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  • 1
    Electronic Resource
    Electronic Resource
    s.l. : American Chemical Society
    Environmental science & technology 20 (1986), S. 457-463 
    ISSN: 1520-5851
    Source: ACS Legacy Archives
    Topics: Chemistry and Pharmacology , Energy, Environment Protection, Nuclear Power Engineering
    Type of Medium: Electronic Resource
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  • 2
    Publication Date: 2023-03-16
    Keywords: ANT-XI/3; AWI_Paleo; Chloroiodomethane; DATE/TIME; DEPTH, water; Dibromomethane; Gas chromatography, Ekdal & Abrahamsson, 1997; Iodomethane; LATITUDE; LONGITUDE; Paleoenvironmental Reconstructions from Marine Sediments @ AWI; Polarstern; PS29; PUMP; Salinity; SURAbrahamsson1998; Temperature, water; Tribromomethane; Trichloromethane; Water pump
    Type: Dataset
    Format: text/tab-separated-values, 1694 data points
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  • 3
    facet.materialart.
    Unknown
    PANGAEA
    In:  Supplement to: Abrahamsson, Katarina; Bertilsson, Stefan; Chierici, Melissa; Fransson, Agneta; Froneman, P W; Lorén, A; Pakhomov, Evgeny A (2004): Variations of biogeochemical parameters along a transect in the Southern Ocean, with special emphasis on volatile halogenated organic compounds. Deep Sea Research Part II: Topical Studies in Oceanography, 51(22-24), 2745-2756, https://doi.org/10.1016/j.dsr2.2004.09.004
    Publication Date: 2023-08-01
    Description: A number of parameters of biogeochemical interest were monitored along a north–southerly transect (S 43-S 63°) in the Atlantic Sector of the Southern Ocean from the 8th to the 20th of December 1997. Changes in total dissolved inorganic carbon (CT) and total alkalinity (AT) were mostly dependent on temperature and salinity until the ice edge was reached. After this point only a weak correlation was seen between these. Highest mean values of CT and AT were observed in the Winter Ice Edge (WIE) (2195 and 2319 µmol/kg, respectively). Lowest mean AT (2277 µmol/kg) was observed in the Sub-Antarctic Front (SAF), whereas lowest mean CT concentration (2068 µmol/kg) was associated with the Sub-Tropical Front (STF). The pH in situ varied between 8.060 and 8.156 where the highest values were observed in the southern part of the Antarctic Polar Front (APF) and in the Summer Ice Edge (SIE) Region . These peaks were associated with areas of high chlorophyll a (chl a) and tribromomethane values. In the other areas the pH in situ was mainly dependent on hydrography. Bacterial abundance decreased more than one order of magnitude when going from north to south. The decrease appeared to be strongly related to water temperature and there were no elevated abundances at frontal zones. Microphytoplankton dominated in the SAF and APF, whereas the nano- and picoplankton dominated outside these regions. Volatile halogenated compounds were found to vary both with regions, and with daylight. For the iodinated compounds, the highest concentrations were found north of the STF. Brominated hydrocarbons had high concentrations in the STF, but elevated concentrations were also found in the APF and SIE regions. No obvious correlation could be found between the occurrence of individual halocarbons and chl a. On some occasions trichloroethene and tribromomethane related to the presence of nano- and microplankton, respectively.
