As part of the KROP - Kongsfjorden Rijpfjorden Observatory Programme UiT The Arctic University of Norway and The Scottish Association for Marine Science maintain a marine obervatory in the high-Arctic location Rijpfjorden, Svalbard, since 2006. The observatory consists of an array of CTDs, temperature loggers, ADCPs and a sediment trap, in addition to various other instruments or installations that change from year to year. References: F Cottier, R Skogseth, D David, J Berge (2019) Temperature time-series in Svalbard fjords. A contribution from the “Integrated Marine Observatory Partnership (iMOP)". In: Orr et al. (eds): SESS report 2018, Svalbard Integrated Arctic Earth Observing System, Longyearbyen, pp. 108 - 119, https://www.sios-svalbard.org/sites/sios-svalbard.org/files/common/SESS_2018_04_iMOP.pdf. ; Hop, H., et al. (2019). Autonomous Marine Observatories in Kongsfjorden, Svalbard. The Ecosystem of Kongsfjorden, Svalbard. H. Hop and C. Wiencke. Cham, Springer International Publishing: 515-533. https://link.springer.com/chapter/10.1007/978-3-319-46425-1_13. Long term data preservation is done through the Norwegian Infrastructure for Research Data (NIRD) where all individual files are published: https://archive.sigma2.no/pages/public/datasetDetail.jsf?id=10.11582/2021.00017, https://archive.sigma2.no/pages/public/datasetDetail.jsf?id=10.11582/2021.00018, https://archive.sigma2.no/pages/public/datasetDetail.jsf?id=10.11582/2021.00019, https://archive.sigma2.no/pages/public/datasetDetail.jsf?id=10.11582/2021.00020, https://archive.sigma2.no/pages/public/datasetDetail.jsf?id=10.11582/2021.00023, https://archive.sigma2.no/pages/public/datasetDetail.jsf?id=10.11582/2021.00025, https://archive.sigma2.no/pages/public/datasetDetail.jsf?id=10.11582/2021.00026, https://archive.sigma2.no/pages/public/datasetDetail.jsf?id=10.11582/2021.00027, https://archive.sigma2.no/pages/public/datasetDetail.jsf?id=10.11582/2021.00031, https://archive.sigma2.no/pages/public/datasetDetail.jsf?id=10.11582/2021.00061, https://archive.sigma2.no/pages/public/datasetDetail.jsf?id=10.11582/2021.00062, https://archive.sigma2.no/pages/public/datasetDetail.jsf?id=10.11582/2021.00065
Institutions: Scottish Association for Marine Science, UiT The Arctic University of Norway, Norwegain Infrastructure for Research Data (NIRD)
Last metadata update: 2022-11-15T13:56:05Z
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Abstract:
As part of the KROP - Kongsfjorden Rijpfjorden Observatory Programme, UiT The Arctic University of Norway, The Scottish Association for Marine Science and the University Centre in Svalbard maintain a marine observatory in the high-Arctic location Rijpfjorden, Svalbard, since 2006. The observatory consists of an array of CTDs, temperature loggers, ADCPs and a sediment trap, in addition to various other instruments or installations that change from year to year. This dataset contains the temperature, salinity, density data of a Seabird SBE16p CTD with E(PAR) light and chlorophyll fluorescence auxiliary sensors which was located at 20m depth in the deployment year 2012-2013. The fluorescence sensor data is given as raw voltage due to fouling and calibration issues. It is only suitable to detect fluorescence peaks, not to compute actual chlorophyll concentrations. The equation to compute chlorophyll concentration is given in the variable attributes, use with care. E(PAR) data is not corrected for drift due to fouling during the deployment. Observe that E(PAR) sensor is spherical, while other deployments use planar sensors. For this deployment the SBE16p was attached above the subsurface sphere, together with a bag of blue mussels (survival experiment). A second SBE16p was deployed at the regular depth (38m). An additional sediment trap was mounted