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This dataset contains GPS and sensor data from buoys deployed on sea ice north of Svalbard from January to June 2015. The data is described and used in Itkin et al (2017) Decay phase thermodynamics of ice ridges in the Arctic Ocean (https://doi.org/10.1002/2016JC012403).
A sub-set of these buoy data was published at SEANOE (https://www.pangaea.de/), this data base offers a complete collection of all buoy data obtained during N-ICE2015 expedition.
Deployment
During the N-ICE2015 expedition (http://npolar.no/n-ice2015) 42 buoys were deployed in the sea ice covered area north of Svalbard.
Buoys were deployed in two nested arrays, 5-100 km apart. spring deployments (https://api.npolar.no/dataset/6ed9a8ca-95b0-43be-bedf-8176bf56da80/_file/tracks_d1_updt.png) in April/May, on the first- and second-year ice that was characteristic for the region. The winter array was deployed during N-ICE2015 leg 1, during polar night with an assistance of an ice breaker, snow machines and man hauling on ski. The spring array was deployed on leg 3 from a helicopter and R/V Lance. Two buoys (SIMBA_2015d and SNOW_2015d) were deployed in March 2015 on leg 2 separately from all the rest.
During most of the buoy deployments additional information on the sea ice situation including, snow depth and sea ice thickness was collected. Normally three holes were drilled and about 30 snow depth measurements (1 meter spacing) were taken along the sides of unilateral triangles with ~10 m long legs. In addition, a deployment photo was taken. All this information in available in the deployment logs for spring (https://api.npolar.no/dataset/6ed9a8ca-95b0-43be-bedf-8176bf56da80/_file/deployment_conditions_winter.zip) . Most of the buoys were deployed on remote locations and never revisited. Those close to the ice camp were revisited. Some of the buoys were deployed in pairs or clusters.
For both deployments the buoys were deployed over a large time span of approximately 1 month and individual buoys have a relatively short life time of up to 3 months. Some buoys stopped functioning before the deployment of the full array was completed. After ice floes disintegrated, the majority of the buoys sank into the ocean and stopped transmitting data. The drifters with a flotation support (SVPs) continued drifting with the ocean surface currents. The winter array drifted in a south and south-east direction with some of the buoys covering over 1000 km distance, while the spring array drifted south-westwards and covered a 700 km distance.
Overview table of all buoy deployments as published by Itkin et al, 2017:
Buoy types
The 42 buoys deployed at N-ICE2015 are:
- 14 drifters (7 CALIB, 6 SVP and 1 ice beacon - IC) produced by MetOcean, Halifax, Canada
- 5 snow buoys (SNOW) produced by MetOcean, Halifax, Canada
- 7 sea ice mass balance buoys (SIMBA) produced by SRSL, Oban, Scotland,
- 3 sea ice mass balance buoys (IMB-B) produced by Bruncin, Zagreb Croatia
- 1 sea ice mass balance buoys (IMB) produced by MetOcean, Halifax, Canada
- 3 radiation buoys (AFAR) produced by MetOcean, Halifax, Canada
- 6 wave buoys (WAVE) produced by Bruncin, Zagreb, Croatia
- 1 sea ice stress buoy (STRESS) produced by Cold Regions Research and Engineering Laboratory, Hanover, USA
- 2 ridge IMB buoys (RIDGE) produced by Oceanic Measurement, Sydney, Canada
- 1 seasonal sea ice mass balance buoy buoy (IMB-S) produced by Cold Regions Research and Engineering Laboratory, Hanover, USA.