    Keywords: 1,1,1-Trichloroethane; 1-Iodobutane; 1-Iodoethane; 2-Iodobutane; Bacteria; Bromochloromethane; Calculated; Carbon, inorganic, dissolved; Carbon dioxide, partial pressure; Chloroiodomethane; Chlorophyll a; Chlorophyll a microplankton; Chlorophyll a nanoplankton; Chlorophyll a picoplankton; Counting by flow cytometer; CTD; DEPTH, water; Dibromochloromethane; Dibromomethane; Dichlorobromomethane; Dichloromethane; Fluorometry, after filtration; Gas chromatography, Ekdal & Abrahamsson, 1997; Iodomethane; LATITUDE; LONGITUDE; pH; PUMP; S. A. Agulhas; Salinity; Sample code/label; SWEDARP_97/98; Temperature, water; Tetrachloroethene; Tetrachloromethane; Titration; Tribromomethane; Trichloroethene; Trichloromethane; Water pump
    Type: Dataset
    Format: text/tab-separated-values, 2063 data points
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  • 4
    Publication Date: 2024-03-01
    Description: We present sea ice temperature and salinity data from first-year ice (FYI) and second-year ice (SYI) relevant to the temporal development of sea ice permeability and brine drainage efficiency from the early growth phase in October 2019 to the onset of spring warming in May 2020. Our dataset was collected in the central Arctic Ocean during the Multidisciplinary drifting Observatory for the Study of Arctic Climate (MOSAiC) Expedition in 2019 to 2020. MOSAiC was an international transpolar drift expedition in which the German icebreaker RV Polarstern anchored into an ice floe to gain new insights into Arctic climate over a full annual cycle. In October 2019, RV Polarstern moored to an ice floe in the Siberian sector of the Arctic at 85 degrees north and 137 degrees east to begin the drift towards the North Pole and the Fram Strait via the Transpolar Drift Stream. The data presented here were collected during the first three legs of the expedition, so all the coring activities took place on the same floe. The end dates of legs 1, 2, and 3 were 13 December, 24 February, and 4 June, respectively. The dataset contributed to a baseline study entitled, Deciphering the properties of different Arctic ice types during the growth phase of the MOSAiC floes: Implications for future studies. The study highlights downward directed gas pathways in FYI and SYI by inferring sea ice permeability and potential brine release from several time series of temperature and salinity measurements. The physical properties presented in this paper lay the foundation for subsequent analyses on actual gas contents measured in the ice cores, as well as air-ice and ice-ocean gas fluxes. Sea ice cores were collected with a Kovacs Mark II 9 cm diameter corer. To measure ice temperatures, about 4.5 cm deep holes were drilled into the core (intervals varied by site and leg) . The temperatures were measured by a digital thermometer within minutes after the cores were retrieved. The ice cores were placed into pre-labelled plastic sleeves sealed at the bottom end. The ice cores were transported to RV Polarstern and stored in a -20 degrees Celsius freezer. Each of the cores was sub-sampled, melted at room temperature, and processed for salinity within one or two days. The practical salinity was estimated by measuring the electrical conductivity and temperature of the melted samples using a WTW Cond 3151 salinometer equipped with a Tetra-Con 325 four-electrode conductivity cell. The practical salinity represents the the salinity estimated from the electrical conductivity of the solution. The dataset also contains derived variables, including sea ice density, brine volume fraction, and the Rayleigh number.
    Keywords: AC3; Arctic Amplification; Arctic Ocean; Arctic Research Icebreaker Consortium: A strategy for meeting the needs for marine-based research in the Arctic; ARICE; brine; first-year ice; HAVOC; MOSAiC; MOSAiC_BGC; MOSAiC_ECO; MOSAiC_ICE; MOSAiC_SNOW; MOSAiC20192020; MOSAiC expedition; Multidisciplinary drifting Observatory for the Study of Arctic Climate; Ridges - Safe HAVens for ice-associated Flora and Fauna in a Seasonally ice-covered Arctic OCean; Sea ice; second-year ice; Temperature and Salinity
    Type: Dataset
    Format: application/zip, 6 datasets
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  • 5
    Publication Date: 2024-03-01
    Description: First-year sea-ice thickness, draft, salinity, temperature, and density were measured during near-weekly surveys at the main first-year ice coring site (MCS-FYI) during the MOSAiC expedition (legs 1 to 4). The ice cores were extracted either with a 9-cm (Mark II) or 7.25-cm (Mark III) internal diameter ice corers (Kovacs Enterprise, US). This data set includes data from 23 coring site visits and were performed from 28 October 2019 to 29 July 2020 at coring locations within 130 m to each other in the MOSAiC Central Observatory. During each coring event, ice temperature was measured in situ from a separate temperature core, using Testo 720 thermometers in drill holes with a length of half-core-diameter at 5-cm vertical resolution. Ice bulk practical salinity was measured from melted core sections at 5-cm resolution using a YSI 30 conductivity meter. Ice density was measured using the hydrostatic weighing method (Pustogvar and Kulyakhtin, 2016) from a density core in the freezer laboratory onboard Polarstern at the temperature of –15°C. Relative volumes of brine and gas were estimated from ice salinity, temperature and density using Cox and Weeks (1983) for cold ice and Leppäranta and Manninen (1988) for ice warmer than –2°C. The data contains the event label (1), time (2), and global coordinates (3,4) of each coring measurement and sample IDs (13, 15). Each salinity core has its manually measured ice thickness (5), ice draft (6), core length (7), and mean snow height (22). Each core section has the total length of its top (8) and bottom (9) measured in situ, as well estimated depth of section top (10), bottom (11), and middle (12). The depth estimates assume that the total length of all core sections is equal to the measured ice thickness. Each core section has the value of its practical salinity (14), isotopic values (16, 17, 18) (Meyer et al., 2000), as well as sea ice temperature (19) and ice density (20) interpolated to the depth of salinity measurements. The global coordinates of coring sites were measured directly. When it was not possible, coordinates of the nearby temperature buoy 2019T66 were used. Ice mass balance buoy 2019T66 installation is described in doi:10.1594/PANGAEA.938134. Brine volume (21) fraction estimates are presented only for fraction values from 0 to 30%. Each core section also has comments (23) describing if the sample is from a false bottom, from rafted ice or has any other special characteristics. Macronutrients from the salinity core, and more isotope data will be published in a subsequent version of this data set.