at 50m depth. Last deployment using Vemco temperature loggers. Vemco logger s/n 1596, 1599 and 1600 failed (not data). References: F Cottier, R Skogseth, D David, J Berge (2019) Temperature time-series in Svalbard fjords. A contribution from the “Integrated Marine Observatory Partnership (iMOP)". In: Orr et al. (eds): SESS report 2018, Svalbard Integrated Arctic Earth Observing System, Longyearbyen, pp. 108 - 119, https://www.sios-svalbard.org/sites/sios-svalbard.org/files/common/SESS_2018_04_iMOP.pdf. ; Hop, H., et al. (2019). Autonomous Marine Observatories in Kongsfjorden, Svalbard. The Ecosystem of Kongsfjorden, Svalbard. H. Hop and C. Wiencke. Cham, Springer International Publishing: 515-533. https://link.springer.com/chapter/10.1007/978-3-319-46425-1_13 ; Berge (2013). Historiene som blaskjellene forteller oss. Svalbardposten 41: 22-23. Nahrgang J, Varpe O, Korshunova E, Murzina S, Hallanger IG, Vieweg I, et al. (2014) Gender Specific Reproductive Strategies of an Arctic Key Species (Boreogadus saida) and Implications of Climate Change. PLoS ONE 9(5): e98452. https://doi.org/10.1371/journal.pone.0098452
Institutions: Scottish Association for Marine Science, UiT The Arctic University of Norway, Norwegain Infrastructure for Research Data (NIRD)
Last metadata update: 2022-11-15T13:56:05Z
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Abstract:
As part of the KROP - Kongsfjorden Rijpfjorden Observatory Programme UiT The Arctic University of Norway and The Scottish Association for Marine Science maintain a marine obervatory in the high-Arctic location Rijpfjorden, Svalbard, since 2006. The observatory consists of an array of CTDs, temperature loggers, ADCPs and a sediment trap, in addition to various other instruments or installations that change from year to year. This dataset cotains the temperature data of the Vemco minilog temperature logger that was located at 50m depth in the deployment year 2012-2013. For this deployment the SBE16p was attached above the subsurface sphere, together with a bag of blue mussels (survival experiment). A second SBE16p was deployed at the regular depth (38m). An additional sediment trap was mounted at 50m depth. Last deployment using Vemco temperature loggers. References: F Cottier, R Skogseth, D David, J Berge (2019) Temperature time-series in Svalbard fjords. A contribution from the “Integrated Marine Observatory Partnership (iMOP)". In: Orr et al. (eds): SESS report 2018, Svalbard Integrated Arctic Earth Observing System, Longyearbyen, pp. 108 - 119, https://www.sios-svalbard.org/sites/sios-svalbard.org/files/common/SESS_2018_04_iMOP.pdf. ; Hop, H., et al. (2019). Autonomous Marine Observatories in Kongsfjorden, Svalbard. The Ecosystem of Kongsfjorden, Svalbard. H. Hop and C. Wiencke. Cham, Springer International Publishing: 515-533. https://link.springer.com/chapter/10.1007/978-3-319-46425-1_13 ; Berge (2013). Historiene som blaskjellene forteller oss. Svalbardposten 41: 22-23. Nahrgang J, Varpe O, Korshunova E, Murzina S, Hallanger IG, Vieweg I, et al. (2014) Gender Specific Reproductive Strategies of an Arctic Key Species (Boreogadus saida) and Implications of Climate Change. PLoS ONE 9(5): e98452. https://doi.org/10.1371/journal.pone.0098452
Institutions: Scottish Association for Marine Science, UiT The Arctic University of Norway, Norwegain Infrastructure for Research Data (NIRD)
Last metadata update: 2022-11-15T13:56:05Z
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Abstract:
