The EMSO-ERIC Consortium: 12 Fixed Nodes around Europe Provide Coordinated Continuous Access to Deep Sea Environments.

Mairi Best, Consultant on Ocean Observing, Canada, Paolo Favali, EMSO ERIC, CMO, Roma, Italy, Laura Beranzoli, Ist Naz Geofisica Vulcanologia, Roma, Italy, M.Namik Cagatay, Istanbul Technical University, Turkey, Mathilde Cannat, CNRS and Institut de Physique du Globe de Paris, Paris, France, Juanjo Danobeitia, EMSO ERIC, CMO, Rome, Italy, Henko de Stigter, Royal Netherlands Institute for Sea Research, Texel, Netherlands, Mick Gillooly, Marine Institute, Galway, Ireland, Per O J Hall, University of Gothenburg, Department of Marine Sciences, Gothenburg, Sweden, Vasilios Lykousis, Hellenic Centre for Marine Research, ATHEENS, Greece, Juergen Mienert, Universitetet i Tromsø, Norway, Jorge Miguel A Miranda, Instituto Português do Mar e da Atmosfera, Lisboa, Portugal, Vlad Radulescu, National Institute for Marine Geology and Geoecology - GeoEcoMar, Bucharest, Romania, Henry Ruhl, National Oceanography Centre, Southampton, United Kingdom, Hans Christoph Waldmann, MARUM - University of Bremen, Bremen, Germany and all the EMSO Consortium Team
Abstract:
EMSO (European Multidisciplinary Seafloor and water-column Observatory) is forging ahead through the next challenge in Earth-Ocean Science: How to co-ordinate ocean data acquisition, analysis and response across provincial, national, regional, and global scales. EMSO provides power, communications, sensors, and data infrastructure for continuous, high resolution, (near)-real-time, interactive ocean observations across a truly multi- and interdisciplinary range of research areas including biology, geology, chemistry, physics, engineering, and computer science; from polar to tropical environments, down to the abyss. 12 deep sea and 4 shallow nodes span from Arctic through the Atlantic and Mediterranean, to the Black Sea. The EMSO Preparatory Phase (FP7) project led to the Interim phase (involving 13 countries) of forming the legal entity: the EMSO European Research Infrastructure Consortium (EMSO-ERIC). The open user community is through ESONET-Vi (European Seafloor Observatory NETwork - The Vision), following on the extensive scientific community planning contributions of the ESONET-NoE (FP6) project. The further progress made through the FixO3 project (FP7) will also benefit the development of this shared infrastructure. Coordination among nodes is being strengthened through the EMSOdev project (H2020) which will produce the EMSO Generic Instrument Module (EGIM) - standardised observations of temperature, pressure, salinity, dissolved oxygen, turbidity, chlorophyll fluorescence, currents, passive acoustics, pH, pCO2, and nutrients. EMSO not only brings together countries and disciplines, but allows the pooling of resources and coordination to assemble harmonised data into a comprehensive regional ocean picture which it will then make available to researchers and stakeholders worldwide on an open and interoperable access basis.