• BGS Hosted Metadata
  •   Search
  •   Map
  •  Sign in

Concentration of atmospheric methane and carbon dioxide and dissolved methane in surface water and water column in Scotia and Weddell Seas during the cruise DY158 in December 2022 and January 2023

This dataset contains atmospheric methane and carbon dioxide concentration data in the Southern Ocean and South Atlantic Ocean, and dissolved methane concentration data from surface and water column seawater samples in the Scotia Sea, Weddell Sea, and South Georgia shelf taken onboard RRS Discovery during DY158 from December 2022 and January 2023. Atmospheric methane and carbon dioxide concentration was measured using a Los Gatos Ultraportable Greenhouse Gas Analyser (UGGA) G2311-f. The concentrations are 2 hour averaged and have been filtered based on wind direction to data corresponding to wind coming from behind the ship to remove sources of pollution from the ship stack. Surface seawater samples were taken either using the uncontaminated seawater system or from the surface sample from a CTD (Conductivity-Depth-Temperature) cast. Water column seawater samples were taken from a CTD with Niskin bottle rosette-casts at various depths spanning from the sea surface to the seafloor. The dissolved methane concentration in each seawater sample is measured using gas chromatography.





Funding source: This work was supported by the Natural Environment Research Council and the ARIES Doctoral Training Partnership (grant no. NE/S007334/1). The fieldwork was supported by the Collaborative Antarctic Science Scheme (CASS).

Simple

Date (Creation)
2024-11-19
Date (Revision)
2024-11-19
Date (Publication)
2024-11-19
Date (released)
2024-11-19
Edition

1.0

Unique resource identifier
https://doi.org/10.5285/b90df3c1-1b55-4579-ba89-e1d62f6f8bab
Codespace

doi

Unique resource identifier
GB/NERC/BAS/PDC/01944
Codespace

https://data.bas.ac.uk/

Unique resource identifier
NE/S007334/1
Codespace

award

Other citation details

Please cite this item as: Workman, E., Delille, B., Squires, F., Jones, A., Fisher, R., France, J., & Linse, K. (2024). Concentration of atmospheric methane and carbon dioxide and dissolved methane in surface water and water column in Scotia and Weddell Seas during the cruise DY158 in December 2022 and January 2023 (Version 1.0) [Data set]. NERC EDS UK Polar Data Centre. https://doi.org/10.5285/b90df3c1-1b55-4579-ba89-e1d62f6f8bab

Credit

No credit.

Status
Completed
Point of contact
Organisation name Individual name Electronic mail address Role
British Antarctic Survey Workman, Evelyn Author
University of Liege Delille, Bruno Author
British Antarctic Survey Squires, Freya Author
British Antarctic Survey Jones, Anna Author
Royal Holloway University of London Fisher, Rebecca Author
Royal Holloway University of London France, James Author
British Antarctic Survey Linse, Katrin Author
NERC EDS UK Polar Data Centre

PDCServiceDesk@bas.ac.uk

Point of contact
Maintenance and update frequency
As needed
Maintenance note
Completed
Global Change Master Directory (GCMD) Science Keywords
  • EARTH SCIENCE > Atmosphere > Atmospheric Chemistry/Carbon and Hydrocarbon Compounds > Methane
  • EARTH SCIENCE > Oceans > Ocean Chemistry > Carbon Dioxide
  • EARTH SCIENCE > Oceans > Ocean Chemistry > Dissolved Gases
Theme
  • Scotia Sea

  • South Georgia

  • Southern Ocean

  • UGGA

  • carbon dioxide

  • methane

Place
  • Scotia Sea Southern Ocean

  • Weddell Sea

  • South Orkney Islands

  • South Georgia Island

  • Atlantic Ocean

GEMET - INSPIRE themes, version 1.0

  • Atmospheric conditions
  • Oceanographic geographical features
Access constraints
Other restrictions
Other constraints
no limitations to public access
Access constraints
Other restrictions
Other constraints
no limitations
Use constraints
License
Other constraints
Open Government Licence v3.0
Use constraints
Other restrictions
Other constraints

This data is governed by the NERC Data Policy: https://www.ukri.org/who-we-are/nerc/our-policies-and-standards/nerc-data-policy/

Use constraints
Other restrictions
Other constraints

This data is governed by the NERC data policy and supplied under Open Government Licence v.3

Use constraints
Other restrictions
Other constraints

No restrictions apply.

