2024
DOI: 10.3389/fmars.2024.1348161
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A carbonate system time series in the Eastern Mediterranean Sea. Two years of high-frequency in-situ observations and remote sensing

C. Frangoulis,
N. Stamataki,
M. Pettas
et al.

Abstract: The rate of ocean uptake of anthropogenic CO2 has declined over the past decade, so a critical question for science and policy is whether the ocean will continue to act as a sink. Large areas of the ocean remain without observations for carbonate system variables, and oceanic CO2 observations have declined since 2017. The Mediterranean Sea is one such an area, especially its eastern part, where there is a paucity of carbonate system data, with large areas not sampled or only sampled by ship-based discrete meas… Show more

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“…HCB data included high-frequency pH (3-hour, December 2020 -July 2022) and pCO 2 (6-hour, December 2020 -November 2022) data, obtained from two sensors, deployed at near-surface (~1.5m) water, as well as monthly surface (~2m) in situ DIC and TA data, from Niskin bottle water samples. Additional pCO 2 data were also derived from pH and TA (bottle) data, using CO2SYS (version 3.0, Pierrot et al, 2021) software (see Frangoulis et al, 2024, this issue, for more details on HCB data).…”
Section: Validation Datasetsmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…HCB data included high-frequency pH (3-hour, December 2020 -July 2022) and pCO 2 (6-hour, December 2020 -November 2022) data, obtained from two sensors, deployed at near-surface (~1.5m) water, as well as monthly surface (~2m) in situ DIC and TA data, from Niskin bottle water samples. Additional pCO 2 data were also derived from pH and TA (bottle) data, using CO2SYS (version 3.0, Pierrot et al, 2021) software (see Frangoulis et al, 2024, this issue, for more details on HCB data).…”
Section: Validation Datasetsmentioning
confidence: 99%