B54B:
From WOCE through CLIVAR to GO-SHIP: Results from Global Repeat Hydrographic Surveys II Posters
B54B:
From WOCE through CLIVAR to GO-SHIP: Results from Global Repeat Hydrographic Surveys II Posters
From WOCE through CLIVAR to GO-SHIP: Results from Global Repeat Hydrographic Surveys II Posters
Session ID#: 9251
Session Description:
For the past 25 years, countries from around the world have participated in obtaining multiple, high-quality, repeat, global, hydrographic transects. The 1990’s World Ocean Circulation Experiment (WOCE) included some 30 countries. It focused on improving our understanding of ocean circulation, heat and carbon transport through the acquisition of a one-time global survey. The JGOFS program that sought to investigate mechanisms controlling concentrations of inorganic carbon and associated biogeochemical parameters and fluxes augmented WOCE. Ten years later CLIVAR began repeating transects focused on trends in ocean climate. The international Global Ocean Ship-based Hydrographic Investigations Program (GO-SHIP) carries this task forward by identifying natural variability and anthropogenic changes since WOCE.
In this session, we invite contributions using and interpreting these physical, chemical and biological observations. The session will highlight research that presents and interprets changes that have occurred over the last 25 years using the multitude of observed properties. A full range of contributions is solicited from surface to bottom waters based on rosette, underway or float observations. All avenues of investigation are welcome, including those using related data, as well as modeling and remote sensing studies performing comparisons and/or assimilations.
Primary Chair: Brendan R Carter, University of Washington, JISAO, Seattle, WA, United States
Chairs: Alison M Macdonald, Woods Hole Oceanographic Institution, Woods Hole, MA, United States, Richard A Feely, NOAA PMEL, Seattle, WA, United States, Toste S Tanhua, GEOMAR Helmholtz Centre for Ocean Research Kiel, Kiel, Germany and Brendan R Carter, NOAA Pacific Marine Environmental Laboratory, Seattle, WA, United States
Moderators: Brendan R Carter1, Richard A Feely1 and Toste S Tanhua2, (1)NOAA Pacific Marine Environmental Laboratory, Seattle, WA, United States(2)GEOMAR Helmholtz Centre for Ocean Research Kiel, Kiel, Germany
Student Paper Review Liaison: Brendan R Carter, NOAA Pacific Marine Environmental Laboratory, Seattle, WA, United States
Index Terms:
1635 Oceans [GLOBAL CHANGE]
4271 Physical and chemical properties of seawater [OCEANOGRAPHY: GENERAL]
4273 Physical and biogeochemical interactions [OCEANOGRAPHY: GENERAL]
4513 Decadal ocean variability [OCEANOGRAPHY: PHYSICAL]
Co-Sponsor(s):
- CT - Chemical Tracers, DOM and Trace Metals
- OD - Ocean Observing and Data Management
- PC - Past, Present and Future Climate
- PO - Physical Oceanography/Ocean Circulation
Abstracts Submitted to this Session:
The Arctic Ocean Then and Now: Preliminary Hydrographic Data from the 2015 US GEOTRACES Arctic Expedition (60139)
Assessing the Internal Consistency of the Marine Carbon Dioxide System at High Latitudes: The Labrador Sea AR7W Line Study Case (87620)
Meridional Overturning Transports at 30°S in the Indian and Pacific Oceans in 2002-2003 and 2009 (89733)
Temporal and Spatial Variability of Biogeochemical Processes in the Southeast Pacific Oxygen Minimum Zone and Surrounding Regions (91445)
Re-Emergence of Excess Bomb Radiocarbon in Upwelling Waters with High-Latitude Origins (93329)
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