RRS James Cook Cruise JR16005, 17 Mar - 08 May 2017. The Dynamics of the Orkney Passage Outflow (DynOPO)
RRS James Cook Cruise JR16005, 17 Mar - 08 May 2017. The Dynamics of the Orkney Passage Outflow (DynOPO)
The RRS James Clark Ross JR16005 expedition (Punta Arenas, 17 March 2017 – Montevideo, 8 May 2017) was the primary fieldwork element of the Dynamics of the Orkney Passage Outflow (DynOPO) project. The cruise had two main goals: (1) to conduct measurements of the hydrographic properties, velocity and turbulent processes of the Antarctic Bottom Water outflow along its pathway through the Orkney Passage region; and (2) to turn around a set of long-term moorings deployed in the area by BAS and LDEO scientists, including recovery of additional instruments on some of the moorings deployed by DynOPO investigators 2 years previously. Operations were generally successful. With regard to goal (1), a total of 120 hydrographic and / or microstructure stations were occupied across the study region; 3 focussed surveys of two major sills in the area were performed with the autonomous underwater vehicle Autosub Long Range; and an array of moored sensors measuring turbulent processes at high spatio-temporal resolution was deployed for the duration of the cruise, with partial instrument failures. In respect of goal (2), all moorings were successfully recovered and re-deployed, and the return of additional DynOPO instruments was close to 100%.
National Oceanography Centre
Naveira Garabato, A.
97c0e923-f076-4b38-b89b-938e11cea7a6
et al,
867c20e9-3220-49c5-b89e-aac82d31ba5e
December 2017
Naveira Garabato, A.
97c0e923-f076-4b38-b89b-938e11cea7a6
et al,
867c20e9-3220-49c5-b89e-aac82d31ba5e
Naveira Garabato, A. and et al,
(2017)
RRS James Cook Cruise JR16005, 17 Mar - 08 May 2017. The Dynamics of the Orkney Passage Outflow (DynOPO)
(National Oceanography Centre Cruise Report, 47)
Southampton, GB.
National Oceanography Centre
222pp.
Record type:
Monograph
(Project Report)
Abstract
The RRS James Clark Ross JR16005 expedition (Punta Arenas, 17 March 2017 – Montevideo, 8 May 2017) was the primary fieldwork element of the Dynamics of the Orkney Passage Outflow (DynOPO) project. The cruise had two main goals: (1) to conduct measurements of the hydrographic properties, velocity and turbulent processes of the Antarctic Bottom Water outflow along its pathway through the Orkney Passage region; and (2) to turn around a set of long-term moorings deployed in the area by BAS and LDEO scientists, including recovery of additional instruments on some of the moorings deployed by DynOPO investigators 2 years previously. Operations were generally successful. With regard to goal (1), a total of 120 hydrographic and / or microstructure stations were occupied across the study region; 3 focussed surveys of two major sills in the area were performed with the autonomous underwater vehicle Autosub Long Range; and an array of moored sensors measuring turbulent processes at high spatio-temporal resolution was deployed for the duration of the cruise, with partial instrument failures. In respect of goal (2), all moorings were successfully recovered and re-deployed, and the return of additional DynOPO instruments was close to 100%.
More information
Published date: December 2017
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Local EPrints ID: 417045
URI: http://eprints.soton.ac.uk/id/eprint/417045
PURE UUID: 2eaa6a3b-a630-47e4-8b26-29da6962d9c4
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Date deposited: 18 Jan 2018 17:30
Last modified: 16 Mar 2024 03:48
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