Dissolved and particulate carbon and nitrogen data from seawater collected during CCGS John P. Tully cruises in the northeast Pacific Ocean from Vancouver Island to Station P from 2018 to 2020 (NCEI Accession 0278343)
This dataset contains chemical data collected on CCGS John P. Tully during cruise Line-P_cruises in the North Pacific Ocean from 2018-09-21 to 2020-02-16. These data include depth, dissolved inorganic Carbon, pH, particulate organic Carbon (POC), particulate organic nitrogen, and total alkalinity (TA). The instruments used to collect these data include Automatic titrator, Carlo-Erba NA-1500 Elemental Analyzer, LI-COR LI-7000 Gas Analyzer, Niskin bottle, Pump, Scale, and Spectrophotometer. These data were collected by Sophia Johannessen of Fisheries and Oceans Canada, Pacific Region, Andrea J. Fassbender of National Oceanic and Atmospheric Administration, and Phoebe J. Lam of University of California-Santa Cruz as part of the "Constraining Upper-Ocean Carbon Export with Biogeochemical Profiling Floats (EXPORTS BGC Floats)" project. The Biological and Chemical Oceanography Data Management Office (BCO-DMO) submitted these data to NCEI on 2021-12-20.
The following is the text of the dataset description provided by BCO-DMO:
Acquisition Description:
Sampling was conducted aboard the CCGS John P. Tully during five cruises (2018-2020) in the northeast Pacific from Vancouver Island to Station P (50°N, 145°W).
Fisheries and Oceans Canada (DFO) Cruise numbers: 2018-40, 2019-001, 2019-006, 2019-008, 2020-001
Particulate Nitrogen and Carbon
Cruise 2018-040: Prior to use, Whatman 25 mm GF/C filters (~1.2 μm pore size) were placed in aluminum foil packets and baked at 450°C for 4.5 hours and allowed to cool overnight, sealed, and stored in a zip-lock bags in plastic Tupperware containers previously cleaned with a dilute solution of RBS-35 (Thermo Scientific) in deionized water. Filters were not pre-weighed for this cruise. Particulate concentration was determined using the amount of water filtered.
Cruises 2019-001, 2019-006, 2019-008, and 2020-001: Whatman 25 mm GF/F filters (~0.7 μm pore size) were used for all other cruises. Prior to use, GF/F filters were baked at 450°C for 4 hours and allowed to cool in the muffle furnace overnight. Further cooling took place in a desiccator. Once cooled to air temperature, filters were weighed on a Sartorius LE225B balance and then stored in individual PALL plastic 47mm filter holders until use.
All Cruises:
For all cruises, all water bottles and silicone tubing used for sampling were initially cleaned in a dilute Extran solution and thoroughly rinsed with Type 1 deionized water. Water samples were collected from Niskin bottles directly into 330 mL to 1L HDPE bottles, through silicon tubing or, at times, directly from the Niskin. Sample bottles were rinsed three times with aliquots from the Niskin and then filled. Volumes varied depending on availability of bottles. Samples were filtered immediately. People doing the sampling wore either vinyl or nitrile gloves. Sample bottles/tubing were reused through the cruise and well-rinsed with sample water between Niskins/casts.
Pre-combusted filters were placed onto a filtration manifold and samples were filtered under vacuum at 5 mm Hg or less. For total particulate carbon, 0.2 μm filtered seawater was used as a final rinse down the sides of the filtration cups. For particulate organic carbon, acidified seawater (10% HCl) was used as a final rinse to purge off the carbonate.
Cleaned forceps were used to remove filters from the manifold and returned to their original containers. After sampling, the filters were oven dried at 30°C. Filters were then stored at -80°C until returned to the lab where they were dried at 30°C for 24 hours. Samples were cooled in a dessicator. They were then sent to Stanford University for further chemical analysis. Samples that arrived at Stanford were placed into plastic petri dishes.
At Stanford University, filters from all cruises were loaded into a Costech Analytical Technologies Zero Blank carousel attached to a Carlo Erba NA1500 Series 2 elemental analyzer (EA) at the Stanford University Stable Isotope Laboratory Facility. The EA was configured with a 10 ml oxygen loop, a combustion oxidation reactor set at 1080°C, reduction reactor at 650°C, magnesium perchlorate column to remove water, the chromatography column set to 60°C, and the thermal conductivity detector set at 190°C. The UHP grade helium flow rate was 65 ml per minute and the UHP oxygen used to enhance combustion was 20 ml per minute.
