project

IMOS - Deep Water Moorings - Deep Water Arrays (DA) Sub-facility, East Australian deep water array, East Australian Current 1 Mooring (EAC1) Platform

Research Project

Researchers: Sloyan, Bernadette (Principal investigator) ,  Sloyan, Bernadette (Principal investigator) ,  AODN Data Manager (Point of contact, Distributes) ,  Data Officer (Point of contact, Distributes) ,  Data Officer (Point of contact, Distributes)

Brief description The EAC1 deep water mooring was deployed in April 2012 at (-27.31 S, 153.98 E) off the Queensland coast, near Brisbane, Australia. The mooring was recovered in August 2013 and the array decommissioned, and a newly configured array (with new moorings) was redeployed in May 2015, and then subsequently decommissioned in July 2022. Instrumentation on the mooring includes 75kHz Acoustic Doppler Current Profilers (Long Ranger ADCPs), Seabird SBE37SMPs, temperature loggers (Star Oddi, Starmon Mini) and discrete current meters (Aquadopp 6000). The mooring will collect a time series of full-depth profiles of water velocity and discrete temperature and salinity measurements. The array will consist of 9 current meter and property moorings extending eastward from the Queensland Coastal Node shelf mooring array near Brisbane to the deep ocean. The moorings will be at 500-600 m intervals across the Continental Slope and increasing to 800-1000 m in the deep ocean. The East Australian Current (EAC) is the major western boundary current of the south Pacific Ocean. It plays a critical role in the ocean re-distribution of global heat from the equator to the midand- high latitudes. The EAC is relatively stable north of Brisbane, but as the current moves south 2-3 large eddies are pinched off every year. These eddies frequently move onto the continental shelf and close inshore and influence the local circulation patterns. At prominent coastal features the EAC moves away from the coast, driving upwelling which draws nutrient-rich water from a depth of 200-m or more.

Lineage Maintenance and Update Frequency: asNeeded

Notes Credit
Australia’s Integrated Marine Observing System (IMOS) is enabled by the National Collaborative Research Infrastructure Strategy (NCRIS). It is operated by a consortium of institutions as an unincorporated joint venture, with the University of Tasmania as Lead Agent.

Click to explore relationships graph

153.98,-27.31

153.98,-27.31

text: westlimit=153.98; southlimit=-27.31; eastlimit=153.98; northlimit=-27.31

text: uplimit=1649; downlimit=0

Identifiers
  • global : b86af85a-06de-42ab-9a74-0b19579863ea
Viewed: [[ro.stat.viewed]]

Licence & Rights

OPEN Creative Commons Attribution 4.0 International License View details

Rights Statement

Data, products and services from IMOS are provided "as is" without any warranty as to fitness for a particular purpose.

Licence

Licence

Rights Statement

https://licensebuttons.net/l/by/4.0/88x31.png

Rights Statement

WWW:LINK-1.0-http--related

Rights Statement

License Graphic

Rights Statement

Creative Commons Attribution 4.0 International License

Rights Statement

http://creativecommons.org/international/

Rights Statement

WWW:LINK-1.0-http--related

Rights Statement

WWW:LINK-1.0-http--related

Rights Statement

License Text

Rights Statement

The citation in a list of references is: "IMOS [year-of-data-download], [Title], [data-access-URL], accessed [date-of-access]."

Rights Statement

Any users of IMOS data are required to clearly acknowledge the source of the material derived from IMOS in the format: "Data was sourced from Australia’s Integrated Marine Observing System (IMOS) – IMOS is enabled by the National Collaborative Research Infrastructure strategy (NCRIS)." If relevant, also credit other organisations involved in collection of this particular datastream (as listed in 'credit' in the metadata record).

Licence

Creative Commons Attribution 4.0 International License

Access rights