Scientific sampling event log from the US GEOTRACES GP17-OCE cruise on R/V Roger Revelle (RR2214) from December 2022 to January 2023

Website: https://www.bco-dmo.org/dataset/927550
Data Type: Cruise Results
Version: 1
Version Date: 2024-09-30

Project
» US GEOTRACES GP17 Section: South Pacific and Southern Ocean (GP17-OCE) (GP17-OCE)

Program
» U.S. GEOTRACES (U.S. GEOTRACES)
ContributorsAffiliationRole
Twining, BenjaminBigelow Laboratory for Ocean SciencesPrincipal Investigator
Cutter, Gregory A.Old Dominion University (ODU)Co-Principal Investigator
Fitzsimmons, Jessica N.Texas A&M University (TAMU)Co-Principal Investigator
Rauch, ShannonWoods Hole Oceanographic Institution (WHOI BCO-DMO)BCO-DMO Data Manager

Abstract
This dataset is the scientific sampling event log from the US GEOTRACES GP17-OCE cruise on R/V Roger Revelle (RR2214). The expedition departed Papeete, Tahiti (French Polynesia) on December 1st, 2022 and arrived in Punta Arenas, Chile on January 25th, 2023. The cruise took place in the South Pacific and Southern Oceans aboard the R/V Roger Revelle with a team of 34 scientists led by Ben Twining (Chief Scientist), Jessica Fitzsimmons, and Greg Cutter (Co-Chief Scientists). GP17 was planned as a two-leg expedition, with its first leg (GP17-OCE) as a southward extension of the 2018 GP15 Alaska-Tahiti expedition and a second leg (GP17-ANT; December 2023-January 2024) into coastal and shelf waters of Antarctica's Amundsen Sea.


Coverage

Location: South Pacific and Southern Ocean
Spatial Extent: N:-17.536523 E:-73.514377 S:-67.009839 W:-152.000291
Temporal Extent: 2022-11-28 - 2023-01-24

Methods & Sampling

The event log was recorded during the cruise using the R2R ELOG system (https://www.rvdata.us/about/event-log).


BCO-DMO Processing Description

- Imported the BCO-DMO modified file (originally "R2R_ELOG_rr2214_FINAL_EVENTLOG_20230126_135207_cleaned for BCODMO.xlsx") into the BCO-DMO system.
- Flagged "NaN" as a missing data identifier (missing data are empty/blank in the final CSV file.)
- Replaced "rr2214" with "RR2214" in the "Cruise" column.
- Cleaned up "Transect" column by moving information to the "Comment" column. For rows where a station number was entered in "Transect", moved that station number to the "Station" column.
- In "Station" column: replaced "Station 3" with "3", replaced "STN14" with "14", and replaced "test station 1" with "Test 1".
- Renamed fields to comply with BCO-DMO naming conventions.
- Replaced year of "2032" with "2023" in the "DateTimeUTC" column.
- Replaced "4191 m" in Seafloor column with "4191".
- Converted both date/time columns to ISO 8601 (UTC) format.
- Saved the final file as "927550_v1_gp17-oce_event_log.csv".


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Data Files

File
927550_v1_gp17-oce_event_log.csv
(Comma Separated Values (.csv), 123.46 KB)
MD5:8341620458d1f734d8e808e539972f88
Primary data file for dataset ID 927550, version 1

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Parameters

ParameterDescriptionUnits
Cruise

Cruise name/ID

unitless
Event

Event number

unitless
Instrument

Instrument:
36pl Rosette = ODF CTD Rosette.
Aerosol Sampler = High-volume aerosol sampler.
Argo = Deployment of Argo float.
Be 7 = Collection of large volumes (ca. 700L) of water from multiple depths in the upper 200m using a deck-mounted centrifugal pump attached to tubing.
bio-Argo = Bio Argo float.
GeoFish = A towed near surface (<2 m) sampling system for collection of trace metal clean seawater.
Geotraces C = GEOTRACES CTD Rosette.
McLane = Dual-flow McLane Research in-situ pumps (WTS-LV).
NEMO = Deployment of a PROVOR NEMO float.
Other = Deep Argo float deployments; see the Comment column.
Ship = Used for test event.
Surf Ra Pump = Hand-deployed surface pump to collected ca. 1500L of surface water for measurement of Radium isotopes.
Underway = Used to mark the beginning and end of sampling of surface water via the ship's through-hull clean sampling system.

unitless
Action

Description of the event/action, e.g. deploy, recover, start, end, etc.

unitless
Transect

Transect number or descripton; primarily used for Aerosol events

unitless
Station

Station number. Station numbers starting with "C" indicate the 3 stations sampled for a Chilean collaborator after the final official station. The C stands for "coastal".