All standards were loaded into 5×9 mm tin capsules (Costech Analytical Technologies). An empty 5×9 mm tin was analyzed with each run sequence for blank correction. All GF/C and GF/F filters were loaded into 9×10 mm tin capsules and one pre-combusted GF/C or GF/F filter was loaded into a 9×10 mm tin capsule for blank correction. Each 31-drop run sequence was composed of 2 conditioners, 1 5×9 mm tin blank, 1 9×10 mm filter blank, 2 acetanilide standards, 7 unknown filters, 1 acetanilide standard, 7 unknown filters, 1 acetanilide standard, 7 unknown filters, 2 acetanilide standards.
Though instrument precision is relatively high (± 1 µg N, and ± 2 µg C), overall uncertainty is strongly tied to the sampling procedure, with errors anticipated to range from 10% to 25%.
Dissolved Inorganic Carbon, Total Alkalinity, and pH
Samples were collected following standard protocols (Dickson et al., 2007) into 500 mL borosilicate glass bottles and preserved with 200 μL saturated mercuric chloride for later analysis. Samples were shipped to and analyzed at the Monterey Bay Aquarium Research Institute (MBARI). Three parameters (DIC, TA, and pH) were measured from each 500 mL sample bottle. All samples were run in triplicate, and the results were averaged. DIC and TA instrument performance was monitored by measuring Certified Reference Material (CRM; provided by Andrew Dickson at SIO) approximately hourly.
The following is the text of the dataset description provided by BCO-DMO:
Acquisition Description:
Sampling was conducted aboard the CCGS John P. Tully during five cruises (2018-2020) in the northeast Pacific from Vancouver Island to Station P (50°N, 145°W).
Fisheries and Oceans Canada (DFO) Cruise numbers: 2018-40, 2019-001, 2019-006, 2019-008, 2020-001
Particulate Nitrogen and Carbon
Cruise 2018-040: Prior to use, Whatman 25 mm GF/C filters (~1.2 μm pore size) were placed in aluminum foil packets and baked at 450°C for 4.5 hours and allowed to cool overnight, sealed, and stored in a zip-lock bags in plastic Tupperware containers previously cleaned with a dilute solution of RBS-35 (Thermo Scientific) in deionized water. Filters were not pre-weighed for this cruise. Particulate concentration was determined using the amount of water filtered.
Cruises 2019-001, 2019-006, 2019-008, and 2020-001: Whatman 25 mm GF/F filters (~0.7 μm pore size) were used for all other cruises. Prior to use, GF/F filters were baked at 450°C for 4 hours and allowed to cool in the muffle furnace overnight. Further cooling took place in a desiccator. Once cooled to air temperature, filters were weighed on a Sartorius LE225B balance and then stored in individual PALL plastic 47mm filter holders until use.
All Cruises:
For all cruises, all water bottles and silicone tubing used for sampling were initially cleaned in a dilute Extran solution and thoroughly rinsed with Type 1 deionized water. Water samples were collected from Niskin bottles directly into 330 mL to 1L HDPE bottles, through silicon tubing or, at times, directly from the Niskin. Sample bottles were rinsed three times with aliquots from the Niskin and then filled. Volumes varied depending on availability of bottles. Samples were filtered immediately. People doing the sampling wore either vinyl or nitrile gloves. Sample bottles/tubing were reused through the cruise and well-rinsed with sample water between Niskins/casts.
Pre-combusted filters were placed onto a filtration manifold and samples were filtered under vacuum at 5 mm Hg or less. For total particulate carbon, 0.2 μm filtered seawater was used as a final rinse down the sides of the filtration cups. For particulate organic carbon, acidified seawater (10% HCl) was used as a final rinse to purge off the carbonate.
Cleaned forceps were used to remove filters from the manifold and returned to their original containers. After sampling, the filters were oven dried at 30°C. Filters were then stored at -80°C until returned to the lab where they were dried at 30°C for 24 hours. Samples were cooled in a dessicator. They were then sent to Stanford University for further chemical analysis. Samples that arrived at Stanford were placed into plastic petri dishes.