As part of the KROP - Kongsfjorden Rijpfjorden Observatory Programme UiT The Arctic University of Norway and The Scottish Association for Marine Science maintain a marine obervatory in the high-Arctic location Rijpfjorden, Svalbard, since 2006. The observatory consists of an array of CTDs, temperature loggers, ADCPs and a sediment trap, in addition to various other instruments or installations that change from year to year. This dataset cotains the temperature data of the Vemco minilog temperature logger that was located at 107m depth in the deployment year 2012-2013. For this deployment the SBE16p was attached above the subsurface sphere, together with a bag of blue mussels (survival experiment). A second SBE16p was deployed at the regular depth (38m). An additional sediment trap was mounted at 50m depth. Last deployment using Vemco temperature loggers. Vemco logger s/n 1596, 1599 and 1600 failed (not data). References: F Cottier, R Skogseth, D David, J Berge (2019) Temperature time-series in Svalbard fjords. A contribution from the “Integrated Marine Observatory Partnership (iMOP)". In: Orr et al. (eds): SESS report 2018, Svalbard Integrated Arctic Earth Observing System, Longyearbyen, pp. 108 - 119, https://www.sios-svalbard.org/sites/sios-svalbard.org/files/common/SESS_2018_04_iMOP.pdf. ; Hop, H., et al. (2019). Autonomous Marine Observatories in Kongsfjorden, Svalbard. The Ecosystem of Kongsfjorden, Svalbard. H. Hop and C. Wiencke. Cham, Springer International Publishing: 515-533. https://link.springer.com/chapter/10.1007/978-3-319-46425-1_13 ; Berge (2013). Historiene som blaskjellene forteller oss. Svalbardposten 41: 22-23. Nahrgang J, Varpe O, Korshunova E, Murzina S, Hallanger IG, Vieweg I, et al. (2014) Gender Specific Reproductive Strategies of an Arctic Key Species (Boreogadus saida) and Implications of Climate Change. PLoS ONE 9(5): e98452. https://doi.org/10.1371/journal.pone.0098452
Institutions: Scottish Association for Marine Science, UiT The Arctic University of Norway, Norwegain Infrastructure for Research Data (NIRD)
Last metadata update: 2022-11-15T13:56:05Z
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Abstract:
As part of the KROP - Kongsfjorden Rijpfjorden Observatory Programme, UiT The Arctic University of Norway, The Scottish Association for Marine Science and the University Centre in Svalbard maintain a marine observatory in the high-Arctic location Rijpfjorden, Svalbard, since 2006. The observatory consists of an array of CTDs, temperature loggers, ADCPs and a sediment trap, in addition to various other instruments or installations that change from year to year. This dataset contains the temperature, salinity, density data of a Seabird SBE16p CTD with E(PAR) light and chlorophyll fluorescence auxiliary sensors which was located at 38m depth in the deployment year 2012-2013. The fluorescence sensor data is given as raw voltage due to fouling and calibration issues. It is only suitable to detect fluorescence peaks, not to compute actual chlorophyll concentrations. The equation to compute chlorophyll concentration is given in the variable attributes, use with care. E(PAR) data is not corrected for drift due to fouling during the deployment. Observe that E(PAR) sensor is spherical, while other deployments use planar sensors. For this deployment the SBE16p was attached above the subsurface sphere, together with a bag of blue mussels (survival experiment). A second SBE16p was deployed at the regular depth (38m). An additional sediment trap was mounted at 50m depth. Last deployment using Vemco temperature loggers. Vemco logger s/n 1596, 1599 and 1600 failed (not data). References: F Cottier, R Skogseth, D David, J Berge (2019) Temperature time-series in Svalbard fjords. A contribution from the “Integrated Marine Observatory Partnership (iMOP)". In: Orr et al. (eds): SESS report 2018, Svalbard Integrated Arctic Earth Observing System, Longyearbyen, pp. 108 - 119, https://www.sios-svalbard.org/sites/sios-svalbard.org/files/common/SESS_2018_04_iMOP.pdf. ; Hop, H., et al. (2019). Autonomous Marine Observatories in Kongsfjorden, Svalbard. The Ecosystem of Kongsfjorden, Svalbard. H. Hop and C. Wiencke. Cham, Springer International Publishing: 515-533. https://link.springer.com/chapter/10.1007/978-3-319-46425-1_13 ; Berge (2013). Historiene som blaskjellene forteller oss. Svalbardposten 41: 22-23. Nahrgang J, Varpe O, Korshunova E, Murzina S, Hallanger IG, Vieweg I, et al. (2014) Gender Specific Reproductive Strategies of an Arctic Key Species (Boreogadus saida) and Implications of Climate Change. PLoS ONE 9(5): e98452. https://doi.org/10.1371/journal.pone.0098452
