Scotia Sea Antarctica
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These are light level and activity data collected from BAS geolocators that were deployed on 4 Leopard Seals hauled out on Bird Island, South Georgia. Tags were deployed between May 2003 and June 2013. One seal Y5282(B4942) was tracked during two non-consecutive years using two different identification flipper tags. There are three data types for each seal a) the unprocessed light sensor data b) the unprocessed activity (wet/dry) data and c) The estimated positions estimated using the BAStag and SGAT packages in R. All files are in the CSV format and each folder has a readme.txt file describing the data structure of the files within. The data are reported in detail in Staniland et al. 2018 'Long Term Movements and Activity Patterns of an Antarctic Marine Apex Predator: The Leopard Seal' PLOSone
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We present two new gridded bathymetric compilations of the Orkney Passage, Scotia Sea here defined by the following bounding boxes: 39.1 to 39.6 W, 60.55 to 60.7 S and 41.7 to 42.6 W, 60.45 to 60.8 S. These bathymetry grids were compiled from a variety of multibeam swath bathymetry data acquired during 12 different cruises (see lineage). The data is available as grids of 50 m resolution in a GMT-compatible (2-D) NetCDF format using geographic coordinates on the WGS84 datum. This grid was compiled in support of the ongoing monitoring efforts in and around Orkney Passage as part of the Ocean Regulation of Climate by Heat and Carbon Sequestration and Transports (ORCHESTRA) programme and preceding BAS NC projects, and the Dynamics of the Orkney Passage Outflow (DynOPO) project. Funding was provided by the NERC grants NE/K012843/1 and NE/N018095/1 as well as national capability
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Samples of surface seawater were collected around giant icebergs A-76A (on cruise DY158) and A-23A (on cruise SD033) via the underway uncontaminated seawater systems on the RRS Discovery and RRS Sir David Attenborough respectively. Samples were collected with the motivation of identifying the biogeochemical impact of giant iceberg passage on the surrounding surface ocean. Data was collected via sensors of the uncontaminated seawater system for temperature, salinity, and chlorophyll-a concentration. Samples were taken for lab analysis upon return to the UK for dissolved macronutrients (nitrate, nitrite, phosphate, silicic acid), oxygen isotopes, and dissolved silicon isotopes. Funding has been provided by National Environment Research Council via: - C-CLEAR Doctoral Training Partnership (NE/S007164/1) - BIOPOLE (NE/W004933) - SiCLING (NE/X014819)
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We present a new bathymetric compilation around the South Orkney Islands here defined by the following bounding box: 47 to 37 W, 63 to 59 S. This bathymetry grid was compiled from a variety of multibeam swath bathymetry data acquired during 46 different cruises (see lineage). The data is available as a grid of approximately 100 m resolution in a GMT-compatible (2-D) NetCDF format using geographic coordinates on the WGS84 datum. Three versions of the grid are available: the first one shows only swath bathymetry data while the second and third have been merged with the global compilations from the General Bathymetric Chart of the Oceans (GEBCO), GEBCO_2014 (version 20150318) and GEBCO_2019, respectively. Quick views are also available in the corresponding folder. Funding was provided by the NERC grants NE/K012843/1 and NE/N018095/1 as well as national capability
NERC Data Catalogue Service