Water level measurements (bottom hydrostatic pressure) data from the Gulf of Alaska from 02 April 1983 to 25 October 1989 (NCEI Accession 0000339)
공공데이터포털
Depth, pressure, and water temperature data were collected at fixed platforms in the Gulf of Mexico from April 2, 1983 to October 25, 1989. Data were submitted University of Alaska - Fairbanks; Institute of Marine Science and California Dept of Fish and Game. Data were collected using water level recorder.
HYDROSTATIC PRESSURE, WATER TEMPERATURE and INSTRUMENT - DEPTH, and other data from FIXED PLATFORM from 1983-04-09 to 1983-07-01 (NCEI Accession 8400013)
공공데이터포털
This dataset contains water temperature and pressure recorded by Aanderaa water level meter from R/V SWAN and moorings as part of the Santa Barbara Channel Circulation Model and Field Study from 4/9/83 to 7/13/83 by Science Applications, Inc. Data has been processed by NODC to the NODC standard Pressure Gauge (F017) format. The F017 format contains time series measurements of seawater pressure from anchored or bottom-mounted sensors. Measurements of variations at depth of seawater pressure provide information on tidal and storm flows, ocean circulation, and other phenomena that cause changes in sea surface elevation or slope and that can be detected from their pressure signature. Position, bottom depth, and gauge depth are reported for each station. The data record comprises values of total pressure at specified date and time. Data values may be subject to averaging or filtering and are typically reported at time intervals of 10-15 minutes. Seawater temperature may also be reported. Comments may be reported in a text record.
Hydrostatic pressure below Ross Ice Shelf from 2015-01-16 to 2015-03-16 (NCEI Accession 0209188)
공공데이터포털
A pressure sensor was suspended by a steel cable through a borehole in the Ross Ice Shelf into the ocean cavity. The sensor hung 761 m from the ice surface, roughly mid-depth in the 10-m-thick ocean cavity, within a water mass of almost constant potential density when it was sampled in January 2015. The site is located within a grounding zone, or flexure zone, wherein the ice shelf elevation does not respond hydrostatically to variations in ocean pressure.
BAROMETRIC PRESSURE and Other Data from CAPE HENLOPEN and Other Platforms From NW Atlantic (limit-40 W) and Others from 1992-08-13 to 1993-06-05 (NCEI Accession 9300144)
공공데이터포털
The water depth and temperature data were collected in Coastal Waters of Gulf of Mexico, NW Atlantic (limit-40 W) as part of Louisiana-Texas (LATEX part C) Gulf of Mexico Eddy Circulation Study from CAPE HENLOPEN, and DRIFTING PLATFORM between August 13, 1992 and June 5, 1993. The originator's CTD and ARGOS tracked drifting buoy data containing 2,821 records were submitted by Dr. Thomas Berger, Science Applications, Inc. Raleigh NC. The study was supported by grant no MMS 14-35-0001-30633. LATEX is a three-part, $16.2 million federal initiative funded by the U.S. Minerals Management Service (MMS) of the Department of the Interior. The study was conducted to aid MMS in reducing risks associated with oil and gas operations on the continental shelf along the Texas and Louisiana coasts from the mouth of the Mississippi River to the Rio Grande. Begun in September 1991, it was the largest physical oceanography program ever undertaken in the Gulf. The program consists of three major parts: LATEX A, B, and C, conducted by the Texas A&M University System (TAMUS), Louisiana State University (LSU), and Science Applications International Corp. (SAIC), respectively. LATEX C was carried out by researchers at SAIC and the University of Colorado. Loop Current eddies, slope eddies, and squirts and jets within the Gulf of Mexico were located and tracked by air-deployed temperature profiling instruments and drifting buoys. Using these data, scientists assessed the impact of these Gulf-wide, circulation features on shelf circulation and identified the processes that interact with the shelf. The data is currently available in F022-CTD-Hi-Resolution and F156-Drifting-Buoy file formats of NODC.
AIR PRESSURE and Other Data from YELCHO From Drake Passage from 1976-02-27 to 1976-04-08 (NCEI Accession 7700058)
공공데이터포털
Surface Data was collected aboard the YELCHO. Data collected was part of the First Dynamic Response And Kinematic Experiment (FDRAKE) conducted in 1976, along the Drake passage. Data consists of surface temperature, salinity, and silicate. The data was submitted by the Department of Oceanography, Texas A&M University College Station, Texas. Data are in form of computer printout (13 pages), there are no tapes. The experiment was conducted in two separate legs. The first leg was conducted between February 27-March 13, 1976 and the second leg of the experiment was conducted between March 22-April 8, 1976.