Abstract. The Utah Urban CO2 Network (UUCON) is a network of
near-surface atmospheric carbon dioxide (CO2) measurement sites aimed
at quantifying long-term changes in urban and rural locations throughout
northern Utah since 2001. We document improvements to UUCON made in 2015
that increase measurement precision, standardize sampling protocols, and
expand the number of measurement locations to represent a larger region in
northern Utah. In a parallel effort, near-surface CO2 and methane
(CH4) measurement sites were assembled as part of the Uintah Basin
greenhouse gas (GHG) network in a region of oil and natural gas extraction
located in northeastern Utah. Additional efforts have resulted in automated
quality control, calibration, and visualization of data through utilities
hosted online (https://air.utah.edu, last access: 22 August 2019). These improvements facilitate
atmospheric modeling efforts and quantify atmospheric composition in urban
and rural locations throughout northern Utah. Here we present an overview of
the instrumentation design and methods within UUCON and the Uintah Basin GHG
networks as well as describe and report measurement uncertainties using a
broadly applicable and novel method. Historic and modern data described in
this paper are archived with the National Oceanic and Atmospheric
Administration's (NOAA) National Centers for Environmental Information
(NCEI) and can be found at https://doi.org/10.7289/V50R9MN2 (Mitchell et al., 2018c) and
https://doi.org/10.25921/8vaj-bk51 (Bares et al., 2018a) respectively.