Institutions: Scottish Association for Marine Science, UiT The Arctic University of Norway, Norwegain Infrastructure for Research Data (NIRD)
Last metadata update: 2022-11-15T13:56:05Z
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Abstract:
As part of the KROP - Kongsfjorden Rijpfjorden Observatory Programme UiT The Arctic University of Norway and The Scottish Association for Marine Science maintain a marine obervatory in the high-Arctic location Rijpfjorden, Svalbard, since 2006. The observatory consists of an array of CTDs, temperature loggers, ADCPs and a sediment trap, in addition to various other instruments or installations that change from year to year. This dataset cotains the temperature data of the Vemco minilog temperature logger that was located at 72m depth in the deployment year 2012-2013. For this deployment the SBE16p was attached above the subsurface sphere, together with a bag of blue mussels (survival experiment). A second SBE16p was deployed at the regular depth (38m). An additional sediment trap was mounted at 50m depth. Last deployment using Vemco temperature loggers. Vemco logger s/n 1596, 1599 and 1600 failed (not data). References: F Cottier, R Skogseth, D David, J Berge (2019) Temperature time-series in Svalbard fjords. A contribution from the “Integrated Marine Observatory Partnership (iMOP)". In: Orr et al. (eds): SESS report 2018, Svalbard Integrated Arctic Earth Observing System, Longyearbyen, pp. 108 - 119, https://www.sios-svalbard.org/sites/sios-svalbard.org/files/common/SESS_2018_04_iMOP.pdf. ; Hop, H., et al. (2019). Autonomous Marine Observatories in Kongsfjorden, Svalbard. The Ecosystem of Kongsfjorden, Svalbard. H. Hop and C. Wiencke. Cham, Springer International Publishing: 515-533. https://link.springer.com/chapter/10.1007/978-3-319-46425-1_13 ; Berge (2013). Historiene som blaskjellene forteller oss. Svalbardposten 41: 22-23. Nahrgang J, Varpe O, Korshunova E, Murzina S, Hallanger IG, Vieweg I, et al. (2014) Gender Specific Reproductive Strategies of an Arctic Key Species (Boreogadus saida) and Implications of Climate Change. PLoS ONE 9(5): e98452. https://doi.org/10.1371/journal.pone.0098452
Institutions: Scottish Association for Marine Science, UiT The Arctic University of Norway, Norwegain Infrastructure for Research Data (NIRD)
Last metadata update: 2022-11-15T13:56:05Z
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Abstract:
As part of the KROP - Kongsfjorden Rijpfjorden Observatory Programme UiT The Arctic University of Norway and The Scottish Association for Marine Science maintain a marine obervatory in the high-Arctic location Rijpfjorden, Svalbard, since 2006. The observatory consists of an array of CTDs, temperature loggers, ADCPs and a sediment trap, in addition to various other instruments or installations that change from year to year. This dataset cotains the temperature data of the Vemco minilog temperature logger that was located at 140m depth in the deployment year 2012-2013. For this deployment the SBE16p was attached above the subsurface sphere, together with a bag of blue mussels (survival experiment). A second SBE16p was deployed at the regular depth (38m). An additional sediment trap was mounted at 50m