###Ice-mass-balance (IMB) buoys
IMB buoys were typically deployed on level ice portion of the ice floe. The SIMBA and IMB-B type buoys consist of a 5 m long thermistor chain hanging through the air-snow-ice-ocean. The chain was deployed hanging from a wooden tripod about one meter over the ice surface. The chain comprises solid state sensors that measure temperature with an accuracy of 0.1˚C at 2 cm vertical resolution. Temperature was recorded every six hours. In addition, the buoys had a heating mode that can be used as a proxy for thermal diffusivity. With the combination of the temperature and thermal diffusivity proxy one can identify the interfaces between ice-water, ice-snow, snow-air, and detect flooding of the snow. The temperature profiles used for the interface detection were quality controlled and erroneous data was removed and replaced by averages between neighbors. The interfaces were automatically determined using a method similar, but not identical, to Provost et al (2017) Observations of flooding and snow ice formation in a thinner Arctic sea ice regime during the N-ICE2015 campaign: Influence of basal ice melt and storms (https://doi.org/10.1002/2016JC012011). The detection of air-snow and snow-ice interfaces was based on the thermal diffusivity proxy, while the ice-ocean interface is determined based on the temperature profile. All abrupt changes in the interface location were removed from the data and replaced by nearest neighbors. These were then smoothed with a 36-h running mean (Fig. 3 to 8).
The IMB-B type buoys were deployed in the same way as the SIMBAs. In addition, they have a low resolution wide-angle camera, that takes pictures once a day (noon).
Snow buoys measure the distance to the snow surface with four sonic sensors. At deployment, the initial snow depth was measured and afterwards used to calibrate the values measured by the buoy.
IMB and IMB-S are instruments that combine the measuring principles of a sonic snow buoy and a thermistor IMB (Polashenski et al., 2011 (https://doi.org/10.3189/172756411795931516)). Additionally to the thermistor string (50 mm vertical resolution), it also has an underwater sonic sensor that provides the sea ice thickness measurements by measuring the distance from the sensor to the bottom ice surface. IMB-S has all sensors sheltered in a floating elongated tube that should potentially survive summer melt and fall freeze up processes.
Figures
Figure 1:Drifts of the a) winter and b) spring deployments (Itkin et al, 2017). Many of the buoys were deployed in small clusters where several instruments (e.g. snow buoy, IMB buoy and sea ice stress buoy) were deployed together (check Tables 1 and 2 for more details). On this map only one buoy from each cluster is represented. The winter array drifted predominantly in the SE direction, while the spring array drifted in the SW direction. The tracks after the breaks are shaded in grey.
Figure 2: IMB data: both raw and processed data is available for download. Here a combined plot for snow depth (above) and sea ice thickness (bellow) from the IMB and snow buoys and snow stake fields and hot wires (Rösel et al, 2018). The purple shading in the background indicates storm events, The stars show major snow fall events. Note that before 2 February 2015 and between 18 March and 18 April 2015 no meteorological data are available.
Figure 3: SIMBA_2015a: temperature and thermal resistivity proxy through air-snow-ice-ocean. The derived interfaces are delineated by white lines. Initial interfaces are marked by dashed lines.
Figure 4: SIMBA_2015b: temperature and thermal resistivity proxy through air-snow-ice-ocean. The derived interfaces are delineated by white lines. Initial interfaces are marked by dashed lines.
Figure 5: SIMBA_2015d: temperature and thermal resistivity proxy through air-snow-ice-ocean. The derived interfaces are delineated by white lines.Initial interfaces are marked by dashed lines.
Figure 6: SIMBA_2015e: temperature and thermal resistivity proxy through air-snow-ice-ocean. The derived interfaces are delineated by white lines. Initial interfaces are marked by dashed lines.
Figure 7: SIMBA_2015f: temperature and thermal resistivity proxy through air-snow-ice-ocean. The derived interfaces are delineated by white lines. Initial interfaces are marked by dashed lines.
###Literature Itkin et al (2017) Thin ice and storms: a case study of sea ice deformation from buoy arrays deployed during N-ICE2015 (https://doi.org/10.1002/2016JC012403)
Provost et al (2017) Observations of flooding and snow-ice formation in a thinner Arctic sea ice regime during the N-ICE2015 campaign: Influence of basal ice melt and storms (https://doi.org/10.1002/2016JC012011)
Rösel et al (2018) Thin Sea Ice, Thick Snow, and Widespread Negative Freeboard Observed During N-ICE2015 North of Svalbard (https://doi.org/10.1002/2017JC012865)