As anyone who has visited the beach knows, the ocean is
salty. But, just how salty is it in different places, at different depths,
and at different times? How do other water properties such as temperature,
dissolved oxygen, nutrients, particulate matter, and chlorophyll-a vary
in time and space? What causes these variations? What can their spatial
and temporal distributions tell us? What ocean processes cause the observed
patterns?
As part of a new research project being conducted at Texas
A&M University, my colleagues and I will investigate these questions
over the next four years while we gather and study information on the waters
over the U.S. continental shelf and slope in the northeast Gulf of Mexico.
Our project, "Northeast Gulf of Mexico (NEGOM): Chemical
Oceanography and Hydrography," is one of five studies in a physical
oceanography program sponsored by the Minerals Management Service (MMS)
of the U.S. Department of the Interior. Scheduled to run from October 1997
through September 2001, it includes three years of field work and one year
of data interpretation and synthesis. We will collect data on nine cruises
to observe temporal and spatial distributions of water properties during
spring, summer, and fall.

Our first cruise, November 16-26, 1997, aboard Texas A&M's
R/V Gyre, was staged out of Pascagoula, Mississippi. Our cruise
track covered 2,767 kilometers and an area approximately half the size of
Texas. We took samples at 174 locations, or stations, across the gulf. The
station depths ranged from eight meters to more than 1,000 meters.
At 80 stations, the ship continued steaming while we deployed
an expendable bathythermograph (XBT). This probe continuously measured the
temperature as it fell through the water and transmitted its data to the
ship through a wire. The transmission stops when the wire breaks; the expendable
probe rests on the sea floor.
At the other 94 stations, we stopped the ship to lower
a conductivity-temperature-depth measuring instrument (CTD) for continuous
profiling of water properties, and 10-liter Niskin bottles for collecting
water samples at up to 12 discrete depths. From top to bottom through the
water column, the CTD continuously recorded information about the water:
temperature, conductivity, downwelling irradiance, percent light transmission,
and fluorescence.
At all stations, we extracted water samples from the Niskin
bottles and analyzed the samples for nutrients, oxygen, and salinity. At
more than half the stations, we filtered the water samples and stored the
filters for on-shore analysis of particulate material, particulate organic
carbon, and phytoplankton pigments. Throughout the cruise, we operated an
acoustic Doppler current profiler, which measures the current velocity in
four-meter depth increments to a depth of 400 meters.

From the CTD measurements, we found that the water column
at most locations had uniform temperature and salinity from the surface
to a depth of at least 40 meters. This well mixed water was a result of
pre-cruise cold fronts that mixed the layers of water that often have different
temperatures and salinities.
In deeper water, we observed both this mixed layer, and,
below it, variations in water properties indicative of other processes at
work. For example, from our data about light transmission, we detected layers
of water with high concentrations of particles extending off the sides of
the DeSoto Canyon. These data suggest the presence of currents that may
be influenced by the canyon.
Satellite imagery of sea-surface temperature and sea-surface
height anomaly showed the presence of a clockwise-circulating eddy, shed
from the Loop Current, at the southwest edge of the study area. We will
analyze our CTD and bottle data to see if this eddy influenced the water
properties or currents there. (See "Spin cycles" on page 10 for
more about eddies.)

In addition to data collection for NEGOM scientists, we
encouraged participation of scientists and students with complementary projects.
High atop the flying bridge deck of the Gyre were two sets of "Big
Eyes," telescopic binoculars with a range out to five miles. During
daylight, the Big Eyes were managed by brave souls who fought off wind,
weather, and mal de mer to search for marine mammals. White caps made observation
of whale and dolphin blows difficult. Nevertheless, sperm whales and several
dolphin varieties were observed. (For more about marine mammals in the gulf,
read the GulfCet stories in this issue of Quarterdeck.)
The scientific crew deployed 23 drifters on behalf of other
MMS researchers. With a very small area exposed to the air, these drifters
follow the surface currents rather than being blown by the wind. Several
times each day, they signal passing satellites. The satellites then relay
the data to the shore-based researchers. At cruise end, all drifters were
successfully reporting.

A major objective in bringing the NEGOM project to Texas
A&M was to provide training and research opportunities for oceanography
students. Of the 23 members of the scientific crew, eight were graduate
students and one was an undergraduate.
The conditions experienced by these students were excellent
for a November cruise. A front passed over us while the ship was steaming
to the first sampling station, making that part of our ride rocky. But by
the time we reached the station, the seas were calm and the crew members
were getting their sea legs. After that, the weather was windy but fine,
the data collection proceeded apace, and, unlike some cruises I have been
on, the equipment worked without any breakdowns. We returned to shore a
day earlier than scheduled-just in time to get home for Thanksgiving! |

[18K] Cruise track and station locations for
the NEGOM cruise on the Gyre.
Conductivity is the electrical
conductance of a seawater sample. By determining the ratio of the conductivity
of the sample to that of a standard seawater of known salinity, the salinity
of the field sample can be determined.
Downwelling irradiance refers
to the sunlight that penetrates down into the water column. The amount that
penetrates diminishes exponentially with depth.
Percent light transmission is
the percent of a beam of light of known wavelength that is received by a
sensor after the light passes through a known length of seawater. Particles
in the water scatter and absorb the light, and thereby control how much
light gets to the sensor. This gives a measure of the concentration of particles
in the water.
Fluorescence is emission of
radiation, especially visible light, resulting from exposure to external
radiation. For our application it is the emission of light by phytoplankton
as a reaction to a light source; measuring fluorescence gives us a relative
measure of the chlorophyll-a content.
Salinity is the total grams
of dissolved inorganic material in one kilogram of seawater, usually on
the order of about 3.5% by weight.
Particulate organic carbon (POC)
is the fraction of the organic carbon in a water sample that is in particle,
rather than dissolved, form. Particles are those materials retained on a
0.7 micron filter after filtration of the water sample. These data are used
to determine what portion of the particulate matter is organic and what
is inorganic. The ultimate source of organic materials is living organisms,
including their remains and excretions.
Phytoplankton pigments are
the colored organic compounds made by plant species of plankton. In our
study, the major classes of pigments are chlorophylls and carotenoids. These
are the essential chemicals for photosynthesis, which transforms energy
from sunlight into the energy that is used to synthesize the building blocks
of life.

[37K] Sea-surface height anomaly data show
the Loop Current and an eddy in deep gulf waters. A remnant eddy is in the
DeSoto Canyon region, adjacent to the NEGOM study area. Solid lines and
dark purple areas are highs; dashed lines and light purple areas indicate
lows. (Data courtesy of Robert Leben, Colorado Center for Astrodynamics
Research, University of Colorado) |