Transcript Document

Outline of Introduction Presentation
1. Motivation for the GEOTRACES programme
2. Status of GEOTRACES
3. Goals of this workshop
4. Format of the workshop
Timeline
GEOTRACES guiding mission
To identify processes and quantify fluxes that
control the distributions of key trace
elements and isotopes ( TEIs) in the ocean,
and to establish the sensitivity of these
distributions to changing environmental
conditions.
Mission
What are “key” elements?
They include:
- Those acting as micronutrients to control
ocean productivity and ecosystems
- Those tracing modern processes in the
ocean
- Contaminants in the present and future
ocean
- Chemical species used as proxies to
reconstruct past climate
Mission
What are “key” elements?
They include:
- Those acting as micronutrients to control
ocean productivity and ecosystems
- Those tracing modern processes in the
ocean
- Contaminants in the present and future
ocean
- Chemical species used as proxies to
reconstruct past climate
Mission
Iron as a limiting nutrient in HNLC regions
Iron as a limiting nutrient in HNLC regions
Input fluxes of bioactive metals
Present ignorance: Existing deep ocean Fe data
Paucity of information about deep Fe distribution limits
understanding of upwelling supply and internal cycling.
DataLimited for Fe
Stations with Fe concentrations at depths > 2000 m.
As of 2003. From P. Parekh (MIT)
Models are based on limited data…
Model of Fe cycle
(Parekh et al. 2005)
Model of ecosystem
limitation
(Moore et al, 2004)
DataLimitsModels
Iron is not the only trace metal crucial for ocean biology
Other essential TEIs
Figure from F. Morel
What are “key” elements?
They include:
- Those acting as micronutrients to control
ocean productivity and ecosystems
- Those tracing modern processes in the
ocean
- Contaminants in the present and future
ocean
- Chemical species used as proxies to
reconstruct past climate
Mission
What are “key” elements?
They include:
- Those acting as micronutrients to control
ocean productivity and ecosystems
- Those tracing modern processes in the
ocean
- Contaminants in the present and future
ocean
- Chemical species used as proxies to
reconstruct past climate
Mission
What are “key” elements?
They include:
- Those acting as micronutrients to control
ocean productivity and ecosystems
- Those tracing modern processes in the
ocean
- Contaminants in the present and future
ocean
- Chemical species used as proxies to
reconstruct past climate
Mission
Ignorance about cycling of trace elements
What are “key” elements?
They include:
- Those acting as micronutrients to control
ocean productivity and ecosystems
- Those tracing modern processes in the
ocean
- Contaminants in the present and future
ocean
- Chemical species used as proxies to
reconstruct past climate
Mission
What are “key” elements?
They include:
- Those acting as micronutrients to control
ocean productivity and ecosystems
- Those tracing modern processes in the
ocean
- Contaminants in the present and future
ocean
- Chemical species used as proxies to
reconstruct past climate
Mission
Paleoclimate indicates behaviour of climate system
300
Atmospheric CO2
280
260
240
220
200
180
160
0
50000
100000
150000
200000
250000
300000
350000
400000
The need for
proxy
calibration
Two proxies for rate of NADW
flow agree that flow is strong
in Holocene, but disagree
about strength of flow at LGM
and during deglaciation
What are “key” elements?
They include:
- Those acting as micronutrients to control
ocean productivity and ecosystems
- Those tracing modern processes in the
ocean
- Contaminants in the present and future
ocean
- Chemical species used as proxies to
reconstruct past climate
Mission
Timeliness
Substantial interdisciplinary benefits of disciplinary
study of ocean geochemistry
Now 30 years since last global program in marine
geochemistry (GEOSECS)
Improved ability to sample the ocean without
contamination
Increased sensitivity of analytical instrumentation
Advances in modeling permit rates and fluxes to be
derived from modeling
Science
Plan
Published in late 2006
Download PDF from
http://www.geotraces.org/
Or hard copies available
here
(also substantially replicated
in Chemie de Erde paper in
your workshop folders)
Program Elements (Implementation)
Enabling Activities
Standards and intercalibration
Data protocols, management, archiving
Modeling
Test stations
Ocean Sections
Core activity - requires international cooperation
12-15 sections
Covering regions dominated by major processes
National cruises with international collaboration
Process Studies
Targeted at processes known to be important
Targeted at “anomalies” detected in ocean sections
Some will focus on ocean boundaries (e.g., coastal regions)
