15 Niehus, Gerd Moorings/logistics IFM-GEOMAR 16 Papenburg, Uwe Moorings/logistics IFM-GEOMAR 17 Pinck, Andreas Moorings/CTD/Glider IFM-GEOMAR 18 Roth, Christina CTD/Glider IFM-GEOMAR 19 Sachs, Stephan, Prof. Dr. Film coverage MKH 20 Silva, Pericles Neves O2, nutrients INDP 21 Sollich, Miriam Helium/CTD UBU 22 Zantopp, Rainer Moorings, CTD IFM-GEOMAR IFM-GEOMAR Leibniz-Institut fur Meereswissenschaften an der Universität Kiel, Düsternbrooker Weg 20, 24105 Kiel - Germany, e-mail: pbrandt@iumn-geomar.de INDP Instituto de Desenvolvimento das Pescas, Cova de Inglesa, P.B. 132 Mindelo, S. Vicente - Cape Verde, e-mail: pericles.silva@tenatso.com MKH Muthesius Kunsthochschule, Lorentzendamm 6 - 8, 24103 Kiel - Germany, e-mail: sachs@muthesius.de UBU Universität Bremen, Institut fur Umweltphysik, Otto-Hahn-Allee, TJW1, Postbox 330440, 28334 Bremen - Germany, e-mail: mrhein@theo.physik.uni-bremen.de 4.2 Research Program The research cruise IFM-GEOMAR leg 4 aboard RV L'ATALANTE is the first cruise of the new Sonderforschungsbereich 754 "Climate-Biogeochemistry Interactions in the Tropical Ocean". Shipboard, glider and moored observations are used to study the temporal and spatial variability within the oxygen minimum zone (OMZ) of the Tropical North Atlantic. This OMZ is located south of the Cape Verde islands and is generated by particularly low ventilation in addition to oxygen consumption due to heterotrophic respiration. At the same time, cruise IFM-GEOMAR-4 represents the main part of the BMBF program "Nordatlantik", subproject "Role of the equatorial Atlantic Ocean for climate variability in the Atlantic sector". Here, the equatorial current system, particularly the Equatorial Undercurrent (EUC), is the focal point of our research. Oceanic Mixing processes were studied in the frame of the DFG Emmy Noether project "Diapycnal mixing processes in the upwelling regions of the tropical Atlantic" as well as in the frame of the BMBF program "SOPRAN", subproject "The role of mixing and transport for the production and sea-to-air flux of N20 and CH4". The research cruise included hydrographic station observations using a CTD/O2 rosette, including water sampling for helium, oxygen and nutrients. Of particular importance were underway current measurements with both shipboard ADCPs (Narrow Band 75 kHz and 300 kHz). Diapycnal mixing processes were measured on station using a loosely tethered, free-falling microstructure probe. During IFM-GEOMAR-4, an intensive mooring program was carried out with 5 mooring recoveries and 8 mooring deployments. As part of BMBF "Nordatlantik", a mooring array consisting of 5 current meter moorings was installed along 23°W between 2 °S and 2°N. This array is aimed at quantifying the variability of the thermocline water supply toward the equatorial cold tongue which develops east of 10'W during boreal summer. Within the framework of SFB 754, two moorings with CTD/O2 profilers were deployed in the center and at the southern rim of the OMZ of the Tropical North Atlantic. The final mooring of IFMGEOMAR-4 was deployed near the Cape Verde islands shortly before arrival at the port of Mindelo. During the cruise, one glider was recovered and another glider was deployed near the equator. Both gliders are equipped with CTD/O2, chlorophyll and turbidity sensors. 4.3 Narrative of the Cruise R/V L'ATALANTE departed from Mindelo on February 23, 2008 at lO:30L and headed south between the Cape Verdian islands of São Vicente and Santo Antão. South of São Vicente the scientific work commenced with the first CTD/O2 station. Two gliders had been deployed at this location prior to the cruise and the CTD/O2 data were needed for calibrating the CTD/O2 sensors of both gliders. The first glider had been deployed on January 12, 2008 and travelled first along a southeastward track until 14°N, 23°W and then headed further south along the 23°W section. The second glider was deployed a few days before the cruise for a three day test mission. This glider was then loaded aboard R/V L'ATALANTE to be deployed later during the cruise. During the first CTD/O2 station, several microcats and one newly developed oxygen logger were attached to the rosette. All instruments worked well and thus allow a proper pre-deployment instrument calibration. During the following day the working deck as well the instruments were prepared for the intense mooring work that will follow within the upcoming week. On February 25, 2008, after another CTD/O2 station to calibrate the glider sensor, the first glider mentioned above was recovered without any problems. Using the iridium telephone connection from Kiel/Germany, the dive depth of the glider had been reduced to only lOOm, enabling the glider to surface more frequently (about once every 40 minutes). When RIV L'ATALANTE approached the position of the last surfacing, contact with the freewave radio transmitter/receiver system was readily established at a distance of 2-3nm. Over this radio contact the glider transmitted its precise position, and commands were given to keep it at the surface until recovery. Its recovery with the zodiac was a fast operation without any problems despite 2-3 m surface waves. This glider had finished a 45 day mission covering a distance of more than 1200km. All sensors, including temperature, conductivity, pressure, oxygen, turbidity and chlorophyll worked well from beginning to end. Barely any bio- fouling was found on the glider with only some corrosion at the connection between fin-tail and fin. Following the glider recovery, RIV L'ATALANTE steamed toward the first mooring position at 8°N, 23°W. After a CTD/O2 station during the night, the microstructure program commenced with the first 6 casts in the early morning on February 26, 2008. During these measurements, carried out at the portside of the aft deck, R/V L'ATALANTE steamed with 0.5 kn through water during probe deployment while increasing its speed to about 1 kn during descent and recovery of the probe. At 05:OOL the microstructure measurements ended and a drift test started with R/V L'ATALANTE steaming with 1.5 kn through water against weak north-easterly winds at almost zero currents. In the mean time, sound speed data from the CTD/O2 station at the planned mooring position was delivered to the multi-beam echo sounder aboard RV L'ATALANTE to obtain reliably depth measurements. The survey of the bottom topography revealed a depth of about 4800m at the planned mooring position, with a variation of only a few meters nearby. The mooring deployments started at 06:40L on February 26. The ship moved slowly along the planned track, and after about 3h, all instruments including a McLane moored profiler with an oxygen optode had been launched into the water from the aft deck. A short steam of about 1 0mm was needed to reach the anchor drop position, and the final mooring position was determined as 8°01.0'N, 22° 59.0'W. The mooring work at 5°N, 23°W started early in the morning on February 27. Communication with the releases was established using the hydrophone board unit of R/V L'ATALANTE, and the release command was sent at 06:30 L. The top element of the mooring surfaced within a few minutes, and the zodiac was used to connect it to the ship's A-frame. We noticed numerous scuff marks and cuts to the plastic jacket of the mooring wire during the recovery process. The moored profiler sitting near the lower stopper was entangled in a major and tightly pulled cluster of longline fishing gear, preventing the profiler from climbing the mooring wire as planned. In fact, a first glance at the recorded data showed that the profiler recorded full up and down cycles in all variables for the first 1.5 months only, and a complete failure of the vertical profiles afterwards. Both the Aanderaa current meter below the moored profile and the Microcats above and below the moored profiler indicate an occasional and sudden "dive" of the instruments of up to 300 m, consistent with being caught up in longline fishing activities. The next mooring deployment started with a drift test at 12:OOL. The ship arrived at the calculated start position at 13:30L, and the top element went into the water, followed by the remaining instruments in short order - a smooth operation without any problems. The anchor was dropped at the exact position, with the final mooring position being the same as the previous one, i.e. 5° 00.9'N, 23°00'W. The submergence of the top element was observed, and RV L'ATALANTE headed toward the next mooring position at 2°N, 23°W. This mooring is part of the equatorial array between 2°S and 2°N. After a deep CTD station and a drift test, the top element including a narrow-band ADCP was deployed at l6:20L. At about l9:55L the anchor was dropped exactly at the planned position, and the final mooring position is 2°02.5'N, 23°02.0'W. Due to darkness, the submergence of the top element could not be observed. Following the mooring deployment, the ship steamed 75nm to the next mooring position 0°45'N, 22° 59.5'W. During the night, a shallow CTD station down to 1300m was taken, and upon sunrise on February 29 at 6:20L, the mooring was released, and was completely recovered at 10:40L. RV L'ATALANTE headed toward the PIRATA buoy at the equator, 23°W. This position was chosen as the start position for a new glider mission using the glider ("Deepy") that was deployed a few days before the cruise for a test mission south of São Vicente. At 15:00L, the glider went into the water from aboard the zodiac. It was sent first for a lOOm test dive. At l5:50L, it was back at the surface, and after checking its engineering and scientific data it was sent for another 800m test dive. It surfaced at l9:30L and we decided to send the glider on its northward path. Its last position at the surface was at 0'0 1.273N, 22°58.648'W. The plan is to recover the glider during a cruise aboard Maria S. Merian in April 2008 at about 8°N, 23°W. A series of CTD and microstructure measurements was carried out during the night. The knowledge of captain and officers of R/V L'ATALANTE in handling the ship's drift during microstructure measurements was very helpful and considerably improved the quality of the obtained data, enabling the profiler to reach greater depths without distortion due the tension on the cable. As during the previous day, we released the mooring at the nominal position of O°O0'N, 23 °06.8'W at sunrise, and the top element, including the PIRATA workhorse ADCP, was aboard R/V L'ATALANTE at 7:50L. During recovery of the moored profiler wire section, we discovered severe and repeated abrasions throughout the wire length. We decided to use the zodiac to pick up the moored profiler located at its upper stopper during the start of the mooring recovery and slowly moving along the wire while the mooring wire was spooled on the winch. The operation was successful and the remainder of the Benthos floatation elements and the releases were finally recovered at 11 :OOL. A first check of the moored profiler data showed that the profiler measured within the planned depth range during the first 4 months of the deployment only, with a subsequent continuous decrease of the maximum depth reached during descents. During our previous mooring deployment at the equator 23°W in June 2006, we had headed into the southeasterly winds, where the mooring wire shifted from its straight position behind the ship and angled strongly toward the port side of the ship, resulting in severe tension on the mooring wire. We believe that parts of the mooring dropped into the depth range of the very strong EUC and were advected eastward. The current deployment did not feature any long mooring segment without buoyancy, and the problem should be significantly reduced. However, we decided to deploy the mooring headed downwind of the southeasterly wind (instead into it as usually). At the beginning of the deployment, we needed to increase the ship's speed to about 2kn (instead of 1.5kn usually used) to bring about enough tension to pay out the wire. The wire moved slightly to the starboard side during the entire deployment, with only some minor correction of the ship's heading required. The anchor was dropped at the exact position, and the final mooring position is again 0°00'N, 23°06.8'W. Recovery of our equatorial mooring at 21'30'W was planned for March 1. We were not sure if this mooring was still at its deployment location since, starting on July 10, 2007, we had received ARGOS messages from the transmitter attached to the top element. However, both releases responded to the signal from the board unit and the mooring was released. The first element discovered at the surface was the 45" flotation with the Longranger ADCP included. After the complete recovery, we had suffered only the loss of the top floatation with the ARGOS transmitter and a temperature/pressure logger. The three Microcats nominally located below the top element dropped down and recorded at unintended depth levels without creating any problems for the Longranger ADCP measurements. On March 3, we started with the CTD section along 23°W at 2°S. Along the northward cruise track toward Cape Verde, CTD stations will be spaced 15' - 30' of latitude apart, somewhat closer near the equator. Water samples will be taken using the water bottles of the CTD/O2 rosette. During most of the stations, water samples will be analyzed with respect to their contents of helium and nutrients (nitrate, nitrite, phosphate, and silicate) as well as salinity and oxygen to calibrate the sensors of the CTD/O2 probe. Helium samples are typically taken in the upper 150m mainly in the equatorial region, while nutrient samples are measured in the upper 1000m along the whole section. Along our northward track, the program still allowed for some mooring deployments and recoveries. In the early morning of March 3, we deployed the southernmost mooring of our equatorial current meter array. As the topography appeared to be very rough, the deployment area was surveyed in detail with the multi-beam echo sounder, and a small area of about 1 by 1 nm was found featuring rather smooth topography at a depth of 4840m in between topographic ridges reaching up to 4350m. The mooring went out without problems, and submergence of the top element was observed after the anchor was dropped. The final mooring position is 1° 56.4'S and 22°57'W, exactly at the planned position. During the afternoon and the following night, 3 CTD profiles down to 1300m were taken. Early in the morning of March 4, we recovered the last of our moorings deployed in June/July 2006 during M68/2. Both releases responded and the mooring was recovered completely without problems. In summary, we were able to recover all instruments of all moorings except for the top floatation of the equatorial mooring at 21° 30'W that was severed on July 10, 2007 as well as one single temperature/pressure logger. After a CTD station and microstructure measurements, the continuation mooring was deployed at