Unique resource identifier
url
Codespace

url

Association Type
Cross reference
Unique resource identifier
url
Codespace

url

Association Type
Cross reference
Unique resource identifier
doi
Codespace

doi

Association Type
Cross reference
Spatial representation type
Text, table
Language
English
Character set
UTF8
Topic category
  • Climatology, meteorology, atmosphere
  • Oceans
N
S
E
W
thumbnail




Begin date
2022-12-22
End date
2023-01-29
Supplemental Information

It is recommended that careful attention be paid to the contents of any data, and that the author be contacted with any questions regarding appropriate use. If you find any errors or omissions, please report them to polardatacentre@bas.ac.uk.

Title

European Petroleum Survey Group (EPSG) Geodetic Parameter Registry

Date (Publication)
2008-11-12
Cited responsible party
Organisation name Individual name Electronic mail address Role

European Petroleum Survey Group

EPSGadministrator@iogp.org

Publisher
Unique resource identifier
urn:ogc:def:crs:EPSG::3031
Version

6.18.3

Distributor

Distributor contact
Organisation name Individual name Electronic mail address Role
NERC EDS UK Polar Data Centre

PDCServiceDesk@bas.ac.uk

Distributor
Distributor format
Name Version
text/csv
Units of distribution

bytes

Transfer size
78848
OnLine resource
Protocol Linkage Name

WWW:LINK-1.0-http--link

http://ramadda.data.bas.ac.uk/repository/entry/show?entryid=b90df3c1-1b55-4579-ba89-e1d62f6f8bab

Get Data

Hierarchy level
Dataset
Statement

Methodology:

Atmospheric methane concentrations were continuously measured along the entire DY158 expedition (Montevideo to Mare Harbour) using a Los Gatos Research (Mountain View, CA, USA) Ultra-portable Greenhouse Gas Analyzer (UGGA). The inlet of the UGGA was situated on the meteorological mast at the front of the ship (around 17.6 m asl (above sea level)), to be minimally affected by pollution from the exhaust stack at the back of the ship. A 30-metre long inlet tube with internal diameter of 3/8" (dekabon) connected the mast to the UGGA in the met lab. The UGGA took measurements of atmospheric methane, carbon dioxide and water vapour concentrations every second. A KNF pump (type N816.1.2KN.18) pulled air from the inlet down the tube. The residence time was 10 seconds. The air inlet included a funnel pointing down to minimise rain entering and a water trap (Norgren F07 series 40 um G 1/4, part no.: F07-200-A3TG), which was located just downstream of the inlet, was used to trap the majority of the water droplets entering the inlet. There were 2 in line filters (7 and 2 microns) used in the setup to stop particles entering the pump/UGGA which could cause damage. Dryers (a magnesium perchlorate drying tube and a Nafion dryer) were used initially but were removed after a leak was identified in the Nafion on 05/01/2023. After the removal of the dryers the water vapour measured by the UGGA stayed below 1% which is acceptable for operation.





During cruise DY158 water samples were taken at various locations from a CTD with Niskin bottle rosette-casts and water surface samples were taken more frequently using the underway water system on the ship which has its inlet at 5 m below the sea surface. The CTD rosette contained Seabird SBE 9plus temperature and salinity sensors, AquaTracka III Fluorometer (Chelsea Technologies Group) for chlorophyll a detection and twenty-four 20 L Niskin bottles to take samples of seawater from discrete depths. The salinity measured by the Seabird SBE 9plus sensor was calibrated by taking samples from several Niskin bottles for each CTD cast and analysed using a Autosal salinometer. The underway water system on the ship was also calibrated using the same procedure, with samples being taken approximately every 6 hours. Temperatures measured by the CTD were calibrated using a Deep Ocean Standards Thermometer (Seabird SBE 35 DOST) which was mounted on the CTD frame.





