Title :
The Australian Integrated Marine Observing System Southern Ocean Time Series facility
Author :
Trull, T.W. ; Schulz, E. ; Bray, S.G. ; Pender, L. ; McLaughlan, D. ; Tilbrook, B. ; Rosenberg, M. ; Lynch, T.
Author_Institution :
Antarctic Climate & Ecosyst. Cooperative Res. Centre, Univ. of Tasmania, Hobart, TAS, Australia
Abstract :
The CSIRO, Bureau of Meteorology, University of Tasmania, and Antarctic Climate and Ecosystems CRC operate the Integrated Marine Observing System (IMOS) Southern Ocean Time Series (SOTS) facility with funding from the National Collaborative Research Infrastructure Strategy (NCRIS)- a set of moorings designed to quantify physical, chemical, and biological processes important to the transfer of heat, moisture, momentum, oxygen and carbon dioxide between the atmosphere and ocean. There are 3 mooring platforms at the SOTS site near 140°E, 47°S in ~4500 m water depth, in the Subantarctic Zone (SAZ) ~36 hours by ship southwest of Tasmania: i) the Southern Ocean Flux Station (SOFS) - a large surface tower buoy that focuses on meteorological measurements, ii) the Pulse surface mixed layer mooring focusing on biological nutrient and carbon transformations using sensors and an automated water sampler, and iii) the deep SAZ sediment trap mooring (below 1000 m depth) that quantifies sinking carbon fluxes to the ocean interior and returns particle samples for a broad range of biogeochemical studies. Additional applications include evaluation of wave models, calibration of isotopic proxies for past ocean conditions, and quantification of impacts of ocean acidification on foraminiferal zooplankton.
Keywords :
atmospheric boundary layer; atmospheric composition; atmospheric humidity; atmospheric temperature; microorganisms; ocean chemistry; ocean temperature; oceanographic equipment; oceanographic regions; oceanographic techniques; Antarctic Climate and Ecosystems CRC; Australian IMOS SOTS; Bureau of Meteorology; CSIRO; Integrated Marine Observing System; NCRIS; National Collaborative Research Infrastructure Strategy; SOFS; Southern Ocean Flux Station; Southern Ocean Time Series facility; University of Tasmania; atmosphere-ocean carbon dioxide transfer; atmosphere-ocean heat transfer; atmosphere-ocean moisture transfer; atmosphere-ocean momentum transfer; atmosphere-ocean oxygen transfer; biogeochemical studies; deep SAZ sediment trap mooring; foraminiferal zooplankton; ocean acidification; pulse surface mixed layer mooring; subantarctic zone; surface tower buoy; Instruments; Meteorology; Ocean temperature; Sea measurements; Sea surface; Surface waves;
Conference_Titel :
OCEANS 2010 IEEE - Sydney
Conference_Location :
Sydney, NSW
Print_ISBN :
978-1-4244-5221-7
Electronic_ISBN :
978-1-4244-5222-4
DOI :
10.1109/OCEANSSYD.2010.5603514