the same position without problems and the final mooring position was calculated, using the positions of the anchor drop and the submerging of the top element, to be 0'44.95'S, 22°59.70'W. During the night, the CTD section was continued toward the equator. In the equatorial mooring deployed 4 days earlier, we had incorporated an additional top element including a 1200 kHz ADCP with a release attached to the top of the remaining mooring. The ADCP was used to measure within the vertical shear zone between the eastward flowing EUC with a core depth at about 50m and the westward flow above. Before recovering the top element on March 5, its position was exactly triangulated and the position of the upper release was determined to be 0°00.22'N, 23°06.76'W at a depth of 177m. The 1200 kHz ADCP acquired good data with a vertical and temporal resolution of 50 cm and 2s, respectively, and a vertical range of about 20m showing vertical shears up to 0.07 The variance of the velocity data will be analyzed in comparison to the microstructure measurements near the mooring to obtain further insight into the mixing processes in the shear zone above the EUC. The last mooring deployment in the equatorial region started on March 6 at 6:00L. The mooring went into the water without problems. Before the anchor drop at 9:35L, the top element of the mooring was followed by the zodiac to film its submergence - a successful operation. In addition, the submergence position was located exactly, and the resulting mooring position is 0°45.l7'N, 22°59.28'W. During the following days, we continued the CTD/O2 section along 23°W northward. South of 2°N and between 7°N and 9°N (the region of the tracer release experiment scheduled for April 2008), each CTD station was followed by a microstructure station consisting of 3 microstructure profiles. North of 9°N, RIV L'ATALANTE headed against quite strong northerly winds and its speed dropped to about 9 kn. To stay within the scheduled program, we decided to cancel further microstructure measurements south of the Cape Verde islands. The meridional section along 23°W was concluded on March 12 at 11:00 with the last CTD/O2 station at l4°N. Before deploying our last mooring north of São Vicente, we had to stop at the port of Mindelo to pick up an Inverted Echo Sounder to be installed near that mooring but was inadvertently left behind at INDP in Mindelo. Using the zodiac of RV L'ATALANTE, the instrument, as well as the baggage of the crew member which had not arrived in time before the cruise, was brought onboard the vessel without much time delay. On March 13 at l8:OOL, we arrived at the planned mooring position at l7°36'N, 24°l5'W. During the night we conducted two three hour microstructure stations, separated by one deep CTD station down to the bottom. On March 14 at 4:OOL we started the drift test for the mooring deployment, and at 6:OOL the top element including a fluorometer, a microcat and an ARGOS watchdog, went into the water. The whole mooring deployment took about 4 hours, and the anchor was dropped at the planned position. Submergence of the top element was observed. Since more than one hour later no ARGOS signal had been received, we deemed the mooring successfully deployed. During lunchtime, microstructure measurements were carried out and at 1 4:OOL, while preparing for the deployment of the Inverted Echo Sounder, we observed the top element of our mooring located right at the surface, at times flushed by the waves. It soon became clear that the top element was still attached to the mooring, but at least 40m shallower than expected. The only option without releasing the mooring again was to cut off the top element. In this case, 34m of mooring, with two microcats, attached would drop down below the next Benthos group. They would represent no harm for the remainder of the mooring as long as the new top element would stay deep enough below the surface. As there was the possibility that the top element would re-submerge due to changing currents, we quickly decided to use the zodiac to attach a rope via the ship's Aframe to the top element. In a perfectly executed operation, the captain drove the ship backward to stop exactly in front of the top element. At 16:15 L the top element was picked up and heaved out of the water using the ship's capstan. After a haul of only two to three meters, the tension on the mooring wire became very severe. The wire was cut below the top element. From the proximity of the cut position to the actual mooring position we assume that the mooring wire was almost completely stretched and that after cutting the top element, the next Benthos group is about 20m below the surface. The risk for rising to the surface during low current conditions is regarded to be small. As the water depth at the mooring position was exactly determined by independent measures from the CTD, the multi-beam echo sounder during the last RN METEOR cruise as well as the triangulation of the releases and agreed with expected values of about 3600m, we believe that the only explanation for the surfacing of the top element is a mooring longer than planned. We must check with the manufacturer of the mooring wire if such a mistake is possible and can be prevented for any future deployments. The triangulated mooring position is l7°36.244'N, 24°14.915'W. Note that this location is closer to the anchor drop position than expected, with the backdrop of the anchor only about 9% of the total mooring length. The inverted echo sounder was then deployed without problems at 17:1 0L near the mooring at l7°36.03l'N, 24'l 4.604'W. During the night we continued with a 24 h microstructure station near the mooring position. The scientific work of R/V L'ATALANTE cruise IFM-GEOMAR leg 4 ended at ll:30L and the ship headed toward Mindelo where the cruise ended on March 15, 18:00L (Fig. 4.1). Fig. 4.1: Cruise track of R/V L'ATALANTE cruise IFM-GEOMAR leg 4. 4.4 Preliminary Results 4.4.1 CTD and Oxygen Measurements 4.4.1.1 Technical Aspects During the whole cruise a Seabird SBE 9 system, the IFM-GEOMAR, Kiel SBE-5 S/N 0410 was used. The software used was the Seabird Seasave V7.l2 program. For the final calibrated datasets the data from the primary set of sensors (temperature s/n 2120, conductivity s/n 1494, and oxygen s/n 0985) were used. During profile 5 the secondary set of sensors showed a problem with the oxygen sensor (s/n 1287), which could be resolved by changing the data transmission channels. A comparison with the Winkler titrated sample data showed that the problem had existed also during the first four casts and might have already been present during the previous leg. Although the second conductivity sensor (s/n 2512) showed slightly higher quality than the primary sensor, we decided to use the primary set of sensors as it worked continuously throughout the whole cruise. A comparison of the secondary temperature sensor (s/n 4547) showed that the two temperature sensors had a mean offset of 0.003°C with a standard deviation of 0.004°C. A second Seabird CTD, IFM-GEOMAR, Kiel SBE-4, was available as backup system, but was not used. During the cruise a total of 51 CTD-profiles were performed. These were usually taken to 1300m depths, only at the mooring positions deep casts to the bottom were performed. For the deep CTD-casts the bottom was detected by an altimeter. This worked reliably and the CTD had no ground contact at all during the cruise. However, a reliable range was only available at distances closer than 30m to the bottom. Sound speed profiles derived from CTD data were used to correct the echo sounder of the ship and a comparison of CTD pressure/altimeter and echo sounder showed a good agreement. The Seabird bottle release unit used with the rosette worked properly and reliably except for some cases, when niskins 3 or 4 did not close. During the first half of the cruise some leakages of the bottles occurred, an exchange of the nylon bands by steel spiral springs inside the bottles led to some improvement. The salinity samples were analyzed with a Guildline Autosal salinometer (Kiel A57). The conductivity calibration was performed using a linear fit with respect to temperature. Tests with linear or quadratic fits in pressure or conductivity did not improve the quality of the fit in a significant manner. Using 66% of the 253 samples for calibration, an rms difference of 0.00025 S/m corresponding to a salinity of 0.0025 PSU was found for the upcast. We chose the downcast as final dataset for several reasons: 1) Sensor hysteresis starts from a well defined point, 2) the incoming flow is not perturbed by turbulence generated by the CTD- rosette, and 3) long stops during the upcast profiles lead to unsteady profiles over depth. For the downcast conductivity, we got an mis difference of 0.00051 S/m corresponding to a salinity of 0.0052 PSU. A comparison with a different calibration including the outliers showed significantly larger mis differences but the final calibrated profiles were identical within about 0.001 PSU indicating that the restriction to the highest quality data does not introduce systematic shifts in the calibration results. A comparison of up- and downcast profiles shows that the intrinsic time and space variability are much larger than the uncertainties involved in the calibration processes. For the oxygen calibration the oxygen content of the water samples has been determined by Winkler's titration method. The downcast has been calibrated using all samples within 2.8 standard deviations of the observed differences. This includes 613 of 694 data samples and led to an mis difference of 0.052 mIll using a linear correction for temperature, pressure and oxygen itself. Fig. 4.2: a) B-S diagram, the color code denotes the profile number. Later profiles are plotted on top of the earlier profiles. b) CTD station map. During the cruise, the Cape Verde Frontal Zone was crossed twice and the shift from the more saline, higher temperature regime of the North Atlantic Central Water (NACW) to the fresher, lower temperature regime of the South Atlantic Central Water can easily be identified between Stations 1, 49, 50, 51 and the other stations south of about 13.25° N (Fig. 4.2). Below the Central Water layer, the AAIW can be identified by its salinity minimum and at the deep stations at the mooring positions also the saltier NADW is found underneath. 4.4.1.2 Water Masses and Oxygen Distribution Along 23°W Fig. 4.3: Oxygen distribution along 23°W. White lines show isolines of σθ=24.5, σθ=26.8 σθ=27.1 and, σ1000=32.l5kg/m3. During the cruise the oxygen minimum zone in the eastern tropical Atlantic is observed with lowest oxygen concentrations below 50 tmo1Ikg between 400 and 600 m water depth and at 9 to 12'N (Fig. 4.3). In the equatorial region high oxygen concentrations are observed in the regime of the Equatorial Undercurrent (EUC). The Northern and Southern Intermediate Countercurrents (NICC and SICC) also show high oxygen concentrations. An intermediate depth oxygen maximum at the equator at 350 m depth as observed during the RN METEOR cruise 68/2 in June/July 2006 was not found during the RIV L'ATALANTE cruise. 4.4.1.3 Oxygen Optode Calibration The Physical Oceanography Department at IFM-GEOMAR in Kiel uses the Aanderaa Optode 3830 on various platforms, including moored fixed level instruments, moored profilers, and autonomous gliders. The instrument specifications claim longterm stability of measurements (more than one year) without recalibration. However, our comparisons with CTD measurements show that the factory settings require an instrument-specific calibration to satisfy our accuracy needs in order to measure oceanographically relevant signals. To perform the calibration measurements, the optode loggers were installed in our in-house built, self- recording loggers. During Leg 4, we performed shipboard calibrations of various sensors for a pre or post-deployment check, essentially consisting of the following: 1) Oxygen loggers mounted on the CTD rosette and deployed during a regular CTD cast, typically to 1300 m during this cruise. 2) During the upcast, 12 bottle stops are taken of 2 minutes each to allow all sensors to "settle" and to take a water sample for subsequent oxygen determination via Winkler titration. 3) The raw CTD profiles undergo post-cruise calibrations using the water samples for salinity and oxygen (and other parameters, primarily nutrients and tracers). Optode calibrations utilize the calibrated CTD data. 4) Time series of temperature and oxygen for CTD and optode are compared via the minimum residual method to determine the time lag between the two respective instrument clocks. This time shift is typically a few seconds (5-10 sec). 5) The time periods for the 12 stops are determined from the pressure record of the CTD. 6) Based on these time periods, the bottle stop values for temperature and oxygen are averaged for CTD and optode, plus pressure and salinity averages for the CTD. These values are written a bottle stop file, also including the titrated bottle oxygen values. 7) Optode oxygen values are corrected for salinity and pressure effects, using the Aanderaa specified numbers in the routine 'o2corr'. 8) Multifit regressions are performed for a correlation between CTD oxygens and (corrected) optode oxygens, in the following configurations: a) Ox(ctd) vs. Ox(opt) b) Ox(ctd) vs. Ox(opt), temperature c) Ox(ctd) vs. Ox(opt), temperature, pressure d) Ox(ctd) vs. Ox(opt), Ox(opt)**2, temperature, pressure 9) The results demonstrate that only the fourth fit (8d), including a quadratic dependence on oxygen, consistently reduces the rms error, and also removes the pressure dependence of those residuals. Other combinations of fit parameters were tried and found to be equal or inferior to the above version 8d. An example plot of the residuals vs. depth for sensors s/n 937 and 946 is shown in Fig. 4.4. 10) Temperatures of the optode measurements were subjected to a linear fit vs. CTD temperatures. 11) The results of all fits for the various instruments are shown in Table A4.2. Caution: Instrument s/n 943 and 839 (last 2 sets) were calibrated during RIV Merian cruise MSMO8/1 in April 2008, using only 5 and 4 bottle stops, respectively. This small number of calibration points does not permit a 4th order fit with adequate certainty. Use with caution! Fig. 4.4: Residuals of various parameter configuration fits for oxygen optodes s/n 937 and 946, respectively. 