    Keywords: Arctic; Arctic Ocean; Arctic Research Icebreaker Consortium: A strategy for meeting the needs for marine-based research in the Arctic; ARICE; Calculated; Comment; Core length; cores; DATE/TIME; density; Density, ice; Depth, adjusted; Depth, adjusted bottom; Depth, adjusted top; Depth, ice/snow, bottom/maximum; Depth, ice/snow, top/minimum; Deuterium excess; Ecological monitoring; Event label; HAVOC; Hydrostatic weighing; IC; Ice corer; ICEGAUGE; Ice thickness gauge; Isotopic liquid water analyzer; LATITUDE; LONGITUDE; MOSAiC; MOSAiC_ECO; MOSAiC_ICE; MOSAiC20192020; Multidisciplinary drifting Observatory for the Study of Arctic Climate; Physical properties; Polarstern; PS122/1; PS122/1_10-19; PS122/1_5-3; PS122/1_6-34; PS122/1_7-6; PS122/1_7-97; PS122/1_8-2; PS122/1_9-6; PS122/1_9-93; PS122/2; PS122/2_17-3; PS122/2_19-7; PS122/2_21-13; PS122/2_23-3; PS122/2_24-8; PS122/3; PS122/3_32-63; PS122/3_35-11; PS122/3_36-21; PS122/3_38-24; PS122/3_39-7; PS122/4; PS122/4_44-134; PS122/4_46-18; PS122/4_47-16; PS122/4_48-23; PS122/4_49-34; Ridges - Safe HAVens for ice-associated Flora and Fauna in a Seasonally ice-covered Arctic OCean; Salinity; Salinometer, inductive; Sample ID; Sea ice; Sea ice draft; Sea ice salinity; Sea ice thickness; Snow height; Tape measure; Temperature; Temperature, ice/snow; Thermometer; time-series; Volume, brine; δ18O, water; δ Deuterium, water
    Type: Dataset
    Format: text/tab-separated-values, 7847 data points
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  • 6
    facet.materialart.
    Unknown
    PANGAEA
    In:  Supplement to: Mattsson, Erik; Karlsson, Anders; Smith, Walker O Jr; Abrahamsson, Katarina (2012): The relationship between biophysical parameters and halocarbon distribution in the waters of the Amundsen Sea and Ross Seas, Antarctica. Marine Chemistry, 140-141, 1-9, https://doi.org/10.1016/j.marchem.2012.07.002
    Publication Date: 2024-02-27
    Description: Little is known regarding the distribution of volatile halogenated organic compounds (halocarbons) in Antarctic waters, and their relation to biophysical variables. During the austral summer (December to January) in 2007-08 halocarbon and pigment concentrations were measured in the Amundsen (100-130ºW) and Ross Sea (158ºW- 160ºE). In addition, halocarbons were determined in air, snow and sea ice. The distribution of halocarbons was influenced to a large extent by sea ice, and to a much lesser extent by pelagic biota. Concentrations of naturally produced halocarbons were elevated in the surface mixed layer in ice covered areas compared to open waters in polynyas and in the bottom waters of the Ross Sea. Higher concentrations of halocarbons were also found in sea ice brine compared to the surface waters. Incubations of snow revealed an additional source of halocarbons. The distribution of halocarbons also varied considerably between the Amundsen and Ross Seas, mainly due to the different oceanographic settings. For iodinated compounds, weak correlations were found with the presence of pigments indicative of Phaeocystis, mainly in the Ross Sea. Saturation anomalies for the surface water and brine (in sea ice) were determined for the two indicator halocarbons bromoform and chloriodomethane. For bromoform, the surface water anomalies varied between -83 and 11%, whereas chloroiodomethane anomalies varied between -6 and 1,200%. The saturation anomalies for brine varied between -56 to 120% for bromoform and 91 to 22,000% for chloroiodomethane, indicating that sea ice could be a possible source both to the atmosphere and the surface waters. Polar waters can have a substantial impact on global halocarbon budgets and need to be included in large-scale assessments.
