Station K1 – Mooring Deployment

This week, we recovered, serviced, and redeployed the last mooring of our cruise, the K1 mooring. This mooring measured continuously temperature and salinity in the central Labrador Sea since the early 1990s. More recently, oxygen sensors have been added to the uppermost part of the mooring. Measuring oxygen in the central Labrador Sea is quite […]

Underway CTD

By Anne-Sophie Fortin As we transit at full speed (10 knots) in the Labrador Sea, we used the underway CTD (uCTD) to investigate the vertical structure of potential eddies identified from satellite imagery. The uCTD is a good compromise between research time, efforts, and the dataset we get from it. Indeed, the ability to get […]

How Much Laughing Gas is Dissolved in Seawater?

By Elizabeth Wallace Here aboard Meteor, there are many interrelated projects happening which will all add to our understanding of this complex region of the ocean, the Subpolar North Atlantic. One such project is the measurement of nitrous oxide (N2O) gas. You may be familiar with N2O as the “laughing gas” used during surgical procedures, […]

Eddy Survey

By Anne-Sophie Fortin August 24-26, 2022 If the marine life would have weather forecasts, they would have eddies maps. Eddies are circular currents of tens to hundreds of kilometers in diameter and a lifetime of about a month. They can be seen on satellite imagery as minimums and maximums of sea surface heights and sea […]

Argo Float Recovery Near Greenland

By Anne-Sophie Fortin Over the past 20 years, Argo floats have caused a small revolution in the field of observational oceanography as they provide near real-time measurements of the ocean subsurface, which have greatly improved our weather forecast and ocean analysis. Currently, there are ~4,000 floats sampling the oceans year-round. These floats are autonomous underwater […]

Glider Recovery in a Zodiac

By Anne-Sophie Fortin After one week of measurements, the glider was successfully recovered today. As it is a somewhat delicate instrument, some of us took a zodiac to bring it back to the ship. The member of the expedition had to wear a survival suit in case someone would have fallen into the cold water […]

Release of SAMS Pressure Sensor

By Anne-Sophie Fortin Today we deployed a highly sensitive bottom pressure instrument from the Scottish Association of Marine Science (SAMS) that will takes measurements for the next 10 years. This instrument is one of a set of two designed to measure the sea surface height across the North Atlantic. The difference in sea surface heights […]