Some will exploit time-series stations
Nations involved in planning
USA
Canada
Mexico
Brazil
Chile
Peru
UK
France
Germany
Netherlands
Sweden
Spain
Belgium
Japan
China
Australia
India
Korea
Taiwan
New Zealand
Hong Kong
GEOTRACES - Scientific Steering Committee (SCOR)
Bob Anderson, Lamont-Doherty Earth Observatory, USA, Co-Chair
Gideon Henderson, University of Oxford, UK, Co-Chair
Per Andersson, Swedish Museum of Natural History, Sweden
Philip Boyd, University of Otago, New Zealand
Ken Bruland, University of California Santa Cruz, USA
Minhan Dai, Xiamen University, China
Hein de Baar, Netherlands Institute for Sea Research, The Netherlands
Martin Frank, IfM-GEOMAR, Germany
Toshitaka Gamo, The University of Tokyo, Japan
Catherine Jeandel, LEGOS (CNRS/CNES/IRD/UPS), France
Bill Jenkins, Woods Hole Oceanographic Institution, USA
Pere Masque, Universitat Autonoma de Barcelona, Spain
Chris Measures, University of Hawaii at Manoa, USA
Felipe Niencheski, Fundaco Universidade Federal do Rio, Brazil
Kristin Orians, University of British Columbia, Canada
James Orr, International Atomic Energy Agency, Monaco
Carol Robinson, Plymouth Marine Lab, UK
Michiel Rutgers van der Loeff, Alfred Wegener Institute, Germany
Reiner Schlitzer, Alfred Wegener Institute, Germany
Sunil Kumar Singh, Physical Research Laboratory, India
Jing Zhang, University of Toyama, Japan
SSC
<www.geotraces.org>
Future timeline
Basin Workshops -> Identify Sections & Process Studies
June/September/October 2007
Basin plans to be formally approved at next SSC meeting in
Nov 2007
Intercalibration and Data-Management protocols being
established now
First cruises - Intercalibration and IPY cruises planned for
2007/2008
Program completion - Decade-plus timescale
Timeline
SCHEMATIC (!) ocean sections for GEOTRACES
Sections
Sections will be designed to investigate regions where
targeted processes dominate trace element cycles.
Distributions reflect circulation and biogeochemistry
Much can be inferred about nutrient cycles from a basic
knowledge of ocean circulation and nutrient distribution.
AtlanticNitrate
Ability to make these measurements for TEIs
• Al traces source of Fe
• Fe distribution reflects biological uptake and regeneration
AtlanticNitrate
Unpublished data of Chris Measures and Bill Landing
Distributions reflect circulation and biogeochemistry
AtlanticNitrate
…but existing data are limited in extent
Fe (nmol/kg)
Results from CLIVAR cruises show comparable richness of
features in Fe distribution.
Atlantic Fe
SCHEMATIC (!) ocean sections for GEOTRACES
Sections
Sections will be designed to investigate regions where
targeted processes dominate trace element cycles.
The major goal of this workshop….
Identify the sections (and process
studies) required to meet the scientific
goals of the GEOTRACES programme
Provide justification and rationale for
the choice of sections
Proposed Pacific Sections
Hawaii
Tahiti
Australia
Canada
China
Japan
Korea/Japan
New Zealand
Taiwan
U.S.
Easter
Island
Keynotes (Monday)
Keynote 1: “Observations and modelling the ocean Fe
cycle: Role in the carbon cycle and state of
understanding”
Ed Boyle (MIT, USA)
Keynote 2: “The importance of bioactive trace metals in the
marine environment”
Mak Saito (WHOI, USA)
Keynote 3: “Trace element and isotope proxies: constraints
on the carbon cycle”
Ros Rickaby (Oxford, UK)
Programme Logistics
Programme Logistics 1: “Intercalibration of measurements
for GEOTRACES”
Gregg Cutter (Old Dominion, USA)
Programme Logistics 2: “Data management during
GEOTRACES”
Chris Measures (Hawaii, USA)
Planned activities
Planned Activities 1: “The BONUS-GOODHOPE IPY Cruise”
Marie Boye (LEMAR, Plouzane, France)
Planned Activities 2: “AMANDES project”
Catherine Jeandel (Kiel, Germany)
Planned Activities 3: “Zero and Drake IPY Cruise”
Hein de Baar (RNRSI, Netherlands)
Planned Activities 4: “Arctic IPY activities”
Per Anderson (Swedish Museum of Natural History, Sweden)
Planned Activities 5: “Mauretania to the Brazil Basin cruise”
Martin Frank (Kiel, Germany)
Planned Activities 6: “UK SOLAS work relevant to GEOTRACES”
Eric Achterberg (National Oceanography Centre, UK)
Planned Activities 7: “German SOLAS work relevant to
GEOTRACES”
Peter Croot (Kiel, Germany)
Remainder of meeting
Keynote 4: “A GEOTRACER's perspective of the hydrography
and circulation of the Atlantic”
Bill Jenkins (WHOI, US)
Advocacy talks
These will set the agenda for the breakout groups that follow
Breakout groups
Will focus on particular regions/questions and define sections and
their justification
Plenary sessions
Will report discussion of breakout groups, and finalize plans
GEOTRACES - Scientific Steering Committee
Black Finis
Meets 16-18 December in SF.
Opportunity for input now!