Cunningham, S.A.. 2009 RRS Discovery Cruise D334, 27 Oct-24 Nov 2008. RAPID Mooring Cruise Report. Southampton, UK, National Oceanography Centre Southampton, 189pp. (National Oceanography Centre Southampton Cruise Report 38)
Abstract
This report describes the mooring and underway operations conducted during RRS Discovery cruise
D334 between 27 October and 24 November 2008.
These mooring operations were completed as a part of the United Kingdom Natural Environment
Research Council (NERC) funded RAPID Programme to monitor the Atlantic Meridional Overturning
Circulation at 26.5°N. The primary purpose of this cruise was to service the Eastern Boundary and
Mid-Atlantic Ridge sections of the 26.5°N mooring array first deployed during RRS Discovery cruises
D277 and D278 (SOC cruise report number 53), and serviced in 2005 during RRS Charles Darwin
cruise CD177 (NOCS cruise report number 5), in 2006 on RRS Discovery cruise D304 (NOCS cruise
report number 16) and FS Poseidon cruises P343 and P345 (NOCS cruise report number 28) and in
2007 on RRS Discovery cruise D324 (NOCS cruise report number 34).
Cruise D334 started and finished in Tenerife, Spain and covered the Eastern Boundary and Mid-Atlantic
Ridge moorings deployed on D324 and P343. This cruise was the fourth annual refurbishment of the
Eastern Boundary and Mid-Atlantic Ridge sections of the mooring array. The array will be further
refined and refurbished during subsequent years.
The instruments deployed consist of a variety of current meters, bottom pressure recorders, CTD
loggers and Inverted Echosounders, which, combined with time series measurements of the Florida
Straits current and wind stress estimates, will be used to determine the strength and structure of the
MOC at 26.5°N.
(http://www.noc.soton.ac.uk/rapidmoc)
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