    Keywords: 1,1,1-Trichloroethane; 1,2-Dibromoethane; 19-Butanoyloxyfucoxanthin; 19-Hexanoyloxyfucoxanthin; 1-Iodobutane; 1-Iodoethane; 1-Iodopropane; 2-Iodobutane; Amundsen Sea; Bromochloromethane; Bromodichloromethane; Bromoiodomethane; Calculated; Chloroiodomethane; Chlorophyll a; Chlorophyll a, fractionated; Chlorophyll c3; CTD, Sea-Bird SBE 911plus; CTD/Rosette; CTD-RO; Date/Time of event; Density, sigma, in situ; Density, sigma-theta (0); DEPTH, water; Dibromochloromethane; Dibromomethane; Diiodomethane; Estimated; Event label; Fucoxanthin; Gas chromatography, Ekdal & Abrahamsson, 1997; Ice coverage; Iodomethane; Latitude of event; Longitude of event; Oden; Oden Southern Ocean; OSO07/08; OSO07/08_10; OSO07/08_11; OSO07/08_12; OSO07/08_13; OSO07/08_14; OSO07/08_15; OSO07/08_16; OSO07/08_17; OSO07/08_18; OSO07/08_19; OSO07/08_20; OSO07/08_21; OSO07/08_22; OSO07/08_23; OSO07/08_24; OSO07/08_25; OSO07/08_26; OSO07/08_27; OSO07/08_28; OSO07/08_29; OSO07/08_30; OSO07/08_31; OSO07/08_32; OSO07/08_33; OSO07/08_4; OSO07/08_5; OSO07/08_6; OSO07/08_7; OSO07/08_8; OSO07/08_9; Salinity; Temperature, water; Tribromomethane
    Type: Dataset
    Format: text/tab-separated-values, 8451 data points
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  • 7
    Publication Date: 2024-03-01
    Description: We present sea ice temperature and salinity data from first-year ice (FYI) and second-year ice (SYI) relevant to the temporal development of sea ice permeability and brine drainage efficiency from the early growth phase in October 2019 to the onset of spring warming in May 2020. Our dataset was collected in the central Arctic Ocean during the Multidisciplinary drifting Observatory for the Study of Arctic Climate (MOSAiC) Expedition in 2019 to 2020. MOSAiC was an international transpolar drift expedition in which the German icebreaker RV Polarstern anchored into an ice floe to gain new insights into Arctic climate over a full annual cycle. In October 2019, RV Polarstern moored to an ice floe in the Siberian sector of the Arctic at 85 degrees north and 137 degrees east to begin the drift towards the North Pole and the Fram Strait via the Transpolar Drift Stream. The data presented here were collected during the first three legs of the expedition, so all the coring activities took place on the same floe. The end dates of legs 1, 2, and 3 were 13 December, 24 February, and 4 June, respectively. The dataset contributed to a baseline study entitled, Deciphering the properties of different Arctic ice types during the growth phase of the MOSAiC floes: Implications for future studies. The study highlights downward directed gas pathways in FYI and SYI by inferring sea ice permeability and potential brine release from several time series of temperature and salinity measurements. The physical properties presented in this paper lay the foundation for subsequent analyses on actual gas contents measured in the ice cores, as well as air-ice and ice-ocean gas fluxes. Sea ice cores were collected with a Kovacs Mark II 9 cm diameter corer. To measure ice temperatures, about 4.5 cm deep holes were drilled into the core (intervals varied by site and leg) . The temperatures were measured by a digital thermometer within minutes after the cores were retrieved. The ice cores were placed into pre-labelled plastic sleeves sealed at the bottom end. The ice cores were transported to RV Polarstern and stored in a -20 degrees Celsius freezer. Each of the cores was sub-sampled, melted at room temperature, and processed for salinity within one or two days. The practical salinity was estimated by measuring the electrical conductivity and temperature of the melted samples using a WTW Cond 3151 salinometer equipped with a Tetra-Con 325 four-electrode conductivity cell. The practical salinity represents the the salinity estimated from the electrical conductivity of the solution. The dataset also contains derived variables, including sea ice density, brine volume fraction, and the Rayleigh number.