depth. Last deployment using Vemco temperature loggers. Vemco logger s/n 1596, 1599 and 1600 failed (not data). References: F Cottier, R Skogseth, D David, J Berge (2019) Temperature time-series in Svalbard fjords. A contribution from the “Integrated Marine Observatory Partnership (iMOP)". In: Orr et al. (eds): SESS report 2018, Svalbard Integrated Arctic Earth Observing System, Longyearbyen, pp. 108 - 119, https://www.sios-svalbard.org/sites/sios-svalbard.org/files/common/SESS_2018_04_iMOP.pdf. ; Hop, H., et al. (2019). Autonomous Marine Observatories in Kongsfjorden, Svalbard. The Ecosystem of Kongsfjorden, Svalbard. H. Hop and C. Wiencke. Cham, Springer International Publishing: 515-533. https://link.springer.com/chapter/10.1007/978-3-319-46425-1_13 ; Berge (2013). Historiene som blaskjellene forteller oss. Svalbardposten 41: 22-23. Nahrgang J, Varpe O, Korshunova E, Murzina S, Hallanger IG, Vieweg I, et al. (2014) Gender Specific Reproductive Strategies of an Arctic Key Species (Boreogadus saida) and Implications of Climate Change. PLoS ONE 9(5): e98452. https://doi.org/10.1371/journal.pone.0098452
Institutions: Scottish Association for Marine Science, UiT The Arctic University of Norway, Norwegain Infrastructure for Research Data (NIRD)
Last metadata update: 2022-11-15T13:56:05Z
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Abstract:
As part of the KROP - Kongsfjorden Rijpfjorden Observatory Programme, UiT The Arctic University of Norway and The Scottish Association for Marine Science maintain a marine obervatory in the high-Arctic location Rijpfjorden, Svalbard, since 2006. The observatory consists of an array of CTDs, temperature loggers, ADCPs and a sediment trap, in addition to various other instruments or installations that change from year to year. This dataset cotains the temperature and salinity data of the Seabird SBE37 MicroCAT that was located at 28m depth in the deployment year 2012-2013. For this deployment the SBE16p was attached above the subsurface sphere, together with a bag of blue mussels (survival experiment). A second SBE16p was deployed at the regular depth (38m). An additional sediment trap was mounted at 50m depth. Last deployment using Vemco temperature loggers. References: F Cottier, R Skogseth, D David, J Berge (2019) Temperature time-series in Svalbard fjords. A contribution from the “Integrated Marine Observatory Partnership (iMOP)". In: Orr et al. (eds): SESS report 2018, Svalbard Integrated Arctic Earth Observing System, Longyearbyen, pp. 108 - 119, https://www.sios-svalbard.org/sites/sios-svalbard.org/files/common/SESS_2018_04_iMOP.pdf. ; Hop, H., et al. (2019). Autonomous Marine Observatories in Kongsfjorden, Svalbard. The Ecosystem of Kongsfjorden, Svalbard. H. Hop and C. Wiencke. Cham, Springer International Publishing: 515-533. https://link.springer.com/chapter/10.1007/978-3-319-46425-1_13 ; Berge (2013). Historiene som blaskjellene forteller oss. Svalbardposten 41: 22-23. Nahrgang J, Varpe O, Korshunova E, Murzina S, Hallanger IG, Vieweg I, et al. (2014) Gender Specific Reproductive Strategies of an Arctic Key Species (Boreogadus saida) and Implications of Climate Change. PLoS ONE 9(5): e98452. https://doi.org/10.1371/journal.pone.0098452
Institutions: Scottish Association for Marine Science, UiT The Arctic University of Norway, Norwegain Infrastructure for Research Data (NIRD)
Last metadata update: 2022-11-15T13:56:05Z
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Abstract:
As part of the KROP - Kongsfjorden Rijpfjorden Observatory Programme UiT The Arctic University of Norway and The Scottish Association for Marine Science maintain a marine obervatory in the high-Arctic location Rijpfjorden, Svalbard, since 2006. The observatory consists of an array of CTDs, temperature loggers, ADCPs and a sediment trap, in addition to various other instruments or installations that change from year to year. This dataset cotains the temperature data of the Vemco minilog temperature logger that was located at 170m depth in the deployment year 2012-2013. For this deployment the SBE16p was attached above the subsurface sphere, together with a bag of blue mussels (survival experiment). A second SBE16p was deployed at the regular depth (38m). An additional sediment trap was mounted at 50m depth. Last deployment using Vemco temperature loggers. Vemco logger s/n 1596, 1599 and 1600 failed (not data). References: F Cottier, R Skogseth, D David, J Berge (2019) Temperature time-series in Svalbard fjords. A contribution from the “Integrated Marine Observatory Partnership (iMOP)". In: Orr et al. (eds): SESS report 2018, Svalbard Integrated Arctic Earth Observing System, Longyearbyen, pp. 108 - 119, https://www.sios-svalbard.org/sites/sios-svalbard.org/files/common/SESS_2018_04_iMOP.pdf. ; Hop, H., et al. (2019). Autonomous Marine Observatories in Kongsfjorden, Svalbard. The Ecosystem of Kongsfjorden, Svalbard. H. Hop and C. Wiencke. Cham, Springer International Publishing: 515-533. https://link.springer.com/chapter/10.1007/978-3-319-46425-1_13 ; Berge (2013). Historiene som blaskjellene forteller oss. Svalbardposten 41: 22-23. Nahrgang J, Varpe O, Korshunova E, Murzina S, Hallanger IG, Vieweg I, et al. (2014) Gender Specific Reproductive Strategies of an Arctic Key Species (Boreogadus saida) and Implications of Climate Change. PLoS ONE 9(5): e98452. https://doi.org/10.1371/journal.pone.0098452
Institutions: Scottish Association for Marine Science, UiT The Arctic University of Norway, Norwegain Infrastructure for Research Data (NIRD)
Last metadata update: 2022-11-15T13:56:05Z
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Abstract:
As part of the KROP - Kongsfjorden Rijpfjorden Observatory Programme, UiT The Arctic University of Norway and The Scottish Association for Marine Science maintain a marine obervatory in the high-Arctic location Rijpfjorden, Svalbard, since 2006. The observatory consists of an array of CTDs, temperature loggers, ADCPs and a sediment trap, in addition to various other instruments or installations that change from year to year. This dataset cotains the temperature and salinity data of the Seabird SBE37 MicroCAT that was located at 28m depth in the deployment year 2012-2013. For this deployment the SBE16p was attached above the subsurface sphere, together with a bag of blue mussels (survival experiment). A second SBE16p was deployed at the regular depth (38m). An additional sediment trap was mounted at 50m depth. Last deployment using Vemco temperature loggers. Vemco logger s/n 1596, 1599 and 1600 failed (not data). References: F Cottier, R Skogseth, D David, J Berge (2019) Temperature time-series in Svalbard fjords. A contribution from the “Integrated Marine Observatory Partnership (iMOP)". In: Orr et al. (eds): SESS report 2018, Svalbard Integrated Arctic Earth Observing System, Longyearbyen, pp. 108 - 119, https://www.sios-svalbard.org/sites/sios-svalbard.org/files/common/SESS_2018_04_iMOP.pdf. ; Hop, H., et al. (2019). Autonomous Marine Observatories in Kongsfjorden, Svalbard. The Ecosystem of Kongsfjorden, Svalbard. H. Hop and C. Wiencke. Cham, Springer International Publishing: 515-533. https://link.springer.com/chapter/10.1007/978-3-319-46425-1_13 ; Berge (2013). Historiene som blaskjellene forteller oss. Svalbardposten 41: 22-23. Nahrgang J, Varpe O, Korshunova E, Murzina S, Hallanger IG, Vieweg I, et al. (2014) Gender Specific Reproductive Strategies of an Arctic Key Species (Boreogadus saida) and Implications of Climate Change. PLoS ONE 9(5): e98452. https://doi.org/10.1371/journal.pone.0098452