4.4.2 Current Observations 4.4.2.1 Vessel Mounted ADCP: Technical Aspects RV L'ATALANTE holds two hull mounted RDI Acoustic Doppler Current Profilers with frequencies of 75 and 300 kHz. Both ADCPs are oriented approximately 45° relative to the ship's bow. The 300 kHz instrument interferes with the hull mounted Doppler Velocity Log (7 pings per second), but to a tolerable amount. Default sources of navigational information are an AQUARIUS GPS (2 antennae) for position and a calculated "hybrid" signal for heading, merged from the same AQUARIUS GPS with one of two OCTANS Fibre Optic Gyros. This hybridheading aims to meet the advantages of the GPS 's long-term stability and the FOG' s short- term accuracy and resolution. Its disadvantage is the undisclosed and thus irreversible algorithm to calculate hybrid-heading. The pure GPS heading signal generated by the AQUARIUS 2antennae attitude array is available on request as ASCII-files at 10-second intervals. This heading source proves to be slightly less noisy than hybrid-heading. Alternative but worse sources of navigational data are: a) "integrated" position, calculated from different sources by an undisclosed algorithm, proves to be noisier than GPS position b) pure FOG-heading, noisier than hybrid-heading because of drifting offset c) so-called HDMS-heading, calculated from different sources, with huge excursions from true heading from time to time During Leg 4 of RV L'ATALANTE cruise 2008, both ADCPs worked continuously, in narrowband mode and at ping rates of 1 per second (300 kHz) and 1 per 2.4 seconds (75 kHz). The 75 kHz unit with 1 6-m-bins had a range of about 400 m while cruising and 500 to 600 m on station. The depth range of the 300 kHz unit was about 100 m at 4-m-bins, mainly depending on scatterer density. The system software TRANSECT delivered single ping data of beam velocities and backscatter amplitude as raw data files and NMEA strings of navigational data as ASCII navigation files. Calibration with GPS positions and GPS attitude array headings produced velocity data of good quality: 10-minute-average velocities showed a standard deviation of heading misalignment of 0.5 to 0.6°, and even 1-minute- average velocities still showed a standard deviation of 0.8 to 0.9° accompanied by an unusual smooth appearance of the processed velocity sections. This was partly due to a calm sea state during most of the cruise. Successful parameters for data processing were misalignment angles of -44.1° (300 kHz) and -45.2° (75 kHz) as well as amplitude factors of 0.997 (300 kHz) and 1.0 (75 kHz). 4.4.2.2 Lowered ADCPs During the cruise two 300 kHz RDI Workhorse ADCPs were attached to the CTD rosette. With these two instruments full CTD depth current profiles could be obtained. The up-looking ADCP was serial number 7915, a loan from the University Bremen. The down-looking ADCP was serial number 690 of IFM-GEOMAR. The instrument from Bremen had been used since another instrument from IFM-GEOMAR had developed a bad beam during one of the preceding legs. Serial number 690 had since the start of leg 4 or earlier one weak beam. We found during all profiles that the instrument from Bremen had 20 m more range than the instrument from Kiel (typically 150 m compared to 130 m in shallow waters). Whether this was caused by the instrument being newer (guessed from the higher serial number) or whether there is a hardware or firmware difference, we do not know. For CTD profile number 1, a glider calibration station near the Cape Verde Islands, the instruments could not be started. No lowered ADCP data was thus collected for this profile. During the following days it was discovered that the serial cable connection had gone bad near the plug to the battery pack. Water was found inside the cable (this cable never enters the water, so that the wetting must have occurred by rain or the hosing of the CTD with freshwater after a profile). The connection was resoldered and covered with a two-component plastic seal. As we on previous cruises had similar problems, as the number of wires coming out of the battery pack is not sufficient (we need 8 instead of the current 7 wires for 2 serial connections and the battery voltage), and as the battery pack itself had shown contact problems with the battery cells on a previous cruise, a proper refurbishment of the battery packs and the attached cables is due after the following cruise on FS Merian. During this cruise we could for the first time use two newly acquired USB to Serial converters that use a signal voltage of 12V instead of the usual 5V for the serial lines. This indeed solved all the connection problems we had encountered on previous cruises. We were thus able to implement the parallel downloading routines from Andreas Thurnherr of LamontDoherty Earth Observatory. This cuts in two the time needed to download data from the ADCPs and also makes the switching of cables or instruments between downloads unnecessary. In all this setup worked extremely well during the cruise. For all the following profiles, with the exception of profile 3, the lowered ADCP worked as intended. During profile 3 the up-looking ADCP did not record during the whole cast and produced 2 data files, an indication that it might have lost the connection to the battery during the profile. This did, however, not occur again and we were thus unable to solve whatever problem might have been the cause. The data quality during all shallow profiles (most CTD profiles went only down to 1300 m) was very high. Parallel processing by Rebecca Hummels and Gerd Krahmann, one including shipboard ADCP data and one not, showed only minor differences, indicating that the quality of the lowered ADCP data is very high. For all deep profiles the quality degraded severely and while not totally unusable the velocity error on all deep profiles is rather high with up to 10 cm/s. For future cruises collecting deep lowered ADCP profiles one needs to investigate what the difference between the instruments from the University Bremen and the one from IFMGEOMAR is and what the recent development of a higher powered 300 kHz workhorse by RDI has resulted in. 4.4.2.3 Selected Results Fig. 4.5 is a composition of zonal velocity data from 300 kHz and 75 kHz 10- minute-averages and LADCP-data along 23°W. The most prominent feature is the eastward Equatorial Undercurrent (EUC), with its core at 50 to 70 m depth; underneath, the westward Equatorial Intermediate Current (ETC) is clearly observable. The Northern Intermediate Countercurrent (NICC) at 2°N and 400 m is shallower than usual. Instead of the lacking northern branch of the South Equatorial Current (nSEC), an eastward shallow current at 3°N is observed; a quite persistent one, which has been found in the Leg 2 data of January 2008, too. The North Equatorial Countercurrent (NECC) is absent as expected, while an eastward structure at 9°N is present which may be interpreted as northern branch of the NECC. Fig. 4.6 illustrates the good quality of the 300 kHz 1-minute-averages during the two equator crossings. The resolution of 4 m vertically, 300 m or less horizontally (depending on ship speed) and 1 minute in time allows resolving the current fine structure. Not only the undulations in the upper high-shear part of the EUC may be seen (spatial scale roughly 10 km, time scale roughly 20 mm), but vertical excursions of the whole EUC of 20 to 30 m on timescales of a few days - Figs. 4.6a and 4.6b are sections separated by 2 to 6 days. Fig. 4.5: Zonal velocity along 23°W. Composite section of vessel mounted ADCP (300 kHz, 75 kHz) and LADCP measurements. White lines show isolines of σθ=24.5, σθ=26.8 σθ=27.1 and, σ1000=32.11 5kg/m3. Fig. 4.6: Zonal velocity from 300 kHz vessel mounted ADCP during two crossings of the equator. a) Northern branch: 28.02.2008, 12 a.m. to 29.02.2008, 6 p.m. from north to south at 23°W. Gap at the equator is 29.02.2008, 6 p.m. to 02.03.2008, 10 a.m. while going along the equator from 230W to 21.5°W. Southern branch: 02.03.2008, 10a.m. to 03.03.2008, 3a.m. from north to south, starting at 21.50W and ending at 23°W. Visible inhomogeneity at 0.75°N is caused by long stay due to mooring activities. b) 03.03.2008, 6.a.m. to 07.03.2008, 10 a.m. from south to north at 23°W. 4.4.3 Mooring Operations The mooring activities of RIV L'ATALANTE cruise IFM-GEOMAR - 4 served two major scientific programs, the BMBF-funded 'North Atlantic' project with a focus on the equatorial circulation, and a newly installed SFB focused on oxygen minimum zones (OMZs). The plans called for recovery of 6 moorings and deployment of 8 moorings. Fortunately, the ship was able to recover the TENATSO mooring V440 (also known as KPO_1006) during the previous leg en route to the port of Mindelo. However, several of the near surface instruments were exposed to major biofouling (barnacles, mussels, etc.), causing additional cleanup work and leaving some uncertainty whether or not all Microcats could be reused for the next deployment period. All other instruments to be used during the upcoming deployments came straight from the lab, with the exception of one of the moored ADCPs. All mooring activities are summarized in the deployment and recovery tables. The ship sailed from Mindelo on Saturday morning, February 23. Local time on board is UTC- 1. Headed south, we began to prepare the instruments for the first mooring - the MMP station near 8°N, 23°W planned for the early morning of February 26. The Profiler was programmed to perform paired profiles every 1.9 days, following a lengthy discussion on energy consumption, tidal aliasing etc. With this setting, the diagnostic program predicts sufficient power until January 2010 while recovery is planned for November 2009. Microcats were calibrated during the first CTD cast. We decided not to touch the optode on the Profiler but leave the calibration to be done during the recovery cruise. This mooring is in support of the OMZ research project, as is the mooring at 5°N, the latter being a repetition of a pilot mooring deployed during RIV METEOR cruise 68/2 in July 2006. In the early morning of Tuesday, February 26, we surveyed the intended location of the 8°N mooring and found a suitable place with a water depth close to the planned one - 4480 m corrected. Deployment started at 6:36 local (7:36 UTC). The Profiler was deployed after about 50 m of wire below the stopper has been paid out, trying a new method by slipping a section of Meteor rope through the lower plastic guide of the Profiler, then slowly lowering the instrument into the water, allowing it to descend tail first. We believe this method to be superior to all others we have tried so far. The anchor was slipped at 10:49L without any problems about 10 minutes after the last element went in the water. The anchor drop position was 08° 01.28'N, 22°58.6'W. The next stop was the 5°N site to recover and re-deploy that mooring, for a full day of mooring-related work. Release of the mooring went very well, and most of the instruments came on board in good physical shape. However, the profiler was entangled in long-line fisheries equipment which prevented any profiling of the MMP after the long-line incident. The question of when this happened remained unanswered initially as the top MTD recorder was flooded and damaged beyond repair, and the Aanderaa rotor located at a depth of 1025 m was also blocked by the same fishing line. However, the records indicated that this entanglement must have occurred about 1.5 months after deployment. Redeployment of the mooring began during the late afternoon on February 27, and the anchor was dropped with a big splash. Submergence of the top elements could not be observed due to the fading daylight. The final mooring position was estimated at 5° 0.9'N, 23° 0.O'W. With this deployment, the SFB mooring component was completed successfully. Mooring work was performed throughout the next few days. We began to install the equatorial array with the deployment of the 2°N mooring on February 28. This and other deployments at new sites, not previously occupied, were preceded by a deep CTD cast (to obtain a precise estimate of the sound speed profile), followed by a depth survey with RIV L'ATALANTE multi beam echo sounder. The starting point and anchor drop location were determined by performing a 20 min long drift test. Deployment at the 2°N mooring began in late afternoon, and anchor drop was during fading daylight, allowing submergence to be observed by the ceasing watchdog signal only. The mooring at 00 45'N was recovered on February 29 with no surprises. The release responded properly, with good ranging and immediate release. The top element was heavily overgrown, but the wire farther down was almost clean. Instruments looked good and a first data inspection indicated a somewhat shallower top than planned. The day after, March 1, at 06:15L we released the mooring at the equator - including the WHOI-supplied profiler (J. Toole). The mooring came up immediately and the first elements went on deck. To our surprise, the profiler was found at the upper end of the wire. The wire jacket was damaged over most of the upper 1000 m, and we decided to get the profiler first so it would not slide down all the way along the rough wire. It turned out that the profiler had worked to the end, but the range was considerably reduced following a few months of full depth range. The damage must have occurred during the recovery operation, also confirmed by the blank, non-corroded wire elements. In the afternoon we redeployed the equatorial mooring - this time with the wind on the stern, to avoid being caught again by the EUC (as happened during M68/2). However, the EUC-caused problems did reoccur, albeit to a much lesser degree. We were able to solve the wire angle problem without major complications. This mooring featured a Tip-Top (see Fig. 4.7) above the regular mooring configuration, to be recovered on our way back. The first mooring with 3 ADCPs was deployed during early evening, and darkness prevented us from observing the submergence of the top float. The radio signal from the Tip-Top ceased and was not heard again, providing great relieve as the top element was planned to be shallower than 40m depth. The morning of March 2, we were at the mooring site at 21.5'W and the equator. About half a year earlier, the Argos beacon on this mooring had alarmed us of a drifting top element, so we were anxious to see what was still left of the mooring. At the site, both releases responded and released promptly. We found everything in place, missing only the 32" foam float with one MTD and the Argos beacon. The remainder of the mooring was in good shape, and it appeared that the ADCP had not suffered from being pulled down by the bitter end of the wire and 3 Microcats along this wire. However, the Microcats showed spurious spikes after the event. On March 3, we arrived at the site of the 2°S mooring, and we had already concluded earlier that the topography at the chosen site was very unfavorable. The only really good place was a valley which was 400m too deep and could not be used due to wire limitations. A multibeam echo sounder survey showed another location of sufficient flatness and proper depth (4840 m). To be on the safe side, we decided to allocate 5 h for the mooring work, leaving sufficient time at the end to tow the mooring into place. This worked out fine, except it took more time than expected, and the final mooring location ended up at 10 56.70'S, 22° 56.65'W. The