Ibcao Bathymetry Data

skq201713s

Emodnet Dataset ID (LID)
0000142107
id
9862
Dataset name
skq201713s
File name
20230315/skq-201713s-2017-200m-3996.xyz
Data format
xyz (tsv)
File size
2444828
Dataset version
7
Seabed source ID (SID)
1367
Seabed data category (TID)
Multibeam — depth value collected by a multibeam echo-sounder (code 11)
Included in IBCAO gridding
Yes (code 1)
IBCAO gridding layer weight
1000
Data restriction
by negotiation
Shape
surface
Cruise name
SKQ201713S
Cruise ID
0
Cruise report
https://www.polartrec.com/files/resources/docs/Ashjian_2017_collaborativereport.pdf
Chief scientist
Ashjian, Carin
Start date
2017-08-25
End date
2017-09-18
Date format
Only date, no time (code Y-m-d)
From harbour
Nome, Alaska
To harbour
Nome, Alaska
Originator centre
Rolling Deck to Repository (R2R)
Data provider
National Oceanic and Atmospheric Administration, National Centers for Environmental Information (NOAA NCEI)
Platform class
research vessel
Station name
RV Sikuliaq
Station id
WDG7520
Instrument
multi-beam echosounders
Instrument specified
Kongsberg EM710
Spatial reference system
EPSG:3996
Horizontal resolution
41668.1
IBCAO gridding Remove and Restore resolution
200
Abstract
The Beaufort Sea shelf break experiences frequent upwelling of deep, nutrient rich basin water onto the shelf. Such upwelling is not only a short-term source of heat, salt, and nutrients, and a mechanism promoting elevated primary production (production response), but it also transports populations between ocean regions and depth strata/regimes (physical response), potentially modifying ecosystem structure and availability of zooplankton and fish prey to upper trophic level consumers. Historically, the Beaufort Sea shelf break has been a domain of enhanced abundance of beluga whales, presumably in response to elevated availability of their prey. This project sought to explore and identify the mechanisms linking broad-scale atmospheric forcing, ocean physical response, prey-base condition and distribution, upper trophic level animal aggregations, and climate change along the Beaufort Shelf break. Our overarching hypothesis is that atmospherically-forced (wind-induced) upwelling along this shelf break leads to enhanced feeding opportunities for intermediate links in the pelagic ecosystem (zooplankton, forage fish) that in turn sustain the exploitation of this environment by animals such as beluga whales, seabirds, and seals. Seven supporting hypotheses further explore and support the overarching hypotheses.
URL
https://www.ngdc.noaa.gov/ships/sikuliaq/SKQ201713S_mb.html
Database reference
NOAA NCEI
Operator who enters this information
marcus
File creation time
2023-03-14 15:33:53+00
Metadata modification time
2023-03-15 10:19:57.282885+00
Bounding box
POLYGON((-1082726.049 1769808.005,-1082726.049 2772172.69,-483840.224 2772172.69,-483840.224 1769808.005,-1082726.049 1769808.005))
Color
#be4633
preprocess
cat NOAA-*-files.csar.txt | perl -pe 's/ I:\\Qimera\\IBCAO_4.2\\XYZ\\NOAA files\\(.+).$//; if ($1) { open(STDOUT, ">>" . $1) || die $!; } else { open(STDOUT) }'
Ibcao data status
done
Supplementary data
20220422/20220422.zip
Processing status
Final check, otherwise done.

Revisions