I09N 2016 Weekly Report 2
From Leticia Barbero and Carmen Rodreguez **(Co-Chief Scientists)
Ahoy land-dwellers!
Week 2 of our I09N cruise seems to have flown by as we have settled into our
routine of 3-4 stations per day. The weather has been fantastic and we have
been
working under calm seas. We can definitely tell that we have entered tropical
waters
now. The temperatures at the sea surface are around 30C (that’s 86 Fahrenheit)
and
we can feel the high humidity in the air. No one is complaining if they get
splashed
with the cool, refreshing water from the deep bottles anymore.
This past week we have sampled what will be our deepest stations of the
cruise,
reaching up to 6122 m depth. That is 3.8 miles deep! The sensors on our Rosie
(nickname for our rosette), however, can only withstand depths of 6000 m, so
we
had to stop her short. I am sure she was wondering why we didn’t lower her to
the
near-bottom, like we normally do.
While on one of these deep stations, the secondary conductimeter sensor of the
CTD
stopped working (not to worry, this is why we have 2 installed). The
conductimeter
provides a continuous profile of salinity, so it is an essential piece of
equipment in
the package. We replaced the faulty conductimeter while in transit to our
following
station, without any waste of ship time. A couple of days later we had to
replace the
primary conductimeter as well - so we are now working with two brand new ones.
At the same time, the oxygen sensor started to show increased scatter.
Normally,
only one oxygen sensor is installed, so it needs to provide a clean profile.
We did
some minor install modifications, tested all our spares, and are now back with
a
reliably functioning oxygen sensor.
We have just sailed past Cocos Islands. These small coral atolls belong to
Australia
and are located southwest of Christmas Island (see picture below).
Unfortunately
we were just a little too far to be able to see the atolls, but that didn’t
stop us from
learning about them. Apparently, two British captains (one Scottish, one
English)
rediscovered them in the 19th century and planned to settle there. One came
with a
harem of 40 women. The second came shortly after with his family for a more
traditional settlement. As you can imagine, these 2 groups didn’t get along,
especially after some women from the harem started deserting to live with the
sailors of the second group. Another interesting fact? Charles Darwin stopped
there
during his journey of discovery aboard the Beagle. Participating in a GO-SHIP
cruise
always brings with it the chance to learn interesting little facts about
remote parts
of our planet!
On Sunday April 3rd, at approximately 16:30 local time, while on station 115,
we
had a loss of communications with the CTD which was then at 3000 m depth and
coming up. We recovered the package and determined that one of the conductor
cables had shorted. The winch cable has three electrical conductor cables
inside that
are used to communicate with the rosette while it is in the water.
Fortunately, only
one conductor is needed, so we switched to an alternate one in the winch and
have
proceeded with sampling, redoing a cast on station 115. There will be no
impacts to
our science plan as a result of the time invested in reterminating the cables
and no
modifications have been made to our station planning.
We have also been deploying ARGO floats at select locations along the way.
ARGO
floats are free drifters that stay “parked” at a predetermined depth (normally
around 1000 m). Every 10 days or so, they descend to 2000 m and profile the
temperature and salinity on the way back to the surface. These profiles, along
with
the surface GPS position, are then sent via satellite to the labs overseeing
the
drifters. There are currently over 3000 ARGO floats providing us with T-S data
from
all the world’s oceans, and around 800 need to be deployed every year in order
to
keep the array active. By the end of this cruise we will have deployed 8 new
floats.
Science never sleeps on this cruise. Next week we will be talking about our
underway measurements, so stay tuned for that!
In the meantime, you can check our cruise blog:
One of our CTD-watch standers, Amanda Fay, is also chronicling her experience
in
her own blog:
Onwards!
Carmen and Leticia, chief scientists I09N