mooring at 00 45'S was replaced on March 4. Mooring recovery started in the early morning, and after both releases responded properly, the mooring was released at sunrise (06:15L). The mooring was sighted shortly thereafter, but all elements were clustered at the same location, making the pickup extremely difficult. We then picked the most exposed group which turned out to be located in the middle of the mooring. However, when the top was finally retrieved, more fishing line was found which apparently had sheared off the uppermost MTD. Two Aanderaa rotors were lost during recovery due to the long-line tangles. After lunch we began to re-deploy the mooring at the same location which went well without a hitch. Please note that the upper Microcats were shifted upward slightly, as noted in the protocol. We towed the mooring into place and dropped the anchor in heavy rain. However, submergence could be observed, and once again, the final position was almost exactly as planned. After waiting to make sure that the mooring did not resurface, we left the site for the next CTD station. Fig. 4.7: Tip-Top element carrying the 1200 kHz ADCP atop the regular equatorial mooring at 23°W. On March 5, we were back at the equator to recover the Tip-Top of the equatorial mooring deployed five days earlier. We first determined the position by minimum distance search, then moved the ship into position 150 m off the point, released, and immediately located the floatation half sphere, even though nobody actually saw it popping up. The ADCP was still pinging and sampled more than 200 MB of data in 4 days. The last mooring of the equatorial array was installed March 6 very early in the morning (04:00 L drift test, 06:00 L first element in water). This mooring was at 4310 m water depth and we had to add 100 m of wire (remove 20 m; add 3 x 40 m). Aiming for a deployment length of 3.5 h, we were almost ready to drop the anchor when we passed the launch position (l00 m overshoot). The anchor (1450kg) was dropped with a splash, filmed this time from the Zodiac. Then we observed the submergence of the top element which appeared to move much slower through the water than in the other moorings. On standby, we waited for about one hour for any re-appearance of the watchdog signal, but everything remained quiet, indicating a successful deployment. The top Microcats were moved up the wire, with the upper Microcat at 94 m (s/n 2251 to 143 m), and MTD s/n 31 moved to 298 m. On March 14 at 04:00 L, we started the drift test for the redeployment of the TENATSO mooring, and at 06:00 L the top element including a fluorometer, a Microcat and an ARGOS watchdog, went into the water. The whole mooring deployment took about 4 hours, and the anchor was dropped at the planned position. Submergence of the top element was observed. Since more than one hour later no ARGOS signal had been received, we deemed the mooring successfully deployed. During lunchtime, microstructure measurements were carried out and at 14:00 L, while preparing for the deployment of the Inverted Echo Sounder, we observed the top element of our mooring located right at the surface, at times flushed by the waves. It soon became clear that the top element was still attached to the mooring, but at least 40 m shallower than expected. The only option without releasing the entire mooring was to cut off the top element. In this case, 34 m of mooring, with two Microcats attached, would drop down below the next Benthos group (see Fig. 4.8 for a schematic of the mooring configuration). They would represent no harm for the remainder of the mooring as long as the new top element would stay deep enough below the surface. As there was the possibility that the top element would resubmerge due to changing currents, we quickly decided to use the Zodiac to attach a rope via the ship's A-frame to the top element. The captain skillfully drove the ship backward to stop exactly in front of the top element. Fig. 4.8: Schematic of mooring configuration which lead to the resurfacing of the top float of the TENATSO mooring. The 36 m piece in the upper right-hand corner was cut. At 16:15L the top element was picked up and heaved out of the water using the ship's capstan. After a haul of only two to three meters, the tension on the mooring wire became very severe. The wire was cut below the top element at the position of 17°36.198'N, 24°l5.004'W. This cut position was only about 180 m horizontally from the location of the release position determined through subsequent triangulation, i.e. 17°36.244'N, 24°14.915'W. Note that this location is closer to the anchor drop position than expected, with the backdrop of the anchor only about 9% of the total mooring length. The distance between the top element and the release direct following the cut was about 3580 m (corrected for hydrophone depth and sound speed). The mooring program indicates this distance to be no more than 3523 m (the distance between release and top element from the mooring program). Therefore, in case the mooring was fully stretched, the total length of the mooring was about 60 m too long. An error in the water depth is very unlikely. The different pressure/depth records from the last mooring period consistently indicate a water depth at the mooring position of 3594 m. Moreover, during our last cruise, we made a detailed bathymetric survey using the multi-beam echo sounder of RIV METEOR. The obtained topography - corrected using an observed sound speed profile - revealed water depths around 3600 m with only 10 m variations over a very large region. This was confirmed by the deep CTD profile just prior to the mooring deployment that was stopped 15 m above the bottom (as measured by the CTD altimeter and the lowered ADCP), indicating 3584 m as measured by the pressure sensor and converted to depth. Also, the echo sounder of RV L'ATALANTE showed very smooth topography with only slight variations around 3600 m during the CTD cast and during the mooring deployment. From the triangulation of the releases after severing the top element, we obtained the depth of the releases to be 3570 m. As the releases are nominally 34 m above the anchor, the total water depth at the mooring position should be 3604 m. From the proximity of the cut position to the actual mooring position we conclude that the mooring wire was almost completely stretched and that after cutting the top element, the next Benthos group is about 20 m below the surface, and the risk for rising to the surface during low current conditions is deemed to be small. We believe that the only explanation for the surfacing of the top element is a mooring longer than planned. We must check with the manufacturer of the mooring wire if such a mistake is possible and can be prevented for any future deployments. The inverted echo sounder was then deployed without problems at 17:10 L near the mooring at 17°36.031'N, 24°14.604'W. During the above-described decision making process, we noticed some range inconsistencies with one of the new release units (#270) of about 30 m. This was confirmed later by comparison with its counterpart in the mooring and by inspection of the release tests. Another pair of releases with the same type of instrument showed the same behavior (30 m more range than its counterpart). Thus, this type of releases should be treated with caution when range determination is important. 4.4.3.1 Moored Instrument Performance During 2006-2008 The data retrieval was similar to other mooring efforts in the past (Fig. 4.9). We got all moorings back and most of the instruments contained full data sets. Most painful was that both MMPs had only partially fulfilled their mission. The one at 5°N was hampered by fishing equipment after only 1.5 months, and the equatorial one gradually decreased its profiling range for reasons unknown so far. Major concern with the ADCP data was the apparently incorrect data of the equatorial Workhorse and possibly a heading problem of the northern Narrowband ADCP. Table 4.1: Standard instrumentation vs. moored profilers Instrument Moored Performance Standard Profiler 2006-2008 Instr. (%) (%) ------------ ---------- -------- Moorings 100.0 100.0 Currents 95.0 28.0 Temperature 92.7 28.0 Conductivity 93.8 28.0 Pressure 87.0 28.0 Fig. 4.9: Percentage of moorings/parameter data retrieved for the 2006-2008 deployment. The reduced data amounts obtained from the profilers are due to the range and time limitations from long-line entanglement and unknown causes (see text). 4.4.3.2 Calibration of Moored Instruments Moored instruments (Microcats and MTD5) are typically subjected to a pre- deployment or postdeployment calibration by lowering them during a regular CTD cast and using stabilized data obtained during 2-minute stops at pre-selected depths (or water mass properties) for calibration points for temperature, conductivity and pressure, if available. Linear fits are used to determine calibration factors which are then applied to the moored records (Fig. 4.10). Fig. 4.10: Residual of linear calibration fits for temperature (blue), conductivity (red) and pressure (green, scaled by factor of 1/100) as a function of serial number and CTD cast. The quality of some fits may vary due to sea state, ship's pitch and roll, and other effects. The resulting calibration factors are listed below. 4.4.3.3 McLane Moored Profiler The MMP is a modern observing platform for physical and chemical insitu measurements over long time intervals. Powered by lithium batteries, an electric motor drives a friction wheel for climbing the mooring wire up and down at slow speeds. One million meters is the total traveling range, e.g. 500 profile pairs of 2000m total length (I 000m up and down, respectively) can be performed. On RV L'ATALANTE cruise IFM-GEOMAR - 4, we had two of these instruments aboard and two were to be recovered. As we approached the 5°N mooring relatively early during the cruise, we were anxious to see how this instrument had performed. The mooring structure is shown to the left (Fig. 4.11). Unfortunately, the profiler suffered a major entanglement with long-line fishing equipment, and data inspection showed that this happened early during the deployment period - after about 40 days, thereby bringing the profiler to a complete stop. During the total deployment period, this mooring seemed to suffer several attacks by long-lines, with August being the preferred month. Thus there is some concern for the replacement mooring that was deployed at the same location. However, while the profiler was running properly, it performed the cycle as programmed: one up and down cycle, followed by a waiting period of 1.6 days. Two aspects have been investigated in more detail. The first was the oxygen measured by an Aanderaa optode, apparently requiring post-deployment calibrations and a rather long time constant correction of the sensor foil. Nevertheless, the measurements offer tremendous potential for the new SFB research on OMZ. The second aspect was the velocity measured by the FSI-ACM aboard the MMP. The mooring also featured a down-looking ADCP with large overlapping ranges for comparison. The Seabird Microcats above and below the profile range as well as the Aanderaa Rotor Current Meter will also be used as references for the CTD and current measurements of the moored profiler. Mooring A005 with full instrumentation, MMP, LongRanger ADCP, Aanderaa Rotor Current Meter, and two Seabird Microcats. Fig. 4.11: Schematic of Mooring AO-05 One and a half month of high resolution oxygen profiles reveal the potential of MMP measurements with Aanderaa optodes. The oxygen measurements capture the oxygen minimum at about 400m and show strongly inclined oxygen anomalies on short time scales. The obtained oxygen data from up and down profiles also reveal the presence of a strong hysteresis inherent with optode measurements (Fig. 4.12, upper panel). However, the hysteresis cannot be attributed to the temperature measurements inside the optode: The effect of correcting the optode temperature using the CTD temperature from the profiler is small compared to the remaining hysteresis. Using a simple calibration accounting for a time constant of the oxygen sensor, we are able to reduce the hysteresis in the oxygen data (Fig. 4.12, lower panel). The optimum, yet rather large time constant of about 40 s was obtained by searching for a minimum in the standard deviation of the difference between successive up and down profiles. The final calibrated MMP oxygen values fall in the range of previously obtained shipboard measurements showing a high variability of the oxygen at 5°N, 23°W (Fig. 4.13). Fig. 4.12: Oxygen profiles [µmol/kg] from MMP at 5°N, 23°W acquired from July 4 to August 22, 2006. Uncalibrated oxygen data showing a strong hysteresis are depicted in the upper panel. Calibrated oxygen data are obtained by applying a time constant calibration and standard calibrations as discussed in section 4.4.1.3. Fig. 4.13: Oxygen measurements at 5°N, 23°W from different shipboard CTD measurements (dashed and solid lines) and from MMP. The second topic of interest was a comparison of the velocity measurements of the MMP and a downward looking Longranger ADCP. In a first step, the raw MMP- velocities were corrected for magnetic bias and for instrument motion using a software packet provided by J. Toole (WHOI). The data were initially gridded and contoured (Fig. 4.14), followed by an interpolation of the MMP velocity to the vertical resolution of the LR-ADCP. A feature comparison between individual MMP profiles and adjacent LR-ADCP profiles allowed a temporal synchronization in the next step, yielding both velocity fields on the same space and time grid, and in turn allowing a first comparison (using the LR-ADCP data as a reference). The overall means of the two fields are indistinguishable (< 0.02 m/s), with rms differences in layers around 4 cm/s (see Fig. 4.15). Altogether, this is a promising outlook for the quality of the MMP velocity measurements. Fig. 4.14: Zonal MMP currents at 5°N (depth [m] vs. time). Data were subjected to the J. Toole correction routine and subsequent gridding. Fig. 4.15: Comparison of LR-ADCP (blue) and MMP (red) velocities. Dashed lines are rms differences between the two, calculated for 10m depth cells; here enveloping the MMP profile. The effect of MMP bias correction is illustrated by the dashed green curve, representing the MMP profile without the correction. 