A 20-year collection of sub-surface salinity and temperature observations for the Australian shelf seas

Roger Proctor1, Sebastien Mancini2, Xavier Hoenner3, Katherine Tattersall3, Benedicte Pasquer3, Guillaume Galibert3 and Tim Moltmann2, (1)University of Tasmania, Integrated Marine Observing System, Hobart, TAS, Australia, (2)University of Tasmania, Integrated Marine Observing System, Hobart, Australia, (3)University of Tasmania, Hobart, Australia
Abstract:
Salinity and temperature measurements from different sources have been assembled into a common data structure in a relational database. Quality Control flags have been mapped to a common scheme and associated to each measurement. For datasets like gliders, moorings or ship underway which are sampled at high temporal resolution (e.g. data every second) a binning and sub-sampling approach has been applied to some datasets in order to reduce the number of measurements to hourly sampling. After averaging approximately 25 Million measurements are available in this dataset collection. A national shelf and coastal data atlas has been created using all the temperature and salinity measurements that pass various quality control checks. These observations have been binned spatially on a horizontal grid of ¼ degree with standard vertical levels (every 10 meters from the surface to 500m depth) and temporally on a monthly time range over the period January 1995 to December 2014. The number of observations in each bin has been determined and additional statistics, the mean, the standard deviation, minimum and maximum values, have been calculated, enabling a degree of uncertainty to be associated with any measurement. The data atlas is available as a Web Feature Service.