    Keywords: AC3; after Cox & Weeks (1983); Arctic Amplification; Arctic Ocean; Arctic Research Icebreaker Consortium: A strategy for meeting the needs for marine-based research in the Arctic; ARICE; brine; DATE/TIME; Density, ice; DEPTH, ice/snow; Estimated from electrical conductivity and temperature of the melted ice samples; Event label; first-year ice; HAVOC; IC; Ice corer; Linear interpolation at the midpoint of the sample based on the measurements from the ice temperature profile; MOSAiC; MOSAiC_BGC; MOSAiC_ECO; MOSAiC_ICE; MOSAiC_SNOW; MOSAiC20192020; MOSAiC expedition; Multidisciplinary drifting Observatory for the Study of Arctic Climate; Polarstern; PS122/1; PS122/1_10-39; PS122/1_11-11; PS122/1_4-29; PS122/1_5-24; PS122/1_6-61; PS122/1_7-78; PS122/1_8-22; PS122/1_9-40; PS122/2; PS122/2_15-12; PS122/2_18-113; PS122/2_20-92; PS122/2_22-77; PS122/3; PS122/3_30-87; PS122/3_31-5; PS122/3_32-58; PS122/3_39-83; Rayleigh number; Ridges - Safe HAVens for ice-associated Flora and Fauna in a Seasonally ice-covered Arctic OCean; Salinity; Sea ice; second-year ice; see comment; Site; Temperature, ice/snow; Temperature and Salinity; Utility; Volume, brine
    Type: Dataset
    Format: text/tab-separated-values, 2163 data points
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  • 8
    Publication Date: 2024-03-01
    Description: We present sea ice temperature and salinity data from first-year ice (FYI) and second-year ice (SYI) relevant to the temporal development of sea ice permeability and brine drainage efficiency from the early growth phase in October 2019 to the onset of spring warming in May 2020. Our dataset was collected in the central Arctic Ocean during the Multidisciplinary drifting Observatory for the Study of Arctic Climate (MOSAiC) Expedition in 2019 to 2020. MOSAiC was an international transpolar drift expedition in which the German icebreaker RV Polarstern anchored into an ice floe to gain new insights into Arctic climate over a full annual cycle. In October 2019, RV Polarstern moored to an ice floe in the Siberian sector of the Arctic at 85 degrees north and 137 degrees east to begin the drift towards the North Pole and the Fram Strait via the Transpolar Drift Stream. The data presented here were collected during the first three legs of the expedition, so all the coring activities took place on the same floe. The end dates of legs 1, 2, and 3 were 13 December, 24 February, and 4 June, respectively. The dataset contributed to a baseline study entitled, Deciphering the properties of different Arctic ice types during the growth phase of the MOSAiC floes: Implications for future studies. The study highlights downward directed gas pathways in FYI and SYI by inferring sea ice permeability and potential brine release from several time series of temperature and salinity measurements. The physical properties presented in this paper lay the foundation for subsequent analyses on actual gas contents measured in the ice cores, as well as air-ice and ice-ocean gas fluxes. Sea ice cores were collected with a Kovacs Mark II 9 cm diameter corer. To measure ice temperatures, about 4.5 cm deep holes were drilled into the core (intervals varied by site and leg) . The temperatures were measured by a digital thermometer within minutes after the cores were retrieved. The ice cores were placed into pre-labelled plastic sleeves sealed at the bottom end. The ice cores were transported to RV Polarstern and stored in a -20 degrees Celsius freezer. Each of the cores was sub-sampled, melted at room temperature, and processed for salinity within one or two days. The practical salinity was estimated by measuring the electrical conductivity and temperature of the melted samples using a WTW Cond 3151 salinometer equipped with a Tetra-Con 325 four-electrode conductivity cell. The practical salinity represents the the salinity estimated from the electrical conductivity of the solution. The dataset also contains derived variables, including sea ice density, brine volume fraction, and the Rayleigh number.
