Oden Southern Ocean 2008/09 - Conductivity-Temperature-Depth (CTD) Data Collected Onboard Icebreaker Oden during November 2008 through January 2009
SND-ID: ecds0203-2. Version: 1.0. DOI: https://doi.org/10.5879/ecds/2017-03-17.1/1
Is part of collection at SND: Icebreaker Oden
This data description and associated data have been migrated from the ECDS portal to SND's research data catalogue. The level of documentation may therefore differ from other data descriptions in the catalogue. For more information about the migration of data from ECDS to SND click here.
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Creator/Principal investigator(s)
Swedish Polar Research Secretariat
Research principal
Description
Oden Southern Ocean 2008/09 was a cooperative effort of the Swedish Polar Research Secretariat and the National Science Foundation (NSF) in the USA.
It was the third season in a row icebreaker Oden worked in Antarctica. The basis of the cooperative effort was that NSF chartered Oden from the Swedish Maritime Administration and the Swedish Polar Research Secretariat to break an ice channel to the McMurdo Antarctic Station in the Ross Sea, allowing supply vessels to reach the station. As Oden sailed through the Southern Ocean, researchers had an opportunity to perform marine studies.
The marine research conducted during Oden Southern Ocean 2008/09 was interdisciplinary, and involved environmental chemistry, chemical and physical oceanography, climate research, epidemiology and evolutionary biology. The scientific findings from the expedition will play an important role in our understanding of the Antarctic system and its role in climate change. Its extreme climate and isolated location makes the Antarctic a unique platform for studying the Earth’s climatic, biological and geological evolution,
It was the third season in a row icebreaker Oden worked in Antarctica. The basis of the cooperative effort was that NSF chartered Oden from the Swedish Maritime Administration and the Swedish Polar Research Secretariat to break an ice channel to the McMurdo Antarctic Station in the Ross Sea, allowing supply vessels to reach the station. As Oden sailed through the Southern Ocean, researchers had an opportunity to perform marine studies.
The marine research conducted during Oden Southern Ocean 2008/09 was interdisciplinary, and involved environmental chemistry, chemical and physical oceanography, climate research, epidemiology and evolutionary biology. The scientific findings from the expedition will play an important role in our understanding of the Antarctic system and its role in climate change. Its extreme climate and isolated location makes the Antarctic a unique platform for studying the Earth’s climatic, biological and geological evolution, and the environmental problems of the future.
This data set contains conductivity, temperature and depth data collected during the American-Swedish expedition Oden Southern Ocean 2008/09, which was an international research cruise using the icebreaker Oden. The expedition embarked from Gothenborg, Sweden on October 28 2008 and arrived in McMurdo Januari 2009.
Data include: water depth, pressure, water temperature, salinity, and dissolved oxygen.
Further metadata on instrumentation and the individual variables can be found in the info file. Graphics and files describing the route and positions of CTD casts are included in the package. Show less..
Data contains personal data
No
Time period(s) investigated
2008-12-10 – 2009-01-07
Data format / data structure
Geographic spread
Geographic location: Ross Sea, Southern Ocean
Research area
Engineering and technology (Standard för svensk indelning av forskningsämnen 2011)
Environmental sciences (Standard för svensk indelning av forskningsämnen 2011)
Meteorology and atmospheric sciences (Standard för svensk indelning av forskningsämnen 2011)
Oceanography, hydrology and water resources (Standard för svensk indelning av forskningsämnen 2011)
Climatology / meteorology / atmosphere (INSPIRE topic categories)
Oceans (INSPIRE topic categories)
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