Water samples were stored in 60 ml glass bottles. An airtight Tygon tube of the correct diameter for the 60 ml sample bottles was attached to the spout of the Niskin bottle/underway tap and the sample bottle filled. Bottles were rinsed by letting them overflow for 2-3 seconds, and filled until a meniscus was formed at the top of the bottle. Each sample was then poisoned with 60 uL of saturated mercuric chloride solution (7.7 g/100 ml) to stop biological processes. The bottle is then firmly closed with an isobutyl stopper, an aluminium cap is crimped on top of the stopper with a crimper wrench. The sample is stored at room temperature for the remainder of the cruise. During the transit back to the UK the samples were stored in the +4 degrees C refrigerated storage room on RRS Discovery.





Water samples were analysed from 16 CTD casts. Underway water samples were taken more regularly, again at a range of latitudes and off-shelf and on shelf, usually between CTD casts. Water samples were stored for 7 to 8 months at room temperature until analysis.





Measurements of dissolved CH4 concentration in the water samples was carried out at the Department of Astrophysics, Geophysics and Oceanography at University of Liège, Belgium. Samples were analysed using gas chromatography (GC) (SRI 8610 C gas chromatograph) to measure the concentration of dissolved methane. The method involves creating a 20 ml headspace (using nitrogen) in the 60 ml sample bottle and allowing the wat...(10)

Data collection:

Atmospheric methane and carbon dioxide concentration data were collected using a Los Gatos Ultraportable greenhouse gas analyser (UGGA) installed on RRS Discovery.



A Conductivity-Depth-Temperature (CTD) rosette with Niskin bottles was used to take water samples.



Ship underway water sampling system



A SRI 8610 C gas chromatograph was used to analysis the samples for dissolved methane concentrations.



Python 3 is used to analyse the data and create the datasets.

Data quality:

The UGGA is regularly calibrated by measuring gases of known CO2 and CH4 concentrations. The calibration suite consists of three 5 litre cylinders of compressed ambient air (2 calibration gases and 1 target gas, which are traceable to WMO reference scales for CH4 and CO2). The dataset is filtered based on wind direction in order to minimise contamination from pollution from the ship stack; data corresponding with wind directions between 30 degrees and 330 degrees relative to the ship (0 degrees is wind coming directly from the front of the ship and 180 degrees is wind coming directly from behind the ship) are removed. There is not a lot of variation in the data, so we take 2 hour averages to allow us to see any trend in the dataset.





The absolute error on the dissolved methane concentration measurement in the water samples is 0.4 nM (standard deviation).

Metadata

File identifier
b90df3c1-1b55-4579-ba89-e1d62f6f8bab XML
Metadata language
English
Character set
UTF8
Hierarchy level
Dataset
Hierarchy level name

dataset

Date stamp
2024-11-19
Metadata standard name

ISO 19115 Geographic Information - Metadata

Metadata standard version

ISO 19115:2003(E)

Metadata author
Organisation name Individual name Electronic mail address Role
NERC EDS UK Polar Data Centre

polardatacentre@bas.ac.uk

Point of contact
 
 

Overviews

Spatial extent

thumbnail

Keywords

Scotia Sea South Georgia Southern Ocean UGGA carbon dioxide methane
GEMET - INSPIRE themes, version 1.0

Atmospheric conditions Oceanographic geographical features
Global Change Master Directory (GCMD) Science Keywords

EARTH SCIENCE > Atmosphere > Atmospheric Chemistry/Carbon and Hydrocarbon Compounds > Methane EARTH SCIENCE > Oceans > Ocean Chemistry > Carbon Dioxide EARTH SCIENCE > Oceans > Ocean Chemistry > Dissolved Gases


Provided by

logo

Share on social sites

Access to the catalogue
Read here the full details and access to the data.




  •   About
  •   Github
  •