4.4.3.4 Selected Results Flow in the equatorial belt To illustrate the richness of the data set, we here show the current distribution in one of the depth layers, at 700 m, in their geographical arrangement. The middle row in Fig. 4.16 is at the equator (23°W and 21.5°W) and the upper and lower graphs are at 23°W, 45'N and 45'S, respectively. Note the intense variability (instability waves) on short time scales with some correlation of the larger events (e.g., northern and equatorial mooring at 23° W). The maximum flow in September 2007 can be detected in all four records. Fig. 4.16: Stick plots of equatorial flow field at 700m level, (upper graph for 45'N, 23°W, middle for equator, 23°W and 21.5'W, and lower for 45'S, 23°W) For the upper layer we show the four ADCPs located in the upper range of these moorings (Fig. 4.17). Narrowband ADCPs transmitting at 150 kHz were use in the off-equatorial moorings, looking upward from about 300m depth. The northern instrument seemed to have problems with its heading, requiring a post cruise compass calibration which was performed in Kiel on June 4, 2008. Both NB-ADCP were placed on a turntable, rotating the instruments by 360°, and comparing the readings to those of a reference magnetic compass in a magnetically undisturbed area. We found no significant deviations from the reference readings and therefore the ADCP direction data as being reliable. Longranger ADCPs (75 kHz systems) were used in the equatorial mooring and at 5° N (see MMP discussion). At a first glance, all LR-ADCP worked well without any apparent compass problems. However, this is not the case with the 300 kHz ADCP at the equator. This instrument shows very strange behavior (large vertical and error velocities), and no reasonable explanation for why this happened. Currently this data set must be regarded non-usable. This ADCP has been sent to RDI-Europe for inspection/repair. Fig. 4.17: Zonal flow in the upper layer of the equatorial Atlantic as measured by ADCP. Left column from top to bottom: instrument at 5°N, 0°45'N, Equator, 0°45'S, and right column at top (zonal flow at 5°N with velocity scale -20cm/s to +20cm/s) and middle right is for equatorial ADCP at 21.5°N. 1200 kHz ADCP at the equator The equatorial mooring at 23°W had an additional high frequency ADCP attached to the top buoy (a so-called Tip-Top, see photo in Fig. 4.7) aimed at measuring turbulent flow in the upper 40m; i.e., at the upper edge of the EUC (Fig. 4.18). However, the depth of this ADCP was somewhat shallower than planned, and during short periods of weak flow, it rose up to about 5 to 10m, barely safe below the surface. However, since this deployment was for a short period of 4 days only, we deemed any risk for the main mooring to be small. Fig. 4.18: Zonal velocity [m/s] at the equator, 23°W above the EUC as measured from a short term mooring (March 1" - 5th 2008) using a 1200 kHz upward looking ADCP. Surface distance varies with mooring motion. This ADCP had been programmed to measure in beam coordinates with mode 12, meaning raw internal Doppler averaging of fast pings and storing thereafter. During the 4-day operation, the instrument sampled more than 200MB of data. These were transformed and depth-shifted. The zonal flow shows an average vertical shear of about 0.035 along the entire depth range scanned. 4.4.4. Glider Recovery/Deployment Two autonomous glider systems manufactured by Webb Research were used during the cruise. With the intention of covering a section along 23°W from the Cape Verde Islands to the equator one system, IFM03, was launched from near Mindelo on January 11. After spending a few days near the deployment location to test whether everything was functioning properly it was on January 16 sent southeast towards the northern end of the section at 14°N 23°W. The glider reached this position on January 30. It then turned south and traveled until February 25 when it was recovered near 9°35.5'N, 23°1.1'W (see Fig. 4.19 for the track). This was for our group the first successful long distance glider mission with this type of glider. During this mission and a companion deployment near the Cape Verde Islands the endurance of the battery packs was evaluated. We found that with the battery configuration and the sensors in use the distance was limited to about 1000 km. A somewhat longer distance should be possible when reducing the speed of the glider by pumping less oil. This was however not feasible during this deployment as the possible recovery dates were fixed by the times when RIV L'ATALANTE would pass the glider and we wanted to cover as much distance within this fixed time frame. Fig. 4.19: θ-S-diagrams of glider IFM03 (upper left) and IFM02 (lower right). In the θ-S-diagram the colors denote the number of the respective profile as indicated in the track map. Fig. 4.20: Oxygen distribution as observed by glider IFM03 (northern part) and IFM02 (southern part). White lines show isolines of σθ=24.5, σθ=26.8, and σθ=27.1 kg/M3. Glider tracks are given in Fig. 4.19. During the whole deployment the sensors of the glider, a Seabird CTD system, an Aanderaa Oxygen measuring Optode (Fig. 4.20), and a Wetlabs Fluorometer, worked without problems. The glider made more than 300 dives, 258 of which were to 980 m depth and resulted in good data. The remaining profiles were shallower down to 500 or 200 m and were collected during the initial test and later shortly before recovery when the batteries were already running low. The number of dives translates into an average distance between profiles of about 4km. Comparison of the average of the glider's last three deep CTD profile with a CTD profile collected on RV L'ATALANTE nearby but several days later showed that the temperatures and salinities below lOOm differed by 0.18 degrees and 0.015 psu rms, respectively. A final comparison of the CTD collected on RV L'ATALANTE with the glider's data will be made once the CTD data has been calibrated. For calibration purposes the Aanderaa optode was removed from the glider and connected to a data logger. During one profile this system was attached to the CTD. Together with bottle samples calibration coefficients were developed for the optode. The second glider operation on R/V L'ATALANTE was the deployment of IFM02 (Deepy). On this glider the science bay of IFM05 had been installed after the CTD data collected by the original science system on a previous deployment appeared to be problematic. IFM02 had been tested during a 3 day deployment off the Cape Verde Islands prior to the cruise. The glider was put to the water on February 29 at 0°1.4'N 22°58.5'W. After an initial 30 m test dive, a first deep dive to 800 m was commanded. On both dives no problems were encountered. It was then sent north with double dives between surfacings. The dives have a particular depth pattern in order to conserve energy. The glider descends from the surface down to 980 m, climbs to 200 m, dives again to 980 m, and then comes back to the surface. Using this pattern the pumped oil volume can be greatly reduced as the glider avoids every other climb into the very low density waters above 100 m depth. We came again close enough to the glider for freewave radio connection on March 6 at O°53.4'N 23°2.5'W. A number of full data files were downloaded and some parameters changed to improve operation of the glider. In particular it has problems to get GPS positions and to establish Iridium contacts. We suspect that the Antenna, which is used both for GPS and Iridium, is not well matched. IFM02 was recovered from FS Maria S. Merian (chief scientist W. Ekau) at April 14 at 6 °57.1'N, 22°24.4 'W. On RV L'ATALANTE all glider operations in the water were done with the help of a zodiac inflatable. For the freewave radio system the antenna was installed above the bridge deck with a 6m long cable running into the bridge where it was connected to a Webb dockserver laptop. With this setup we were able to get good connections at distances up to 3nm. Near the equator in very calm seas intermittent radio contact was made at distances up to 6nm. The quality was however not sufficient to send commands. 4.4.5 Microstructure Measurements A microstructure measurement program was carried out within the frame work of the Junior Research Group (DFG Emmy Noether-Nachwuchsgruppe) "Microstructure" and the BMBFSurface Ocean Processes in the Anthropocene (SOPRAN) project. The projects aim at quantifying the impact of diapycnal mixing processes on the variability of sea surface temperature and on improving estimates of diapycnal fluxes of heat and biogeochemical tracers from the deeper ocean into the oceanic mixed layer in the upwelling regions of the tropical Atlantic. Enhanced microstructure sampling was carried out in three regions: Within 10 of the equator, at the Tropical Eastern North Atlantic Time Series Observatory (TENATSO) station northeast of Cape Verde and within the oxygen minimum zones around 23°W, 8°N. In the equatorial region, measurements were performed to resolve mixing processes associated with elevated background shear due to the presence of the EUC. Here, night time enhancement of turbulent dissipation rates in the stratified water column was observed during previous cruise and the measurements aimed at a better understanding of relevant physical processes. At the TENATSO station, long duration measurements were performed to investigate diapycnal fluxes of chemical and biological parameters to improve understanding of biogeochemical processes in the water column. Finally, measurements within the oxygen minimum zone were conducted to study processes leading to diapycnal fluxes of oxygen that may be relevant for the total oxygen budget in this region. Technical Aspects Microstructure measurements were sampled using a microstructure measuring system consisting of a loosely-tethered profiler, an electrical winch supplied with 900 m Kevlar cable, and a deck unit. The system was manufactured by ISW-Messtechnik in collaboration with Sea and Sun Technology (Trappenkamp, Germany). The profiler in use during the cruise was of type MSS90-D (S/N 032). The winch was mounted to the gunwale at the port-side stern of RV L'ATALANTE. The MSS90-D profiler operates 16 channels with a high data transmission rate (1024 Hz) which is sufficient to resolve micro-scale gradients (4L6 mm) of velocity shear and temperature that can be used to infer turbulent fluctuations in the ocean. It was equipped with two shear probes (airfoil, 4ms response time), a fast- responding temperature sensor (Thermistor FP07, 12 ms response time), an acceleration sensor and two tilt sensors, as well as conductivity, temperature, pressure sensors that sample at a lower frequency (24 Hz). In addition, oxygen and turbidity sensors were attached. The profiler was optimized to sink at a rate of about 0.6 m/s which minimizes uncertainties in microstructure shear measurements. In total, microstructure measurements were performed on 38 stations. Routinely, at least 3 profiles were collected on individual stations before or after CTD casts. In addition, four stations of 3-hour duration contributed about 10 profiles each, and during a 24 hour station, 38 profiles were collected at a single location (see Table A4.5). While most of the profiles were terminated in a depth of about 250 m, measurements within the oxygen minimum were extend to a depth up to 350 m to include the upper boundary of the oxygen minimum zone. Three shear probes (S/N 6070, 6071, 003) were used. Sensor 6070 lost its sensitivity after the first three MSS stations. It was replaced by sensor 003. After station 11 a failure of the cable led to a termination of the data transmission to the deck unit. This was due to a short circuit due to a leakage in the cable at the connection to the profiler. The error was removed by shortening the Kevlar cable by 20m. No further problems aroused during the cruise. Preliminary Results In general there are several regions and situations, where elevated levels of turbulence and thus diapycnal mixing is expected. Within the mixed layer, levels of turbulence are usually high due to the influence of winds and night time cooling at the ocean surface. Mixing below this well mixed layer is less likely to occur and depends on the interaction of several parameters. The measurement program aims at a better understanding of these interactions and at quantifying the influence of individual parameters on integral diapycnal fluxes of ocean properties. The situations in which high levels of turbulence are more likely to occur in deeper layers are regions, in which background shear is elevated in respect to stratification. There, the flow may then become unstable in a Kelvin-Helmholtz sense and energy from the mean flow is fed into the turbulent regime. Near the equator, background shear levels are particularly pronounced in the region of the Equatorial Undercurrent, where zonal velocity shows the strong core at about 50 m depth (Fig. 4.21a). Here, shear levels are most elevated above the core of the EUC between 30 and 50 m. Accordingly, dissipation rates of turbulent kinetic energy that were derived from the microstructure measurements indicate elevated turbulence levels in the same region (Fig. 4.21e). These elevated levels however, that are in the range of 1-lOx 108 Wkg', are at the lower end of previously observed dissipation rates above the EUC core. Microstructure measurements in the EUC region at 10'W during September 2005 indicated strongly elevated dissipation rates of 13x 106 Wkg' during turbulent bursts occurring at night in the stratified region above the EUC core. These bursts were absent during a second microstructure measurement program carried out in December 1994, where similar levels of turbulence as found during the R/V L'ATALANTE cruise were observed. It could be shown that stronger stratification above the EUC core during the December 1994 cruise compared to the September 2005 cruise prevented the occurrence of Kelvin-Helmholtz Instability in a large part of the water column and thus inhibited significant energy transfer from the background flow to the turbulent regime. The same argument could also hold here, as stratification encountered above the EUC during the RV L'ATALANTE cruise was also pronounced above the EUC core (Fig. 4.2ld). Another possible source for bands of enhanced large scale shear are highly- baroclinic internal waves which are marked by changing velocities with depth. In some occasions, bands of elevated shear in the deeper water column may provide information about the nature of the propagating internal wave signal. However, due to the coarse vertical resolution of the shipboard ADCP, having an effective vertical resolution for shear of 16 m, together with the short duration of the CTD/microstructure stations make it hard to identify the propagation of internal waves. Nevertheless, wave-like structures in the upper ocean shear distribution (Fig. 4.2lc) were pronounced in the some regions along the 23°W section (e.g. at 7°N) suggesting wind induced inertial gravity waves, which in turn may lead to locally elevated patches of turbulent dissipation rates. As mentioned above, dissipation rates are usually elevated in the mixed layer, but also depend on the time within the day. Night-time convection in the mixed layer sets in when the heat loss exceeds the heat gain at the ocean surface, and results in weakening of the stratification. If the stratification is weak wind induced mixing can penetrate deeper into the surface layers. Most measurements on the section were not collected in the early morning hours leading to mixing being confined to the upper part of the surface mixed layer. However, some measurements were taken during early morning hours marked by higher mixing rates and rather weak stratification extending until about 50m depth (e.g. at 8°N) originated from night time convection. Fig. 4.21: Section at 23°W of a) zonal velocity, b) meridional velocity, c) total squared shear. d) Brunt-Vaisala frequency, e) dissipation rate of turbulent kinetic energy. 