Monday, October 22, 2007

ETP blog Wakeham group

Today has had calmer weather but we are still behind schedule. We will get to the first station on Wednesday morning. But today we learned how to set the bottles on the CTD, how we are going to do O2 and salt analysis from the CTD, and most importantly how we will get the CTD off the deck and into the water without killing anyone or the CTD. All of my samples are dependent on the CTD casts so I was excited to learn how everything works today. Now we just have to get to the station. Hopefully the weather will cooperate. Currently there is a hurricane over the second stop!

3 comments:

Matthew said...

So, what exactly is a CTD? Try to avoid maiming anyone with it!

The Eastern Tropical Pacific Project said...
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The Eastern Tropical Pacific Project said...

Good question! A CTD stands for "conductivity, temperature, and depth" - it measures conductivity which is a proxy for salinity, temperature, and depth. The CTD contains 25 or so Niskin bottles which remain open until lowered to a specific depth and then closed via a lead "messenger" sent down from the surface to activate the closures, thus securing a water sample at a particular depth.