NACP West Coast cruise 2007

The 33-day NACP West Coast Cruise on the R/V Wecoma started on May 11 in Newport, Oregon, and ended on June 14, 2007 in San Diego, California. During the cruise, a total of 111 stations along 13 transect lines orthogonal to the coast were sampled, extending from Queen Charlotte Sound, British Columbia, Canada, in the north, to San Lazaro Bay, Baja California, Mexico, in the south. Water samples collected with a 24-bottle rosette at each CTD station were analyzed for salinity, oxygen, nutrients, dissolved inorganic carbon, total alkalinity, dissolved organic matter, colored dissolved organic matter, particulate organic carbon, biogenic silica, and chlorophyll. Underway measurements of atmospheric pCO2, near-surface seawater pCO2, and bio-optical properties were also made along the cruise track. Chief Scientists were Dr. Richard Feely and Dr. Christopher Sabine.  Key results from this cruise have been published in Feely et al. (2008) and Juranek et al. (2009).

Data Status: Public (CLICK HERE TO DOWNLOAD)
Chief Scientists: Richard Feely and Chris Sabine
Dates 11 May to 14 June 2007
R/V Wecoma
Ports of call: Newport, Oregon to San Diego, California
Stations: 115
Geographic boundaries: 24.92°N to 52.23°N by 112.82°W to 132.82°W

References

Feely, R.A., Sabine, C.L., Hernandez-Ayon, J.M., Ianson, D., Hales, B., 2008. Evidence for upwelling of corrosive "acidified" water onto the continental shelf. Science, 320, 1490-1492. [pdf]

Juranek, L.W., R.A. Feely, W.T. Peterson, S.R. Alin, B. Hales, K. Lee, C.L. Sabine, and J. Peterson (2009): A novel method for determination of aragonite saturation state on the continental shelf of central Oregon using multi-parameter relationships with hydrographic data. Geophys. Res. Lett., 36, L24601, doi: 10.1029/2009GL040778. [pdf]

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