4.4.6 Chemical Measurements Oxygen Oxygen samples were analyzed by standard Winkler-titration. For the standardization of the thiosulphate solution an iodate standard was used. Samples were taken in 100 mL glass bottles with glass stoppers. After slow filling (avoiding bubbling and turbulence), sufficient overflow must be ensured: two to three times the content of the bottle. Then 1 mL of MnC12 and 1 mL of alkaline iodide were added simultaneously with a special dispenser. The stopper was then inserted and the bottles were shaken for about 1 minute to bring each molecule of dissolved oxygen into contact with manganese (II) hydroxide. After fixation of the oxygen, the precipitate was allowed to settle for minimum half an hour, before starting the titration. Oxygen was analyzed from 801 Niskin bottles at 51 CTD-Stations according to a standard titration after Winkler (Grashoff, 1999). Two duplicate samples were taken and analyzed at all 51 stations, and the precision of the measurement was determined as 0.3 tmol kg' (95 % confidence interval). Nutrients Nutrients (nitrate, nitrite, phosphate, silicate) were determined from 656 water samples at 37 CTD-Stations. Samples were taken in 60 mL NALGENE PP bottles with screw caps. Bottles and caps were rinsed twice and then filled. The nutrient analysis was made with a Continuous-FlowAutoanalyzer-(CFA) System developed and built at IFM-GEOMAR according to Grashoff et al. (1999). For the determination of phosphate, the method by Bran and Luebbe (Method No. G175-96 Rev 8) was used. The precision for nutrient analysis as determined from 75 double samples from 37 stations was determined as (95 % confidence interval): Nitrite 0.006 tmol kg-'; Nitrate 0.13 tmol kg'; phosphate 0.008 tmol kg', silicate 0.18 tmol kg', which was approximately 1 % of the nutrient standards. Calibration curves were made with nutrients standards from Ocean Scientific International. 4.4.7 Thermosalinograph Measurements Post-processing Sea surface temperature (SST) and sea surface salinity (SSS) were measured by a Thermosalinograph mounted near the ship's seawater intake. The device was a SEACAT SBE 21 manufactured by Sea-Bird Electronics, Inc. and specifications are as follows: Measurement Initial Range Accuracy Resolution ------------ --------- ---------- Conductivity 0 to 7 S/m 0.001 S/m 0.0001 S/m Temperature -5 to +35°C 0.01°C 0.01 The Thermosalinograph worked well till the evening of March 9th when the temperature sensor showed an abrupt drop of about 0.4 °C. For this reason, temperature and salinity records were calibrated separately against CTD temperature and salinity data prior and after this occurrence. For the calibration CTD data acquired at 6 m depth were used. Constant offsets in Thermosalinograph temperature and salinity were found to be adequate for calibration (Fig. 4.22) and while the derived values for temperature reflected the observed sudden decrease (0.765 vs. -0.369 °C), no such difference was found for salinity (0.018 vs. 0.016 psu). The standard deviations of the temperature differences between the CTD and Thermosalinograph were quite large (0.031 and 0.040 °C) during the cruise, whereas low values of 0.015 and 0.010 psu were obtained for salinity. During post-processing, both Thermosalinograph data sets were corrected by removing the offsets and were submitted to the GOSUD/SISMER project, hosted at IFREMER in Brest, France (http://www.ifremer.fr/sismer/pro2ram/2osud/) Fig. 4.22: Differences between CTD and thermosalinograph temperature (left panel) and salinity (right panel) versus time. Observations Fig. 4.23 shows the Themiosalinograph SST and SSS during the cruise, separated in the way from and back to Mindelo. While SSTs are generally increasing from Mindelo to about 6°N (22 to 28 °C), SSSs are decreasing ( 36.5 to 35.5 psu). South of this latitude, SSTs are around 28 °C but large SSS fluctuations can be observed. Fig. 4.23: Calibrated Thermosalinograph SST (left panel) and SSS (right panel), with respective CTD data. 4.4.8 Film coverage Film coverage of research cruise IFM-GEOMAR 4 aboard the French R/V L'ATALANTE, between February 21, 2008 and March 17, 2008 was provided by Prof. Stephan Sachs and student assistant Michael Gülzow on behalf of the Muthesius Academy of Fine Arts. An agreement with IFREMER, the ship's owner, was negotiated and signed prior to the cruise by IFM-GEOMAR and Muthesius Academy of Fine Arts, both members of the Cluster of Excellence, "The Future Ocean". The goal of the film accompaniment was not any journalistic coverage per se but a broad, artistic and documentary collection of materials. The intended purpose is manifold: As a member of the cluster's public outreach, Prof. Stephan Sachs collects moving images and sound bites from various areas of cluster-related activities to create a public image of the diverse, primarily scientific disciplines. In fact, a clear differentiation in terms of format and content from the customary television and documentary films is intended. Aside from the film activities themselves, the use of these materials is also scheduled for cluster-related exhibits (some of these have been successfully implemented in this constellation). Furthermore, the images will be used for the participants' own personal artistic research which, as far as Stephan Sachs is concerned, investigates the interaction between the arts and natural sciences, among others. All filming was done in HDV format. Depending on the task at hand, three different cameras, plus splash and underwater housings were used. Since diving itself was not permitted, certain gadgets had to be constructed for underwater filming. More spectacular events, such as filming the recovery and deployment of a glider from the ship's zodiac, were the exception rather than the rule. The focus of our film activities were not any sensational events but the normality of basic research instead: deployment and recovery of moorings, lowering and retrieval of the CTD rosette, microstructure measurements, look-out for and tracking of drifting mooring elements, the submerging of a glider - all of these are strange, i.e. uncommon, and fascinating experiences. Rows and columns of data, plus diagrams, provide just a glance at the complexity of the underlying research. The main focus was on the technical and scientific work, however, the special atmosphere of life aboard a research ship in equatorial latitudes was not short- changed. The natural skepticism toward the nearly omnipresent camera quickly disappeared, and the camera work thus became just another one of the regular shipboard activities. The collaboration with chief scientist and the science team, as well as the ship's master and crew, was very pleasant. 4.5 Acknowledgements We very much appreciated the cooperative working atmosphere as well as the professionalism and seamanship of crew, officers and Captain of RV L'ATALANTE, which made this work a success. Financial support came from the German Bundesministerium fur Bildung, Wissenschaft und Forschung (BMBF) as part of the Verbundvorhaben Nordatlantik (Nordatlantik, 0317044313) and from the German Science Foundation (DFG) as part of the 5FB754 (Climate Biogeochemistry Interactions in the Tropical Ocean) and the EMMY NOETHER project (Diapycnal mixing processes in the upwelling regions of the tropical Atlantic, DE 1369 1- 1). APPENDIX Table A4.1: CTD Stations SHIP Stn 3.1.1.1 DATE UTC POSITION Uncor. MAX # OF EXPOCODE No. No. Mmdd TIME CODE LATITUDE LONGITUDE DEPTH PRESS BTLS PAR. -------- --- ------- ------ ---- ---- ----------- ---------- ----- ----- ---- ------- 08AT004 001 1 022308 1333 BE 16 45.15 N 25 06.19 W 1644 16 2,3,4 08AT004 001 1 022308 1401 BO 16 45.48 N 25 06.75 W 1644 1066 16 08AT004 001 1 022308 1433 EN 16 45.71 N 25 06.75 W 1644 16 08AT004 002 2 022508 0953 BE 10 00.10 N 22 59.92 W 5037 16 2,3,4 08AT004 002 2 022508 1029 BO 10 00.18 N 22 59.98 W 5039 1307 16 08AT004 002 2 022508 1143 EN 10 10.38 N 22 59.88 W 5015 16 08AT004 003 3 022508 0010 BE 07 59.98 N 22 59.97 W 4419 16 2,3,4 08AT004 003 3 022608 0210 BO 08 00.24 N 22 59.87 W 4428 4470 16 08AT004 003 3 022608 0325 EN 08 00.33 N 22 59.78 W 4429 16 08AT004 004 4 022708 0428 BE 05 01.87 N 22 59.98 W 4219 15 2,3,4 08AT004 004 4 022708 0501 BO 05 01.88 N 22 59.95 W 4220 1301 15 08AT004 004 4 022708 0604 EN 05 01.83 N 23 00.65 W 4221 15 08AT004 005 5 022808 1226 BE 02 02.50 N 23 01.99 W 4374 16 1,2,3,4 08AT004 005 5 022808 1408 BO 02 02.48 N 23 01.99 W 4375 4419 16 08AT004 005 5 022808 1606 EN 02 02.49 N 23 02.01 W 4378 16 08AT004 006 6 022908 0401 BE 00 46.05 N 22 59.59 W 4327 16 1,2,3,4 08AT004 006 6 022908 0432 BO 00 46.04 N 22 59.62 W 4327 1316 16 08AT004 006 6 022908 0501 EN 00 46.04 N 22 59.62 W 4325 16 08AT004 007 7 030108 0008 BE 00 01.96 N 22 58.39 W 3847 16 1,2,3,4 08AT004 007 7 030108 0123 BO 00 02.19 N 22 58.22 W 3826 3867 16 08AT004 007 7 030108 0235 EN 00 02.30 N 22 58.03 W 3820 16 08AT004 008 8 030208 1209 BE 00 00.13 N 21 26.71 W 4961 16 1,2,3,4 08AT004 008 8 030208 1240 BO 00 00.33 N 21 26.53 W 4959 1305 16 08AT004 008 8 030208 1317 EN 00 00.56 N 21 26.18 W 4958 16 08AT004 009 9 030308 0337 BE 02 02.65 S 23 04.93 W 5053 16 1,2, 3,4 08AT004 009 9 030308 0532 BO 02 02.93 S 23 04.83 W 5069 5112 16 08AT004 009 9 030308 0706 EN 02 02.75 S 23 04.06 W 5098 16 08AT004 010 10 030308 1753 BE 01 40.02 S 23 00.09 W 4934 16 1,2,3,4 08AT004 010 10 030308 1843 BO 01 39.83 S 22 59.92 W 4923 1304 16 08AT004 010 10 030308 1938 EN 01 39.47 S 22 59.41 W 4989 16 08AT004 011 11 030308 2154 BE 01 20.01 S 22 59.95 W 4860 16 1,2,3,4 08AT004 011 11 030308 2222 BO 01 19.92 5 22 59.88 W 4854 1316 16 08AT004 011 11 030308 2252 EN 01 19.73 5 22 59.63 W 4826 16 08AT004 012 12 030408 0203 BE 00 59.98 5 23 00.03 W 4122 16 1,2,3,4 08AT004 012 12 030408 0232 BO 00 00.01 5 22 59.99 W 4118 1318 16 08AT004 012 12 030408 0304 EN 01 00.04 5 22 59.87 W 4129 16 08AT004 013 13 030408 1132 BE 00 45.82 5 22 57.33 W 16 1,2,3,4 08AT004 013 13 030408 1200 BO 00 45.64 5 22 57.13 W 1307 16 08AT004 013 13 030408 1227 EN 00 45.44 5 22 56.95 W 16 SHIP Stn 3.1.1.2 DATE UTC POSITION Uncor. MAX # OF EXPOCODE No. No. Mmdd TIME CODE LATITUDE LONGITUDE DEPTH PRESS BTLS PAR. -------- --- ------- ------ ---- ---- ---------- ---------- ----- ----- ---- ------- 08AT004 014 14 030408 2114 BE 00 30.08 S 23 00.13 W 4625 16 1,2,3,4 08AT004 014 14 030408 2144 BO 00 30.02 S 22 59.98 W 4627 1314 16 08AT004 014 14 030408 2213 EN 00 30.07 S 22 59.69 W 4630 16 08AT004 015 15 030508 0105 BE 00 15.01 S 23 00.01 W 4162 16 1,2,3,4 08AT004 015 15 030508 0143 BO 00 14.97 5 22 59.84 W 4123 1315 16 08AT004 015 15 030508 0216 EN 00 15.03 S 22 59.59 W 4107 16 08AT004 016 16 030508 0833 BE 00 01.44 S 23 06.54 W 3943 16 1,2,3,4 08AT004 016 16 030508 0948 BO 00 01.04 S 23 06.03 W 3942 3988 16 08AT004 016 16 030508 1105 EN 00 00.41 S 23 05.59 W 16 08AT004 017 17 030508 1935 BE 00 14.98 N 23 00.10 W 16 1,2,3,4 08AT004 017 17 030508 2006 BO 00 15.20 N 22 59.78 W 1315 16 08AT004 017 17 030508 2035 EN 00 15.39 N 22 59.43 W 16 08AT004 018 18 030508 2304 BE 00 30.07 N 22 59.95 W 16 1,2,3,4 08AT004 018 18 030508 2335 BO 00 30.41 N 22 59.63 W 1314 16 08AT004 018 18 030608 0001 EN 00 30.59 N 22 59.46 W 16 08AT004 019 19 030608 0250 BE 00 45.03 N 23 01.51 W 16 1,2,3,4 08AT004 019 19 030608 0319 BO 00 45.09 N 23 01.39 W 1304 16 08AT004 019 19 030608 0349 EN 00 45.10 N 23 01.19 W 16 08AT004 020 20 030608 1604 BE 00 59.98 N 23 00.03 W 3229 16 1,2,3,4 08AT004 020 20 030608 1632 BO 01 00.04 N 22 59.98 W 3228 1302 16 08AT004 020 20 030608 1738 EN 01 00.07 N 22 59.76 W 08AT004 021 21 030708 0159 BE 01 20.01 N 22 59.98 W 4721 16 1,2,3,4 08AT004 021 21 030708 0229 BO 01 19.96 N 22 59.84 W 4722 1302 16 08AT004 021 21 030708 0256 EN 01 19.94 N 22 59.77 W 4726 16 08AT004 022 22 030708 0603 BE 01 39.99 N 23 00.07 W 4130 16 3,4,7, 8 08AT004 022 22 030708 0634 BO 01 40.0 N 23 00.07 W 4128 1302 16 08AT004 022 22 030708 0700 EN 01 40.07 N 23 00.01 W 4129 16 08AT004 023 23 030708 1018 BE 02 02.05 N 23 01.05 W 4356 16 1,2,3,4 08AT004 023 23 030708 1046 BO 02 02.16 N 23 00.85 W 4357 1311 16 08AT004 023 23 030708 1111 EN 02 02.22 N 23 00.65 W 4362 16 08AT004 024 24 030708 1413 BE 02 20.02 N 22 59.98 W 4283 16 1,2,4 08AT004 024 24 030708 1444 BO 02 20.04 N 23 00.06 W 4271 1302 16 08AT004 024 24 030708 1553 EN 02 20.13 N 23 00.08 W 4257 16 08AT004 025 25 030708 1801 BE 02 39.94 N 22 59.88 W 4728 16 1,2,3,4 08AT004 025 25 030708 1832 BO 02 40.02 N 22 59.85 W 4696 1305 16 08AT004 025 25 030708 1932 EN 02 40.12 N 22 59.88 W 4696 16 08AT004 026 26 030708 2245 BE 02 59.62 N 22 59.95 W 4647 16 2,4 08AT004 026 26 030708 2312 BO 02 59.73 N 23 00.06 W 4650 1315 16 08AT004 026 26 030708 2338 EN 02 59.84 N 23 00.22 W 4654 16 08AT004 027 27 030808 0157 BE 03 19.98 N 23 00.00 W 4161 16 2,3,4 08AT004 027 27 030808 0226 BO 03 20.00 N 23 00.00 W 4160 1306 16 08AT004 027 27 030808 0250 EN 03 20.01 N 22 59.98 W 4161 16 SHIP Stn 3.1.1.3 DATE UTC POSITION Uncor. MAX # OF EXPOCODE No. No. Mmdd TIME CODE LATITUDE LONGITUDE DEPTH PRESS BTLS PAR. -------- --- ------- ------ ---- ---- ---------- ---------- ----- ----- ---- ------- 08AT004 028 28 030808 0603 BE 03 39.97 N 22 59.98 W 4434 16 2,4 08AT004 028 28 030808 0635 BO 03 40.06 N 23 00.13 W 4428 1303 16 08AT004 028 28 030808 0711 EN 03 40.15 N 23 00.33 W 4421 16 08AT004 029 29 030808 1030 BE 03 59.95 N 22 59.97 W 4221 16 2,3,4 08AT004 029 29 030808 1059 BO 04 00.14 N 23 00.06 W 4219 1302 16 08AT004 029 29 030808 1157 EN 04 00.63 N 23 00.13 W 4219 16 08AT004 030 30 030808 1458 BE 04 19.94 N 22 59.98 W 4250 16 2,4 08AT004 030 30 030808 1528 BO 04 19.96 N 23 00.00 W 4249 1302 16 08AT004 030 30 030808 1634 EN 04 20.17 N 23 00.02 W 4262 16 08AT004 031 31 030808 1851 BE 04 39.94 N 23 00.04 W 4220 16 2,3,4 08AT004 031 31 030808 1920 BO 04 39.88 N 23 00.03 W 1303 16 08AT004 031 31 030808 1948 EN 04 40.02 N 23 00.22 W 4222 16 08AT004 032 32 030808 2209 BE 05 01.12 N 22 59.44 W 4213 16 2,4 08AT004 032 32 030808 2235 BO 05 01.26 N 22 59.44 W 4213 1307 16 08AT004 032 32 030808 2301 EN 05 01.49 N 22 59.40 W 4211 16 08AT004 033 33 030908 0259 BE 05 29.97 N 22 59.98 W 4235 16 2,3,4 08AT004 033 33 030908 0330 BO 05 30.07 N 23 00.01 W 4231 1301 16 08AT004 033 33 030908 0356 EN 05 30.12 N 22 59.95 W 4236 16 08AT004 034 34 030908 0705 BE 05 59.98 N 23 00.04 W 4095 16 2,4 08AT004 034 34 030908 0733 BO 06 00.11 N 23 00.24 W 4094 1305 16 08AT004 034 34 030908 0759 EN 06 00.15 N 23 00.38 W 4091 16 08AT004 035 35 030908 1149 BE 06 29.98 N 