Dataset - Dissolved Fe measured on board with Flow injection analysis and Fe-binding dissolved organic ligands from Ultra Clean CTD collected depth profiles during GEOTRACES PS94 Arctic cruise on Polarstern
Summary
Data from Polarstern cruise PS94 in the Arctic in 2015 with chief scientist Ursula Schauer. In order to explain geochemical cycles of Fe in the ocean, M. Rijkenberg, L. Gerringa and H. Slagter samples filtered seawater using an ultra clean titanium CTD. In these samples on board measurements were executed: Dissolved Fe by flow injection analysis and the characteristics of the dissolved organic Fe-binding organic ligands (totalL), being the concentration of these ligands and the conditional binding constant of the Fe-complex (K expressed as its logarithm: logK). Moreover in order to relate the dissolved organic Fe-binding organic ligands to humic substances fluorescence of dissolved organic matter was measured as well as humic substances using voltammetry.
Purpose
scientific purposes within the GEOTRACES project
Originating center
Royal Netherlands Institute for Sea Research (NIOZ)
Participants
Dataset progress
in work
Data quality
stations 153, 161 and 173 have no lDFe. The speciation characteristics K and totalL have been calculated using DFe. Otherwise there are no known issues.
Access constraints
Freely accessible
Use constraints
Free to work with the data, but please consult us before publishing anything derived from this dataset
Projects
Title | Funding id | Period |
GEOTRACES | 2006-01-01 - ... | |
Publications
Micha J. A. Rijkenberg, Hans A. Slagter, et al., 2018. Dissolved Fe in the Deep and Upper Arctic Ocean With a Focus on Fe Limitation in the Nansen Basin. Frontiers in Marine Science 5
H.A. Slagter, H.E. Reader, et al., 2017. Organic Fe speciation in the Eurasian Basins of the Arctic Ocean and its relation to terrestrial DOM. Marine Chemistry 197, 11-25
Links
No linksRelated datasets
- https://dx.doi.org/10.1594/PANGAEA.890975 - The same dataset
Relation: Also uploaded to Pangaea since data was collected on Polarstern