unitless
Cast

Cast number

unitless
Latitude

Latitude of event; negative values = South

decimal degrees
Longitude

Longitude of event; negative values = West

decimal degrees
sample_depth_min

Minimum sample depth

meters (m)
sample_depth_max

Maximum sample depth

meters (m)
GEOTRACES_ID_Num_Range

Range of GEOTRACES sample ID numbers applicable to the event

unitless
Seafloor

Bottom depth

meters (m)
Author

Person recording the event in the event log

unitless
Comment

Comments/notes about the event

unitless
DateTimeUTC

Date and time (UTC) of the event in format YYYYmmdd.HHMM

unitless
ISO_DateTime_UTC

Date and time (UTC) of the event in ISO 8601 format

unitless
GPS_Time

Date and time (UTC) according to the GPS in ISO 8601 format

unitless
Revisions

History of revisions to the event made during the cruise

unitless

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Deployments

RR2214

Website
Platform
R/V Roger Revelle
Report
Start Date
2022-12-01
End Date
2023-01-25
Description
The U.S. GEOTRACES GP17-OCE expedition departed Papeete, Tahiti (French Polynesia) on December 1st, 2022 and arrived in Punta Arenas, Chile on January 25th, 2023. The cruise took place in the South Pacific and Southern Oceans aboard the R/V Roger Revelle with a team of 34 scientists led by Ben Twining (Chief Scientist), Jessica Fitzsimmons, and Greg Cutter (Co-Chief Scientists). GP17 was planned as a two-leg expedition, with its first leg (GP17-OCE) as a southward extension of the 2018 GP15 Alaska-Tahiti expedition and a second leg (GP17-ANT; December 2023-January 2024) into coastal and shelf waters of Antarctica's Amundsen Sea. The GP17-OCE section encompassed three major transects: (1) a southbound pseudo-meridional section (~152-135 degrees West) from 20 degrees South to 67 degrees South; (2) an eastbound zonal transect from 135 degrees West to 100 degrees West; (3) and a northbound section returning to Chile (100-75 degrees West). Additional cruise information is available from the following sources: R2R: https://www.rvdata.us/search/cruise/RR2214 CCHDO: https://cchdo.ucsd.edu/cruise/33RR20221201 More information can also be found at: https://usgeotraces.ldeo.columbia.edu/content/gp17-oce


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Project Information

US GEOTRACES GP17 Section: South Pacific and Southern Ocean (GP17-OCE) (GP17-OCE)


Coverage: Papeete, Tahiti to Punta Arenas, Chile


The U.S. GEOTRACES GP17-OCE expedition departed Papeete, Tahiti (French Polynesia) on December 1st, 2022 and arrived in Punta Arenas, Chile on January 25th, 2023. The cruise took place in the South Pacific and Southern Oceans aboard the R/V Roger Revelle (cruise ID RR2214) with a team of 34 scientists lead by Ben Twining (Chief Scientist), Jessica Fitzsimmons and Greg Cutter (Co-Chief Scientists). GP17 was planned as a two-leg expedition, with its first leg (GP17-OCE) as a southward extension of the 2018 GP15 Alaska-Tahiti expedition and a second leg (GP17-ANT; December 2023-January 2024) into coastal and shelf waters of Antarctica's Amundsen Sea.

The South Pacific and Southern Oceans sampled by GP17-OCE play critical roles in global water mass circulation and associated global transfer of heat, carbon, and nutrients. Specific oceanographic regions of interest for GP17-OCE included: the most oligotrophic gyre in the global ocean, the Antarctic Circumpolar Current (ACC) frontal region, the previously unexplored Pacific- Antarctic Ridge, the Pacific Deep Water (PDW) flow along the continental slope of South America, and the continental margin inputs potentially emanating from South America.

Further information is available on the US GEOTRACES website and in the cruise report (PDF).

NSF Project Title: Collaborative Research: Management and Implementation of US GEOTRACES GP17 Section: South Pacific and Southern Ocean (GP17-OCE)

NSF Award Abstract:
This award will support the management and implementation of a research expedition from Tahiti to Chile that will enable sampling for a broad suite of trace elements and isotopes (TEI) across oceanographic regions of importance to global nutrient and carbon cycling as part of the U.S. GEOTRACES program. GEOTRACES is a global effort in the field of Chemical Oceanography, the goal of which is to understand the distributions of trace elements and their isotopes in the ocean. Determining the distributions of these elements and isotopes will increase understanding of processes that shape their distributions, such as ocean currents and material fluxes, and also the processes that depend on these elements, such as the growth of phytoplankton and the support of ocean ecosystems. The proposed cruise will cross the South Pacific Gyre, the Antarctic Circumpolar Current, iron-limited Antarctic waters, and the Chilean margin. In combination with a proposed companion GEOTRACES expedition on a research icebreaker (GP17-ANT) that will be joined by two overlapping stations, the team of investigators will create an ocean section from the ocean's most nutrient-poor waters to its highly-productive Antarctic polar region - a region that plays an outsized role in modulating the global carbon cycle. The expedition will support and provide management infrastructure for additional participating science projects focused on measuring specific external fluxes and internal cycling of TEIs along this section.