22 59.95 W 3135 16 2,3,4 08AT004 035 35 030908 1216 BO 06 30.26 N 23 00.03 W 3229 1299 16 08AT004 035 35 030908 1317 EN 06 30.06 N 23 00.13 W 3107 16 08AT004 036 36 030908 1640 BE 06 59.95 N 23 00.00 W 1497 16 2,4, 08AT004 036 36 030908 1707 BO 06 59.97 N 23 00.00 W 1475 1309 16 08AT004 036 36 030908 1736 EN 07 00.08 N 23 00.04 W 1454 16 08AT004 037 37 030908 2144 BE 07 29.88 N 22 59.95 W 4392 16 2,3,4 08AT004 037 37 030908 2213 BO 07 30.07 N 22 59.95 W 4392 1315 16 08AT004 037 37 030908 2239 EN 07 30.20 N 23 00.05 W 4392 16 08AT004 038 38 031008 0305 BE 08 02.14 N 22 59.99 W 4493 16 2,4 08AT004 038 38 031008 0334 BO 08 02.11 N 22 59.00 W 4488 1301 16 08AT004 038 38 031008 0400 EN 08 02.16 N 22 59.07 W 4490 16 08AT004 039 39 031008 0758 BE 08 29.98 N 23 00.03 W 4783 16 2,3,4 08AT004 039 39 031008 0829 BO 08 30.02 N 23 00.01 W 4783 1303 16 08AT004 039 39 031008 0854 EN 08 30.12 N 23 00.01 W 4783 16 08AT004 040 40 031008 1319 BE 09 00.00 N 23 00.01 W 4893 16 2,4 08AT004 040 40 031008 1349 BO 09 00.00 N 22 59.98 W 4897 1302 16 08AT004 040 40 031008 1455 EN 08 59.98 N 22 59.99 W 4892 16 08AT004 041 41 031008 1934 BE 09 29.95 N 22 59.98 W 4637 16 2,3,4 08AT004 041 41 031008 2000 BO 09 30.04 N 22 59.93 W 4637 1312 16 08AT004 041 41 031008 2027 EN 09 30.06 N 23 00.01 W 4630 16 SHIP Stn 3.1.1.4 DATE UTC POSITION Uncor. MAX # OF EXPOCODE No. No. Mmdd TIME CODE LATITUDE LONGITUDE DEPTH PRESS BTLS PAR. -------- --- ------- ------ ---- ---- ---------- ---------- ----- ----- ---- ------- 08AT004 042 42 031108 0002 BE 09 59.92 N 22 59.98 W 5045 16 2,4 08AT004 042 42 031108 0031 BO 10 00.10 N 22 59.92 W 5032 1314 16 08AT004 042 42 031108 0059 EN 10 00.26 N 22 59.92 W 5009 16 08AT004 043 43 031108 0434 BE 10 30.00 N 23 00.06 W 5191 16 2,3,4 08AT004 043 43 031108 0505 BO 10 30.05 N 23 00.04 W 5186 1303 16 08AT004 043 43 031108 0530 EN 10 30.12 N 22 59.97 W 5184 16 08AT004 044 44 031108 0908 BE 11 00.01 N 23 00.00 W 5151 16 2,4 08AT004 044 44 031108 0937 BO 11 00.38 N 23 00.05 W 5149 1305 16 08AT004 044 44 031108 1003 EN 11 00.66 N 23 00.15 W 5147 16 08AT004 045 45 031108 1357 BE 11 29.98 N 23 00.01 W 5112 16 2,3,4 08AT004 045 45 031108 1426 BO 11 30.14 N 23 00.00 W 5112 1302 16 08AT004 045 45 031108 1451 EN 11 30.26 N 23 00.04 W 5112 16 08AT004 046 46 031108 1828 BE 11 59.98 N 22 59.98 W 5044 16 2,4 08AT004 046 46 031108 1858 BO 12 00.10 N 22 59.89 W 5044 1303 16 08AT004 046 46 031108 1922 EN 12 00.20 N 22 59.80 W 5045 16 08AT004 047 47 031108 2303 BE 12 29.91 N 22 59.95 W 4921 16 2,3,4 08AT004 047 47 031108 2331 BO 12 30.13 N 22 59.89 W 4919 1305 16 08AT004 047 47 031108 2358 EN 12 30.43 N 22 59.79 W 4916 16 08AT004 048 48 031208 0328 BE 12 59.94 N 23 00.03 W 4740 16 2,4 08AT004 048 48 031208 0357 BO 13 00.08 N 22 59.92 W 4741 1303 16 08AT004 048 48 031208 0422 EN 13 00.19 N 22 59.81 W 4739 16 08AT004 049 49 031208 0748 BE 13 29.89 N 23 00.06 W 4540 16 2,3,4 08AT004 049 49 031208 0821 BO 13 30.12 N 22 59.88 W 4536 1303 08AT004 049 49 031208 0848 EN 13 30.24 N 22 59.81 W 4538 16 08AT004 050 50 031208 1236 BE 14 00.31 N 22 59.98 W 4317 16 2,4 08AT004 050 50 031208 1304 BO 14 00.55 N 23 00.05 W 4317 1302 16 08AT004 050 50 031208 1330 EN 14 00.78 N 23 00.08 W 4314 08AT004 051 51 031308 2240 BE 17 35.43 N 24 15.12 W 3595 21 08AT004 051 51 031308 2347 BO 17 35.04 N 24 15.48 W 3598 3636 21 2,3 08AT004 051 51 031408 0055 EN 17 36.45 N 24 15.82 W 3606 21 Code: BE = begin, BO = bottom, EN = end Parameters (Par.):, 1=He, 20xy, 3=Nuts, 4=Sal Table A4.2: Calibration coefficients for the different optodes. Optode Deployment Temperature (°C) S/N Cal Date Location/Platform Slope Bias rms ------ -------- ------------------- ----------------------- 349 Mar-08 KPO 1006 l27m 0.99816 0.02436 0.028 688 Mar-08 KPO 1001 Profiler 0.99675 0.05808 0.019 691 Mar-08 Glider ifm03 0.99743 0.04524 0.027 937 Mar-08 Pirata 0.99088 0.09257 0.113 938 Mar-08 Pirata 0.99178 0.08532 0.077 939 Mar-08 KPO 1023 306m 0.98556 0.14252 0.173 940 Mar-08 Pirata 0.98653 0.12672 0.170 941 Mar-08 KPO 1026 77m 0.98572 0.13294 0.181 942 Mar-08 KPO 1023 501m 0.98970 0.09986 0.143 944 Mar-08 KPO 1025 385m 0.99015 0.08868 0.092 945 Mar-08 KPO 1025 495m 0.98488 0.14418 0.163 946 Mar-08 Pirata 0.99113 0.09395 0.093 943 Apr-08 Pirata 0.99951 0.02200 0.007 839 Apr-08 Glider ifm02 0.99991 0.01574 0.010 Optode Oxygen (µmol/kg) S/N Bias A(O) A(O**2) A(t) A(p) rms ------ ------ ------ ---------- ---------- ---------- ----- 349 -1.245 1.1792 -3.720E-04 2.800E-02 5.758E-03 0.323 688 -5.746 1.2348 -3.644E-04 1.705E-01 6.950E-03 0.293 691 -18.426 1.1785 -3.142E-04 5.462E-01 6.083E-03 0.351 937 45.771 0.951 6.052E-04 -2.209E+00 -2.052E-02 0.484 938 53.680 0.931 7.490E-04 -2.720E+00 -2.751E-02 0.748 939 28.366 0.974 4.879E-04 -1.333E+00 -1.563E-02 0.529 940 49.229 0.929 7.266E-04 -2.461E+00 -2.363E-02 0.581 941 53.571 0.914 8.073E-04 -2.754E+00 -2.591E-02 0.571 942 50.091 0.944 6.780E-04 -2.478E+00 -2.320E-02 0.579 944 68.165 0.906 9.996E-04 -3.716E+00 -3.736E-02 1.382 945 53.246 0.911 8.279E-04 -2.702E+00 -2.670E-02 0.542 946 48.823 0.936 6.908E-04 -2.451E+00 -2.186E-02 0.515 943 147.960 0.389 6.180E-03 -7.946E+00 -8.864E-02 0.000 839 0.000 1.248 -8.849E-05 7.569E-01 2.517E-02 0.000 Table A4.3: Calibration coefficients for Microcats and MTD Logger CTD | Temperature | Conductivity | Pressure No. S/N | Bias Slope RMS | Bias Slope RMS | Bias Slope RMS --- ---- | -------------------------- | -------------------------- | --------------------------- 1 2245 | 0.004911 0.998937 0.012 | -.023994 1.000162 0.011 | 1 2247 | 0.004947 0.999078 0.011 | -0.055289 1.001080 0.012 | 1 2248 | 0.003766 0.998999 0.012 | -0.000530 0.999448 0.011 | 2 3196 | 0.008469 0.998214 0.013 | 0.034991 0.998588 0.009 | 4 53 | -0.003237 0.999920 0.007 | -0.021154 1.000142 0.011 | 4 1269 | 0.000111 0.999252 0.011 | -0.170789 1.004694 0.026 | 4 1284 | 0.000637 0.999300 0.011 | -0.172329 1.005047 0.024 | 4 1286 | -0.000276 0.999322 0.010 | -0.170304 1.004671 0.024 | 4 2250 | 0.002997 0.998878 0.012 | 0.013979 0.997658 0.014 | 4 3144 | 0.002068 0.999017 0.011 | -0.000707 0.999503 0.013 | 5 1320 | 0.000663 0.999191 0.013 | -0.034962 1.001357 0.025 | 5 2249 | 0.001262 0.999005 0.015 | 0.025490 0.998195 0.013 | 5 2251 | 0.000946 0.999071 0.015 | 0.026441 0.998598 0.014 | 20 1723 | 0.008747 0.997897 0.021 | -0.014345 0.999530 0.020 | 20 2262 | 0.008516 0.997957 0.021 | -0.005466 0.999579 0.020 | 1.605862 1.001700 0.295 20 2488 | 0.007380 0.998181 0.022 | -0.007331 1.000148 0.020 | 1.588798 1.000768 0.541 20 3411 | 0.008690 0.998016 0.022 | -0.029081 0.999708 0.024 | 1.316540 1.002815 0.385 20 3415 | 0.008521 0.997876 0.020 | -0.051253 1.000956 0.027 | 1.441111 1.002220 0.498 20 3755 | 0.009967 0.997919 0.021 | -0.025978 0.999450 0.022 | 1.283954 0.998873 0.365 24 2718 | -0.006062 1.000384 0.025 | -0.047725 1.000955 0.030 | -0.235581 1.002688 0.413 24 1550 | -0.004278 0.999749 0.025 | -0.030215 1.000341 0.027 | 24 1682 | -0.005485 0.999813 0.024 | -0.026442 1.000165 0.026 | 24 2468 | -0.002495 0.999897 0.022 | -0.014239 1.000012 0.026 | 24 2472 | -0.003592 1.000136 0.025 | -0.012015 0.999527 0.029 | 24 2618 | -0.006761 1.000462 0.025 | -0.029201 1.000327 0.029 | 25 1162 | 0.000821 0.999275 0.013 | -0.040287 1.000003 0.010 | 25 1268 | -0.001834 0.999504 0.013 | -0.254478 1.007531 0.033 | 25 2279 | 0.000388 0.999255 0.014 | -0.003304 1.000010 0.011 | 25 2617 | 0.002528 0.999230 0.014 | 0.000494 0.999600 0.011 | 29 2254 | -0.001425 0.999531 0.010 | -0.047930 1.001028 0.016 | 29 2257 | -0.001622 0.999565 0.010 | -0.050548 1.000494 0.014 | 29 2933 | -0.002023 0.999559 0.009 | -0.092354 1.002212 0.020 | 29 24 | 0.088106 0.999515 0.019 | MiniTD | 3.267423 0.997745 0.654 29 26 | -0.090633 1.000866 0.014 | MiniTD | 15.098628 1.009004 3.477 30 2252 | -0.001873 0.999286 0.020 | -0.042792 1.000477 0.019 | 30 2255 | -0.000544 0.999318 0.020 | -0.053731 1.000985 0.019 | 30 3752 | -0.000441 0.999493 0.014 | -0.090715 1.000949 0.019 | 2.315372 1.001572 0.346 30 3753 | 0.001113 0.999524 0.015 | -0.073271 1.000087 0.016 | 2.607432 1.001131 0.349 30 3757 | -0.000749 0.999561 0.015 | -0.086916 1.001883 0.018 | -0.413203 1.003270 0.498 35 3754 | 0.006626 0.998641 0.015 | 0.008818 0.998980 0.012 | 0.765704 1.000394 0.520 35 52 | 0.001956 0.999758 0.013 | -0.062161 1.001668 0.011 | 35 55 | -0.001090 0.999883 0.013 | -0.047535 1.001431 0.010 | 35 278 | -0.003546 1.000110 0.017 | -0.244667 1.007412 0.026 | 35 381 | 0.006351 0.999807 0.012 | -0.337975 1.010176 0.030 | 35 780 | 0.001791 0.999836 0.011 | -0.350030 1.013055 0.035 | 35 921 | -0.000040 0.999924 0.010 | -0.257379 1.007588 0.019 | 35 2256 | 0.008486 0.998265 0.017 | 0.041119 0.998298 0.015 | 40 922 | -0.006065 1.000383 0.008 | -0.174512 1.005103 0.027 | 40 925 | -0.006815 1.000520 0.008 | -0.194128 1.006081 0.028 | 40 936 | -0.003843 1.000050 0.007 | -0.160516 1.004714 0.025 | 40 1281 | -0.005014 1.000396 0.009 | -0.250646 1.007043 0.021 | 40 1282 | -0.006009 1.000509 0.009 | -0.171192 1.005412 0.026 | 40 1583 | -0.001413 1.000219 0.009 | 0.007603 0.999202 0.009 | 40 1599 | -0.001351 0.999701 0.007 | 0.007569 0.999685 0.007 | Table A4.4: Mooring Recoveries and Deployments R/V L'ATALANTE IFM-GEOMAR-4 Mooring Recoveries Deployment Recovery Watchdog Mooring Latitude Longitude Date Date Argos ID --------- --------- --------- ---------- --------- -------- AO_01 0N 00.00 23W 06.80 19-Jun-06 1-Mar-08 11278 A0_02 0N 45.00 22W 59.50 20-Jun-06 29-Feb-08 15172 A0_03 0S 44.95 22W 59.71 17-Jun-06 4-Mar-08 15173 A0_04 0S 00.00 21W 29.60 21-Jun-06 2-Mar-08 2254 A0_05 5N 00.90 23W 00.00 3-Jul-06 27-Feb-08 5461 V440_1 17N 35.39 24W 15.12 8-Jul-06 19-Feb-08 5510 R/V L'ATALANTE IFM-GEOMAR-4 Mooring Deployments Deployment Recovery Watchdog Mooring Latitude Longitude Date Date Argos ID --------- --------- --------- ---------- --------- -------- 23W 2S 1S 56.40 22W 57.00 3-Mar-08 7373 23W 0:45S 0S 44.94 22W 59.70 4-Mar-08 12620 23W 0N 0N 00.00 23W 06.80 1-Mar-08 108 23W 0:45N 0N 45.17 22W 59.28 6-Mar-08 11458 23W 2N 2N 02.50 23W 02.00 28-Feb-08 5481 23W 5N 5N 00.90 23W 00.05 27-Feb-08 2267 23W 8N 8N 01.00 22W 59.00 26-Feb-08 2255 Cape Verde MOORING RECOVERIES Mooring Recovery Equatorial Atlantic AO-01 Notes: Vessel: Meteor Deployed: June 19 2006 19:53 Vessel: Atalante Recovered: March 1 2008 07:21 Latitude: 0 0.001 S Longitude: 23 6.800 W Water depth: 3931 Mag Var: -16.3 Startup ID Depth Instr. type s/n log -------- ----- ----------- ----- ------- Argos WD 11278 no signal received AO_01_01 126 ADCPWHup 508 x good data AO_01_02 126 Mini-TD 24 good data AO_01_03 130 Microcat 52 x good data AO_01_04 234 Microcat 55 x good data AO_01_05 399 Microcat 278 x good data AO_01_06 621 ADCPLRup 2395 x good data AO_01_07 687 RCM-8 9930 x good data AO_01_08 842 Argonaut D182 x good data AO-01-09 998 RCM-8 9964 x bad data after 3/20/2007 AO_01_10 2264 M-CTD MMP 120 x good data initially, degrading with time 3573 Release 174 Code: 9337 9339 A 3573 Release 110 Code: E972 E974 A Interrogate Release Mode Mooring Recovery Equatorial Atlantic AO-02 Notes: Vessel: Meteor Deployed: June 20 2006 15:25 Vessel: Atalante Recovered: Feb 29 2008 07:19 Flotation above releases imploded Latitude: 0 45.000 N Longitude: 22 59.500 W Water depth: 4310 Mag Var: -16.0 Startup ID Depth Instr. type s/n log -------- ----- ----------- ----- ------- ArgosWD 15172 AO_02_01 51 Mini-TD 26 good data, minimum depth 32m AO_02_02 87 Microcat 381 x good data AO-02_03 138 Microcat 780 x good data, numerous read errors AO_02_04 200 Microcat 921 x good data, numerous read errors AO_02_05 301 ADCP15Oup 589 x good data AO-02_06 301 Mini-TD 11 good data AO_02_07 397 RCM-8 9346 x good data AO_02_08 552 RCM-8 9932 x good data AO_02_09 697 RCM-8 5881 x good data AO_02_10 851 Argonaut D143 x questionable data AO_02_11 1007 RCM-8 8412 x good data 3632 Release 188 Code: 8181 8182 B 3632 Release 189 Code: 8183 8184 B Interrogate Release Mode Mooring Recovery Equatorial Atlantic AO-03 Notes: Vessel: Meteor Deployed: June 17 2006 18:21 Vessel: Atalante Recovered: March 4 2008 07:23 Fishing line entangled in top lOOm Latitude: 0 44.950 S Longitude: 22 59.710 W Water depth: 3700 Mag Var: -16.5 Startup ID Depth Instr. type s/n log -------- ----- ----------- ----- ------- Argos WD 15173 no signal received AO_03_01 47 Mini TD 22 instrument lost AO_03_02 83 Microcat 922 x good data AO_03_03 144 Microcat 925 x good data AO_03_04 205 Microcat 936 x good data AO_03_05 307 ADCP150up 267 x good data AO_03_06 307 Mini-TD 27 good data AO_03_07 403 RCM-8 9816 x good data AO_03_08 558 RCM-8 9349 x good data AO_03_09 702 RCM-8 9819 x good data AO_03_10 857 Argonaut D145 x good data AO_03_11 1013 RCM-8 9820 x good data 3132 Release 190 Code: 8185 8186 B 3132 Release 220 Code: 9151 9152 B Interrogate Release Mode Mooring Recovery Equatorial Atlantic AO-04 Notes: Vessel: Meteor Deployed: June 21 2006 18:00 Vessel: Atalante Recovered: March 2 2008 07:18 Top Argos and MiniTD torn off Latitude: 0 0.000 S Longitude: 21 29.600 W Water depth: 4950 Mag Var: -15.8 Startup ID Depth Instr. type s/n log -------- ----- ----------- ----- ------- ArgosWD 2254 lost, top torn off AO_04_01 4 Mini TD 73 lost, top torn off AO_04_02 81 Microcat 1281 x good data until July 2007 AO_04_03 142 Microcat 1282 x good data until July 2007 AO_04_04 204 Microcat 1583 x good data until July 2007 AO_04_05 455 ADCP LR up 2627 x good data AO_04_06 455 Mini-TD 61 good data AO_04_07 459 Microcat 1599 x good data AO_04_08 553 RCM-8 10501 x good data AO_04_09 708 RCM-8 11621 x good data AO_04_10 852 RCM-8 9818 x good data AO_04_11 1007 Argonaut D184 x good data 4291 Release 428 Code: 2457 2459 B 4291 Release 635 Code: 3A95 3A96 A Interrogate Release Mode Mooring Recovery Equatorial Atlantic AO-05 Notes: Vessel: Meteor Deployed: July 3 2006 11:36 Vessel: Atalante Recovered: Feb 27 2008 07:33 Major entanglement with fishing line Latitude: 5 0.900 N preventing profiler movement Longitude: 23 0.000 W Water depth: 4210 Mag Var: -14.5 Startup ID Depth Instr. type s/n log -------- ----- ----------- ----- ------- Argos WD 5461 no signal received AO_05_01 57 ADCPLRdn 3173 x good data AO_05_02 57 Mini TD 62 flooded, no data AO_05_03 103 Microcat 1682 x good data, tuna hit in Aug 2006 AO_05_04 616 M-CTD MMP 11617 x 45d of data, long-line hit in Aug 2006 AO_05_05 1044 Microcat 2478 x good data, long-line hit in Aug 2006 AO_05_06 1045 RCM-8 10779 x good data 3513 Release 441 Code: 8A03 8A04 B 3513 Release 633 Code: 3A91 3A92 A Interrogate Release Mode Mooring Recovery Cape Verde V440-O1 Notes: Vessel: Meteor Deployed: July 8 2006 15:56 Vessel: Atalante Recovered: Feb 19 2008 08:23 Fishing line between 400 and 500m Latitude: 17 35.390 N Longitude: 24 15.120 W Water depth: 3601 Mag Var: -11.2 Startup ID Depth Instr. type s/n log -------- ----- ----------- ----- ------- ArgosWD 5510 N/A V440_1_01 40 Microcat 3753 good data w/press V440_1_02 40 Fluorometer 269 data not read yet V440_1_03 62 Microcat 3752 good data w/press V440_1_04 81 Microcat 1162 good data V440_1_05 103 ADCPWHup 1522 x good data V440_1_06 103 Microcat 3755 good data w/press