    Keywords: AC3; after Cox & Weeks (1983); Arctic Amplification; Arctic Ocean; Arctic Research Icebreaker Consortium: A strategy for meeting the needs for marine-based research in the Arctic; ARICE; brine; DATE/TIME; Density, ice; DEPTH, ice/snow; Estimated from electrical conductivity and temperature of the melted ice samples; Event label; first-year ice; HAVOC; IC; Ice corer; Linear interpolation at the midpoint of the sample based on the measurements from the ice temperature profile; MOSAiC; MOSAiC_BGC; MOSAiC_ECO; MOSAiC_ICE; MOSAiC_SNOW; MOSAiC20192020; MOSAiC expedition; Multidisciplinary drifting Observatory for the Study of Arctic Climate; Polarstern; PS122/1; PS122/1_6-135; PS122/1_8-37; PS122/2; PS122/2_17-29; PS122/2_19-180; PS122/2_23-65; PS122/3; PS122/3_32-6; PS122/3_37-32; Rayleigh number; Ridges - Safe HAVens for ice-associated Flora and Fauna in a Seasonally ice-covered Arctic OCean; Salinity; Sea ice; second-year ice; see comment; Site; Temperature, ice/snow; Temperature and Salinity; Utility; Volume, brine
    Type: Dataset
    Format: text/tab-separated-values, 1120 data points
    Location Call Number Expected Availability
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  • 9
    Publication Date: 2024-03-01
    Description: We present sea ice temperature and salinity data from first-year ice (FYI) and second-year ice (SYI) relevant to the temporal development of sea ice permeability and brine drainage efficiency from the early growth phase in October 2019 to the onset of spring warming in May 2020. Our dataset was collected in the central Arctic Ocean during the Multidisciplinary drifting Observatory for the Study of Arctic Climate (MOSAiC) Expedition in 2019 to 2020. MOSAiC was an international transpolar drift expedition in which the German icebreaker RV Polarstern anchored into an ice floe to gain new insights into Arctic climate over a full annual cycle. In October 2019, RV Polarstern moored to an ice floe in the Siberian sector of the Arctic at 85 degrees north and 137 degrees east to begin the drift towards the North Pole and the Fram Strait via the Transpolar Drift Stream. The data presented here were collected during the first three legs of the expedition, so all the coring activities took place on the same floe. The end dates of legs 1, 2, and 3 were 13 December, 24 February, and 4 June, respectively. The dataset contributed to a baseline study entitled, Deciphering the properties of different Arctic ice types during the growth phase of the MOSAiC floes: Implications for future studies. The study highlights downward directed gas pathways in FYI and SYI by inferring sea ice permeability and potential brine release from several time series of temperature and salinity measurements. The physical properties presented in this paper lay the foundation for subsequent analyses on actual gas contents measured in the ice cores, as well as air-ice and ice-ocean gas fluxes. Sea ice cores were collected with a Kovacs Mark II 9 cm diameter corer. To measure ice temperatures, about 4.5 cm deep holes were drilled into the core (intervals varied by site and leg) . The temperatures were measured by a digital thermometer within minutes after the cores were retrieved. The ice cores were placed into pre-labelled plastic sleeves sealed at the bottom end. The ice cores were transported to RV Polarstern and stored in a -20 degrees Celsius freezer. Each of the cores was sub-sampled, melted at room temperature, and processed for salinity within one or two days. The practical salinity was estimated by measuring the electrical conductivity and temperature of the melted samples using a WTW Cond 3151 salinometer equipped with a Tetra-Con 325 four-electrode conductivity cell. The practical salinity represents the the salinity estimated from the electrical conductivity of the solution. The dataset also contains derived variables, including sea ice density, brine volume fraction, and the Rayleigh number.