The South Pacific Gyre and Pacific sector of the Southern Ocean play critical roles in global water mass circulation and associated global transfer of heat, carbon, and nutrients, but they are chronically understudied for TEIs due to their remote locale. These are regions of strong, dynamic fronts where sub-surface water masses upwell and subduct, and biological and chemical processes in these zones determine nutrient stoichiometries and tracer concentrations in waters exported to lower latitudes. The Pacific sector represents an end member of extremely low external TEI surface fluxes and thus an important region to constrain inputs from the rapidly-changing Antarctic continent. Compared to other ocean basins, TEI cycling in these regions is thought to be dominated by internal cycling processes such as biological uptake, regeneration, and scavenging, and these are poorly represented in global ocean models. The cruise will enable funded investigators to address research questions such as: 1) what are relative rates of external TEI fluxes to this region, including dust, sediment, hydrothermal, and cryospheric fluxes? 2) What are the (micro) nutrient regimes that support productivity, and what impacts do biomass accumulation, export, and regeneration have on TEI cycling and stoichiometries of exported material? 3) What are TEI and nutrient stoichiometries of subducting water masses, and how do scavenging and regeneration impact these during transport northward? This management project has several objectives: 1) plan and coordinate a 55-day research cruise in 2021-2022; 2) use both conventional and trace-metal 'clean' sampling systems to obtain TEI samples, as well as facilitate sampling for atmospheric aerosols and large volume particles and radionuclides; 3) acquire hydrographic data and samples for salinity, dissolved oxygen, algal pigments, and macro-nutrients; and deliver these data to relevant repositories; 4) ensure that proper QA/QC protocols, as well as GEOTRACES intercalibration protocols, are followed and reported; 5) prepare the final cruise report to be posted with data; 6) coordinate between all funded cruise investigators, as well as with leaders of proposed GP17-ANT cruise; and 7) conduct broader impact efforts that will engage the public in oceanographic research using immersive technology. The motivations for and at-sea challenges of this work will be communicated to the general public through creation of immersive 360/Virtual Reality experiences, via a collaboration with the Texas A&M University Visualization LIVE Lab. Through Virtual Reality, users will experience firsthand what life and TEI data collection at sea entail. Virtual reality/digital games and 360° experiences will be distributed through GEOTRACES outreach websites, through PI engagement with local schools, libraries, STEM summer camps, and adult service organizations, and through a collaboration with the National Academy of Sciences.



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Program Information

U.S. GEOTRACES (U.S. GEOTRACES)


Coverage: Global


GEOTRACES is a SCOR sponsored program; and funding for program infrastructure development is provided by the U.S. National Science Foundation.

GEOTRACES gained momentum following a special symposium, S02: Biogeochemical cycling of trace elements and isotopes in the ocean and applications to constrain contemporary marine processes (GEOSECS II), at a 2003 Goldschmidt meeting convened in Japan. The GEOSECS II acronym referred to the Geochemical Ocean Section Studies To determine full water column distributions of selected trace elements and isotopes, including their concentration, chemical speciation, and physical form, along a sufficient number of sections in each ocean basin to establish the principal relationships between these distributions and with more traditional hydrographic parameters;

* To evaluate the sources, sinks, and internal cycling of these species and thereby characterize more completely the physical, chemical and biological processes regulating their distributions, and the sensitivity of these processes to global change; and

* To understand the processes that control the concentrations of geochemical species used for proxies of the past environment, both in the water column and in the substrates that reflect the water column.

GEOTRACES will be global in scope, consisting of ocean sections complemented by regional process studies. Sections and process studies will combine fieldwork, laboratory experiments and modelling. Beyond realizing the scientific objectives identified above, a natural outcome of this work will be to build a community of marine scientists who understand the processes regulating trace element cycles sufficiently well to exploit this knowledge reliably in future interdisciplinary studies.

Expand "Projects" below for information about and data resulting from individual US GEOTRACES research projects.



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Funding

Funding SourceAward
NSF Division of Ocean Sciences (NSF OCE)
NSF Division of Ocean Sciences (NSF OCE)
NSF Division of Ocean Sciences (NSF OCE)

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