V440_1_07 127 RCM-11 325 x V440_1_08 127 Optode 349 V440_1_09 129 Microcat 2252 good data V440_1_10 200 RCM-8 10810 x good data V440_1_11 202 Microcat 2255 good data V440_1_12 302 Microcat 3754 good data w/press V440_1_13 400 Microcat 2256 good data V440_1_14 500 Microcat 2254 good data V440_1_15 602 RCM-8 11622 x good data, needs temp cal V440_1_16 603 Microcat 3415 good data w/press V440_1_17 753 Microcat 2257 good data, 4-day gap in Apr 2007 V440_1_18 899 Watchdog 2265 N/A V440_1_19 899 Watchdog 11307 N/A V440_1_20 900 RCM-8 11265 x OKdata, 3gaps oflmonth each V440_1_21 902 Microcat 2279 good data V440_1_22 999 Sediment Trap 97150 sent to Kiel V440_1_23 1002 Microcat 3757 good data w/press V440_1_24 1151 Microcat 1550 good data V440_1_25 1299 RCM-8 11267 x good data, I gap of 20 days no data, not started prior to V440_1_26 1301 Microcat 1269 deployment V440_1_27 1498 Microcat 2717 good data w/press V440_1_28 1749 Mini-TD 63 good data V440_1_29 2001 RCM-8 10818 x good data V440_1_30 2003 Microcat 1268 good, data, numerous read errors V440_1_31 2249 Mini-TD 64 good data V440_1_32 2500 Microcat 2933 good data V440_1_33 2748 Mini-TD 65 good data V440_1_34 3003 RCM-8 10776 x good data V440_1_35 3005 Microcat 2617 good data V440_1_36 3250 Mini-TD 72 good data V440_1_37 3511 Microcat 2618 good data V440_1_38 3563 Microcat 2472 good data 3565 Release 108 Code: E962 E964 A 3565 Release 821 Code: 4AA7 4AA8 A Interrogate Release Mode MOORING DEPLOYMENTS Mooring Deployment Equatorial Atlantic 23W 2S Notes: KPO_1021 Vessel: Atalante Deployed: 3-Mar 2008 14:09 Vessel: Recovered: Latitude: 1 56.701 S Longitude: 22 56.653 W Water depth: 4840 Mag Var: Startup ID Depth Instr. type s/n log -------- ----- ----------- ----- ------- Argos 7373 KPO_1021_01 298 ADCPNBup 270 KPO_1021_02 298 MiniTD 67 KPO_1021_03 395 Argonaut 304 KPO_1021_04 549 RCM-8 10504 KPO_1021_05 694 RCM-8 94 KPO_1021_06 848 Argonaut 179 KPO_1021_07 1003 RCM-8 10500 4232 Release 31 Code: 5037 5039 A 4232 Release 121 Code: 6177 6178 B Interrogate Release Mode Mooring Deployment Equatorial Atlantic 23W 0:45S Notes: KPO_1022 Vessel: Atalante Deployed: 4-Mar 2008 18:43 Vessel: Recovered: Latitude: 0 44.940 S Longitude: 22 59.700 W Water depth: 3670 Mag Var: Startup ID Depth Instr. type s/n log -------- ----- ----------- ----- ------- Argos 12620 KPO_1022_01 62 MiniTD 58 KPO_1022_02 96 Microcat 1269 x KPO_1022_03 144 Microcat 2250 x KPO_1022_04 295 MiniTD 46 KPO_1022_05 553 ADCPLRup 2290 x KPO_1022_06 698 RCM-8 9933 x KPO_1022_07 853 Argonaut 329 x KPO_1022_08 997 RCM-8 9833 x 3117 Release 173 Code: 9332 9334 A 3117 Release 174 Code: 9337 9339 A Interrogate Release Mode Mooring Deployment Equatorial Atlantic 23W 0:00N Notes: KPO_1023 Vessel: Atalante Deployed: 1-Mar 2008 19:43 Vessel: Recovered: Latitude: 0 0.000 N Longitude: 23 6.800 W Water depth: 3935 Mag Var: Startup ID Depth Instr. type s/n log -------- ----- ----------- ----- ------- Argos 108 KPO_1023_01 40 ADCP 1200 up 7279 x Recovered 5-Mar 2008 KPO_1023_02 198 ADCPup 8237 x KPO_1023_03 203 Microcat 1284 x KPO_1023_04 305 Microcat 1286 x KPO_1023_05 306 02 Logger 939 KPO_1023_06 500 Microcat 1320 x KPO_1023_07 501 02 Logger 942 KPO_1023_08 703 ADCPLRup 1181 x KPO_1023_09 848 Argonaut 144 x KPO_1023_10 1003 RCM-8 6122 x 3322 Release 107 Code: E957 E959 A 3322 Release 435 Code: 1469=ARM 1469+1455 B Interrogate Release Mode Mooring Deployment Equatorial Atlantic 23W 0:45N Notes: KPO_1024 Vessel: Atalante Deployed: 6-Mar 2008 10:35 Vessel: Recovered: Latitude: 0 45.170 N Longitude: 22 59.280 W Water depth: 4320 Mag Var: Startup ID Depth Instr. type s/n log -------- ----- ----------- ----- ------- Argos 11458 KPO_1024_01 64 MiniTD 57 KPO_1024_02 97 Microcat 2249 x KPO_1024_03 143 Microcat 2251 x KPO_1024_04 300 MiniTD 31 KPO_1024_05 555 ADCPLRup 3173 x KPO_1024_06 700 RCM-8 10658 x KPO_1024_07 855 Argonaut 151 x KPO_1024_08 1009 RCM-8 9311 x 3642 Release 271 Code: 1405=ARM 1404+1455 B 3642 Release 122 Code: 6170 6179 B Interrogate Release Mode Mooring Deployment Equatorial Atlantic 23W 2N Notes: KPO_1025 Vessel: Atalante Deployed: 6-Mar 2008 10:35 Vessel: Recovered: Latitude: 2 2.500 N Longitude: 23 2.000 W Water depth: 4363 Mag Var: Startup ID Depth Instr. type s/n log -------- ----- ----------- ----- ------- Argos 5481 KPO_1025_01 297 ADCPup 623 x KPO_1025_02 297 MiniTD 70 KPO_1025_03 385 02 Logger 944 KPO_1025_04 386 Microcat 3144 x KPO_1025_05 394 Argonaut 294 x KPO_1025_06 495 02 Logger 945 KPO_1025_07 496 Microcat 53 x KPO_1025_08 549 RCM-8 12004 x KPO_1025_09 693 RCM-8 8365 x KPO_1025_10 848 Argonaut 299 x KPO_1025_11 1003 RCM-8 10659 x 3832 Release 95 Code: 0485 0455 B 3832 Release 41 Code: E847 E849 B Interrogate Release Mode Mooring Deployment Equatorial Atlantic 23W 5N Notes: KPO_1026 Vessel: Atalante Deployed: 27-Feb 2008 18:30 Vessel: Recovered: Latitude: 5 0.900 N Longitude: 23 0.000 W Water depth: 4216 Mag Var: Startup ID Depth Instr. type s/n log -------- ----- ----------- ----- ------- Argos 2267 KPO_1026_01 76 MiniTD 71 KPO_1026_02 77 02 Logger 941 KPO_1026_03 80 Microcat 2247 x KPO_1026_04 594 M-CTD MMP 12201-1 x KPO_1026_05 1022 RCM-8 9345 x KPO_1026_06 1023 Microcat 3196 x 3513 Release 107 Code: 0495 0455 B 3513 Release 350 Code: C620 C629 B Interrogate Release Mode Mooring Deployment Equatorial Atlantic 23W 8N Notes: KPO_1027 Vessel: Atalante Deployed: 26-Feb 2008 10:49 Vessel: Recovered: Latitude: 8 1.000 N Longitude: 22 59.000 W Water depth: 4484 Mag Var: Startup ID Depth Instr. type s/n log -------- ----- ----------- ----- ------- Argos 2255 KPO_1027_01 81 MiniTD 59 KPO_1027_02 85 Microcat 2245 x KPO_1027_03 599 M-CTD MMP 12255-1 x KPO_1027_04 1027 RCM-8 9727 x KPO_1027_05 1028 Microcat 2248 x 3922 Release 351 Code: C375 C376 B 3922 Release 659 Code: 4901 4902 A Interrogate Release Mode Mooring Deployment Cape Verde V440-02 Notes: KPO_1028 Vessel: Atalante Deployed: 14-Mar 2008 10:58 Vessel: Recovered: Latitude: 17 36.400 N Longitude: 24 14.980 W Water depth: 3598 Mag Var: -11.2 Startup ID Depth Instr. type s/n log -------- ----- ----------- ----- ------- ArgosWD x KPO_1028_01 42 Microcat 248 x w/ press KPO_1028_02 42 Fluorometer 268 x KPO_1028_03 57 Microcat 1268 x w/ press KPO_1028_04 77 Microcat 1723 x KPO_ 028_OS 79 02 NI0Z A7 KPO_1028_06 100 Microcat 1599 x w/ press KPO_1028_07 103 ADCPWHup 1522 x KPO_1028_08 127 RCM-11 325 x KPO_1028_09 127 Optode 349 x KPO_1028_10 128 Microcat 1162 x KPO_1028_11 201 Microcat 1682 x KPO_1028_12 300 Microcat 3411 x w/ press KPO_1028_13 301 RBR 10385 x KPO_1028_14 401 02 NI0Z A4 KPO_1028_15 403 Microcat 2279 x Wire cut after top KPO_1028_16 602 RCM-8 9322 x float resurfaced KPO_1028_17 603 Microcat 2262 x on 14-Mar-08 KPO_1028_18 852 Microcat 2478 x KPO_1028_19 1103 Microcat 1550 x KPO_1028_20 1295 Sediment Trap 900000 x KPO_1028_21 1329 RCM-8 10815 x KPO_1028_22 1403 Microcat 3755 x w/ press KPO_1028_23 1702 Microcat 2718 x w/ press KPO_1028_24 1703 Mini-TD 42 x KPO_1028_25 2028 Microcat 3415 x w/ press KPO_1028_26 2029 Mini-TD 26 x KPO_1028_27 2528 Microcat 2617 x w/ press KPO_1028_28 2529 Mini-TD 24 KPO_1028_29 3001 Microcat 2618 x KPO_1028_30 3002 Mini-TD 36 x 11804- KPO_1028_31 3468 Sediment Trap 1 x KPO_1028_32 3503 RCM-8 10074 x KPO_1028_33 3504 Microcat 2472 x KPO_1028_34 3505 Mini-TD 34 x 1404=AR 1404+1455 B 3565 Release 270 Code: M 3565 Release 28 Code: 5022 5024 A Interrogate Release Mode Table A4.5: Microstructure Stations max. MSS MSS CTD Date Time Lat Long Pres shear shear Stn profile Cast (UTC) (UTC) [°N] [°W] range 1 2 --- ------- ---- --------- ----- ------- ------- ------- ---- ---- 1 1-6 3 26/2/2008 3:36 8.0195 22.9932 344-499 6070 6071 2 7-9 4 27/2/2008 6:10 5.0348 23.0102 249-267 6070 6071 3 11-13 4 27/2/2008 12:18 5.0350 22.9910 227-243 6070 6071 4 14-16 6 29/2/2008 5:08 0.7701 22.9915 363-391 6070 6071 5 20-25 7 29/2/2008 21:31 -0.0129 22.9993 162-180 003 6071 6 26-30 7 1/3/2008 2:55 0.0415 22.9635 196-232 003 6071 7 31-35 7 1/3/2008 12:35 0.0013 23.0706 206-267 003 6071 8 36-38 11 3/3/2008 23:07 -1.3230 22.9869 207-227 003 6071 9 39-45 12 4/3/2008 3:13 -0.9903 22.9975 219-236 003 6071 10 46-51 13 4/3/2008 12:34 -0.7388 22.9391 153-158 003 6071 11 52-54 14 4/3/2008 22:22 -0.4997 22.9953 152-178 003 6071 12 55-57 15 5/3/2008 2:21 -0.2568 22.9911 186-208 003 6071 13 58-67 16 5/3/2008 4:54 -0.0616 23.0908 92-215 003 6071 14 68-78 16 5/3/2008 11:13 0.0383 23.0855 125-278 003 6071 15 79-81 17 5/3/2008 20:42 0.2688 22.9874 222 003 6071 16 82-84 18 6/3/2008 0:42 0.5749 22.9885 209-215 003 6071 17 85-87 19 6/3/2008 3:54 0.7713 23.0135 86-263 003 6071 18 89-91 20 6/3/2008 17:44 0.9991 22.9888 270-397 003 6071 19 92-94 21 7/3/2008 3:00 1.3444 22.9965 220-225 003 6071 20 95-97 22 7/3/2008 7:07 1.7051 22.9981 246-249 003 6071 21 98-100 23 7/3/2008 11:17 2.0375 23.0045 255-264 003 6071 22 101-103 25 7/3/2008 19:39 2.6853 23.0041 280-298 003 6071 23 104-106 27 8/3/2008 2:58 3.3414 23.0009 240-390 003 6071 24 107-109 29 8/3/2008 12:01 4.0221 23.0036 234-247 003 6071 25 110-112 32 8/3/2008 23:07 5.0331 22.9868 245-273 003 6071 26 113-115 34 9/3/2008 8:06 6.0141 23.0035 220-226 003 6071 27 116-118 36 9/3/2008 17:40 7.0251 22.9963 265-317 003 6071 28 119-121 37 9/3/2008 22:45 7.5224 22.9986 278-335 003 6071 29 122-124 38 10/3/2008 4:05 8.0718 22.9853 384-415 003 6071 30 125-127 39 10/3/2008 9:00 8.5117 23.0006 353-378 003 6071 31 128-130 40 10/3/2008 15:01 9.0101 22.9998 347-408 003 6071 32 135-139 51 13/3/2008 18:50 17.6131 24.2501 400-458 003 6071 33 140-150 51 14/3/2008 0:57 17.6406 24.2814 366-454 003 6071 34 151-158 51 14/3/2008 11:39 17.5974 24.2569 318-418 003 6071 35 159-161 51 14/3/2008 18:15 17.6262 24.2486 380-430 003 6071 36 162-171 51 14/3/2008 20:43 17.6582 24.2497 316-420 003 6071 37 172-180 51 15/3/2008 1:28 17.60 24.25 407-475 003 6071 38 181-188 51 15/3/2008 8:34 17.60 24.25 351-485 003 6071 IFM-GEOMAR Reports No. Title 1 RV Sonne Fahrtbericht / Cruise Report 50 176 & 179 MERAMEX I & II (Merapi Amphibious Experiment) 18.05.-01.06.04 & 16.09.-07.1O.04. Ed. by Heidrun Kopp & Ernst R. Flueh, 2004, 206 pp. In English 2 RV Sonne Fahrtbericht / Cruise Report 50 181 TIPTEQ (from The Incoming Plate to mega Thrust EarthQuakes) 06.12.2004.-26.02.2005. Ed. by Ernst R. Flueh & Ingo Grevemeyer, 2005, 533 pp. In English 3 RV Poseidon Fahrtbericht / Cruise Report POS 316 Carbonate Mounds and Aphotic Corals in the NE-Atlantic 03.08.-17.08.2004. Ed. by Olaf Pfannkuche & Christine Utecht, 2005, 64 pp. In English 4 RV Sonne Fahrtbericht / Cruise Report 50 177 - (Sino-German Cooperative Project, South China Sea: Distribution, Formation and Effect of Methane & Gas Hydrate on the Environment) 02.06.-20.07.2004. Ed. by Erwin Suess, Yongyang Huang, Nengyou Wu, Xiqiu Han & Xin Su, 2005, 154 pp. In English and Chinese 5 RV Sonne Fahrtbericht / Cruise Report 50 186 - GITEWS (German Indonesian Tsunami Early Warning System 28.10.-13.1.2005 & 15.11.- 28.11.2005 & 07.01.-20.01.2006. Ed. by Ernst R. Flueh, Tilo Schoene & Wilhelm Weinrebe, 2006, 169 pp. In English 6 RV Sonne Fahrtbericht / Cruise Report SO 186 -3 - SeaCause II, 26.02.- 16.03.2006. Ed. by Heidrun Kopp & Ernst R. Flueh, 2006, 174 pp. In English 7 RV Meteor, Fahrtbericht / Cruise Report M67/1 CHILE-MARGIN-SURVEY 20.02.-13.03.2006. Ed. by Wilhelm Weinrebe und Silke Schenk, 2006, 112 PP. In English 8 RV Sonne Fahrtbericht / Cruise Report 50 190 - SINDBAD (Seismic and Geoacoustic Investigations Along The Sunda-Banda Arc Transition) 10.11.2006 - 24.12.2006. Ed. by Heidrun Kopp & Ernst R. Flueh, 2006, 193 pp. In English 9 RV Sonne Fahrtbericht / Cruise Report 50 191 - New Vents "Puaretanga Hou" 11.01. - 23.03.2007. Ed. by Jörg Bialas, Jens Greinert, Peter Linke, Olaf Pfannkuche, 2007, 190 pp. In English 10 FS ALKOR Fahrtbericht / Cruise Report AL 275 - Geobiological investigations and sampling of aphotic coral reef ecosystems in the NE- , 24.03. - 30.03.2006, Andres Rüggeberg & Armin Form, 39 pp. In English 11 FS Sonne / Fahrtbericht / Cruise Report 50 192-1: MANGO: Marine Geoscientific Investigations on the Input and Output of the Kermadec Subduction Zone, 24.03. - 22.04.2007, Ernst Flüh & Heidrun Kopp, 127 PP. In English 12 FS Maria S. Merian / Fahrtbericht / Cruise Report MSM 04-2: Seismic Wide-Angle Profiles, Fort-de-France - Fort-de-France, 03.01. - 19.01.2007, Ernst Flüh, 45 pp. In English 13 FS Sonne / Fahrtbericht / Cruise Report 50 193: MANIHIKI Temporal, Spatial, and Tectonic Evolution of Oceanic Plateaus, Suva/Fiji - Apia/Samoa 19.05. - 30.06.2007, Reinhard Werner and Folkmar Hauff, 201 pp. In English 14 FS Sonne / Fahrtbericht / Cruise Report S0195: TOTAL TOnga Thrust earthquake Asperity at Louisville Ridge, Suva/Fiji - Suva/Fiji 07.01. - 16.02.2008, Ingo Grevemeyer & Ernst R. Flüh, xx pp. In English 15 RV Poseidon Fahrtbericht / Cruise Report P362-2: West Nile Delta Mud Volcanoes, Piräus - Heraklion 09.02. - 25.02.2008, Thomas Feseker, 63 PP. In English 16 RV Poseidon Fahrtbericht / Cruise Report P347: Mauritanian Upwelling and Mixing Process Study (MUMP), Las-Palmas - Las Palmas, 18.01. - 05.02.2007, Marcus Dengler et al., 34 pp. In English 17 FS Maria S. Merian Fahrtbericht / Cruise Report MSM 04-1: Meridional Overturning Variability Experiment (MOVE 2006), Fort de France - Fort de France, 02.12. - 21.12.2006, Thomas J. Müller, 41 pp. In English 18 FS Poseidon Fahrtbericht /Cruise Report P348: SOPRAN: Mauritanian Upwelling Study 2007, Las Palmas - Las Palmas, 08.02. - 26.02.2007, Hermann W. Bange, 42 pp. In English IFM-GEOMAR Leibniz-Institut für Meereswissenschaften an der Universität Kiel Das Leibniz-Institut für The Leibniz-Institute of Marine Meereswissenschaften Sciences is a member of the Leibniz ist ein Institut der Association Wissenschaftsgemeinschaft (Wissenschaftsgemeinschaft Gottfried Wilhelm Leibniz (WGL) Gottfried Wilhelm Leibniz). Leibniz-Institut für Meereswissenschaften / Leibniz-Institute of Marine Sciences IFM-GEOMAR Dienstgebäude Westufer I West Shore Building Düsternbrooker Weg 20 D-24105 Kiel Germany Leibniz-Institut für Meereswissenschaften / Leibniz-Institute of Marine Sciences IFM-GEOMAR Dienstgebäude Ostufer / East Shore Building Wischhofstr. 1-3 D-24148 Kiel Germany Tel.: ++49 431 600-0 Fax: ++49 431 600-2805 www.ifm-geomar.de CCHDO DATA PROCESSING NOTES Date Person Data Type Action Summary ---------- ------- ------------- --------------- ------------------------------------ 2012-03-14 Bob Key BTL Submitted to go online 2012-03-14 Bob Key Cruise Report Submitted to go online 2012-04-05 C Berys BTL/CrsRpt Website Updated Available under 'Files as received' File 35A320080223.exc.csv containing bottle data, submitted by Bob Key on 2012-03-14, available under 'Files as received', unprocessed by CCHDO. File Short_Cruise_Report_LAtalante_Leg_4.pdf containing Cruise Documentation, submitted by Bob Key on 2012-03-14, available under 'Files as received', unprocessed by CCHDO. 2012-05-11 J Kappa CTD Submitted Downloaded from Pangaea 2012-05-14 Bob Key BTL Submitted replaces previous file 2012-05-18 J Kappa CrsRpt Website Update New Text version online