At Stanford University, filters from all cruises were loaded into a Costech Analytical Technologies Zero Blank carousel attached to a Carlo Erba NA1500 Series 2 elemental analyzer (EA) at the Stanford University Stable Isotope Laboratory Facility. The EA was configured with a 10 ml oxygen loop, a combustion oxidation reactor set at 1080°C, reduction reactor at 650°C, magnesium perchlorate column to remove water, the chromatography column set to 60°C, and the thermal conductivity detector set at 190°C. The UHP grade helium flow rate was 65 ml per minute and the UHP oxygen used to enhance combustion was 20 ml per minute.
All standards were loaded into 5×9 mm tin capsules (Costech Analytical Technologies). An empty 5×9 mm tin was analyzed with each run sequence for blank correction. All GF/C and GF/F filters were loaded into 9×10 mm tin capsules and one pre-combusted GF/C or GF/F filter was loaded into a 9×10 mm tin capsule for blank correction. Each 31-drop run sequence was composed of 2 conditioners, 1 5×9 mm tin blank, 1 9×10 mm filter blank, 2 acetanilide standards, 7 unknown filters, 1 acetanilide standard, 7 unknown filters, 1 acetanilide standard, 7 unknown filters, 2 acetanilide standards.
Though instrument precision is relatively high (± 1 µg N, and ± 2 µg C), overall uncertainty is strongly tied to the sampling procedure, with errors anticipated to range from 10% to 25%.
Dissolved Inorganic Carbon, Total Alkalinity, and pH
Samples were collected following standard protocols (Dickson et al., 2007) into 500 mL borosilicate glass bottles and preserved with 200 μL saturated mercuric chloride for later analysis. Samples were shipped to and analyzed at the Monterey Bay Aquarium Research Institute (MBARI). Three parameters (DIC, TA, and pH) were measured from each 500 mL sample bottle. All samples were run in triplicate, and the results were averaged. DIC and TA instrument performance was monitored by measuring Certified Reference Material (CRM; provided by Andrew Dickson at SIO) approximately hourly.
Dataset Citation
- Cite as: Lam, Phoebe J.; Fassbender, Andrea J.; Johannessen, Sophia (2023). Dissolved and particulate carbon and nitrogen data from seawater collected during CCGS John P. Tully cruises in the northeast Pacific Ocean from Vancouver Island to Station P from 2018 to 2020 (NCEI Accession 0278343). [indicate subset used]. NOAA National Centers for Environmental Information. Dataset. https://www.ncei.noaa.gov/archive/accession/0278343. Accessed [date].
Dataset Identifiers
ISO 19115-2 Metadata
gov.noaa.nodc:0278343
Download Data |
|
Distribution Formats |
|
Ordering Instructions | Contact NCEI for other distribution options and instructions. |
Distributor |
NOAA National Centers for Environmental Information +1-301-713-3277 NCEI.Info@noaa.gov |
Dataset Point of Contact |
NOAA National Centers for Environmental Information ncei.info@noaa.gov |
Time Period | 2018-09-21 to 2020-02-16 |
Spatial Bounding Box Coordinates |
West: -145.001
East: -139.666
South: 49.636
North: 50.613
|
Spatial Coverage Map |
General Documentation |
|
Associated Resources |
|
Publication Dates |
|
Data Presentation Form | Digital table - digital representation of facts or figures systematically displayed, especially in columns |
Dataset Progress Status | Complete - production of the data has been completed Historical archive - data has been stored in an offline storage facility |
Data Update Frequency | As needed |
Purpose | This dataset is available to the public for a wide variety of uses including scientific research and analysis. |
Use Limitations |
|
Dataset Citation |
|
Cited Authors | |
Principal Investigators | |
Contributors | |
Resource Providers | |
Points of Contact | |
Publishers | |
Acknowledgments |
|
Use Constraints |
|
Data License | |
Access Constraints |
|
Fees |
|
Lineage information for: dataset | |
---|---|
Processing Steps |
|
Output Datasets |
|
Acquisition Information (collection) | |
---|---|
Instrument |
|
Platform |
|
Last Modified: 2024-09-16T21:36:20Z
For questions about the information on this page, please email: ncei.info@noaa.gov
For questions about the information on this page, please email: ncei.info@noaa.gov