    Keywords: AC3; after Cox & Weeks (1983); Arctic Amplification; Arctic Ocean; Arctic Research Icebreaker Consortium: A strategy for meeting the needs for marine-based research in the Arctic; ARICE; brine; DATE/TIME; Density, ice; DEPTH, ice/snow; Estimated from electrical conductivity and temperature of the melted ice samples; Event label; first-year ice; HAVOC; IC; Ice corer; Linear interpolation at the midpoint of the sample based on the measurements from the ice temperature profile; MOSAiC; MOSAiC_BGC; MOSAiC_ECO; MOSAiC_ICE; MOSAiC_SNOW; MOSAiC20192020; MOSAiC expedition; Multidisciplinary drifting Observatory for the Study of Arctic Climate; Polarstern; PS122/1; PS122/1_10-69; PS122/1_6-59; PS122/1_7-52; PS122/2; PS122/2_17-124; PS122/2_19-152; PS122/3; PS122/3_31-33; PS122/3_35-151; Rayleigh number; Ridges - Safe HAVens for ice-associated Flora and Fauna in a Seasonally ice-covered Arctic OCean; Salinity; Sea ice; second-year ice; see comment; Site; Snow sampler metal; SSM; Temperature, ice/snow; Temperature and Salinity; Utility; Volume, brine
    Type: Dataset
    Format: text/tab-separated-values, 1575 data points
    Location Call Number Expected Availability
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  • 10
    Publication Date: 2024-03-01
    Description: We present sea ice temperature and salinity data from first-year ice (FYI) and second-year ice (SYI) relevant to the temporal development of sea ice permeability and brine drainage efficiency from the early growth phase in October 2019 to the onset of spring warming in May 2020. Our dataset was collected in the central Arctic Ocean during the Multidisciplinary drifting Observatory for the Study of Arctic Climate (MOSAiC) Expedition in 2019 to 2020. MOSAiC was an international transpolar drift expedition in which the German icebreaker RV Polarstern anchored into an ice floe to gain new insights into Arctic climate over a full annual cycle. In October 2019, RV Polarstern moored to an ice floe in the Siberian sector of the Arctic at 85 degrees north and 137 degrees east to begin the drift towards the North Pole and the Fram Strait via the Transpolar Drift Stream. The data presented here were collected during the first three legs of the expedition, so all the coring activities took place on the same floe. The end dates of legs 1, 2, and 3 were 13 December, 24 February, and 4 June, respectively. The dataset contributed to a baseline study entitled, Deciphering the properties of different Arctic ice types during the growth phase of the MOSAiC floes: Implications for future studies. The study highlights downward directed gas pathways in FYI and SYI by inferring sea ice permeability and potential brine release from several time series of temperature and salinity measurements. The physical properties presented in this paper lay the foundation for subsequent analyses on actual gas contents measured in the ice cores, as well as air-ice and ice-ocean gas fluxes. Sea ice cores were collected with a Kovacs Mark II 9 cm diameter corer. To measure ice temperatures, about 4.5 cm deep holes were drilled into the core (intervals varied by site and leg) . The temperatures were measured by a digital thermometer within minutes after the cores were retrieved. The ice cores were placed into pre-labelled plastic sleeves sealed at the bottom end. The ice cores were transported to RV Polarstern and stored in a -20 degrees Celsius freezer. Each of the cores was sub-sampled, melted at room temperature, and processed for salinity within one or two days. The practical salinity was estimated by measuring the electrical conductivity and temperature of the melted samples using a WTW Cond 3151 salinometer equipped with a Tetra-Con 325 four-electrode conductivity cell. The practical salinity represents the the salinity estimated from the electrical conductivity of the solution. The dataset also contains derived variables, including sea ice density, brine volume fraction, and the Rayleigh number.
    Keywords: AC3; AF-MOSAiC-1; AF-MOSAiC-1_22; AF-MOSAiC-1_23; AF-MOSAiC-1_28; after Cox & Weeks (1983); Akademik Fedorov; Arctic Amplification; Arctic Ocean; Arctic Research Icebreaker Consortium: A strategy for meeting the needs for marine-based research in the Arctic; ARICE; brine; Comment; DATE/TIME; Density, ice; DEPTH, ice/snow; Estimated from electrical conductivity and temperature of the melted ice samples; Event label; first-year ice; HAVOC; IC; Ice corer; Linear interpolation at the midpoint of the sample based on the measurements from the ice temperature profile; MOSAiC; MOSAiC_BGC; MOSAiC_ECO; MOSAiC_ICE; MOSAiC_SNOW; MOSAiC20192020; MOSAiC20192020, AF122/1; MOSAiC expedition; Multidisciplinary drifting Observatory for the Study of Arctic Climate; PS122/1_3-22; PS122/1_3-23; PS122/1_3-28; Ridges - Safe HAVens for ice-associated Flora and Fauna in a Seasonally ice-covered Arctic OCean; Salinity; Sea ice; second-year ice; see comment; Site; Temperature, ice/snow; Temperature and Salinity; Utility; Volume, brine
    Type: Dataset
    Format: text/tab-separated-values, 115 data points
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