Extensive preparations have made to get here: grants written, technicians hired, literally tons equipment packed and sent, crew and ship logistics finalized, scientists traveled from home to here-- all to study the Arctic.

    How do they study the Arctic? What do these scientists look at, measure, compare and contrast, talk about, ponder in quiet moments? The methods used are way cool -- like no science I have ever seen. Today the CTDA research tool that is submerged in the water to measure conductivity (salinity), temperature, and depth. (Conductivity, Temperature and Depth) team conducted a practice Rosette cast. After all the effort to get here, it is important to get it right.

    The Rosette
    Will Burt waits for permission from the Bridge to deploy the Rosette.

    If you wanted to know about the water in a pond, you could go out in a boat to various locations in the pond and take samples, using, say, a cup and your arm. Up here the pond is the Arctic Ocean, our boat the Louis, the cup is the Rosette, and the arm is a winch.The Rosette is an ocean sampling device about the size of a VW Bug. It has all kinds of detection and collection devices on it-- one being the Niskin bottle, 24 of them. These bottles collect sea water at specific depths. Before being out in the water, each Niskin bottle is cocked, held open with a nylon wire. The Rosette can also measure water temperature and pressure, salinity and currents. The water in each Niskin bottle can be tested for dissolved gases, nutrients, sediments-- any factor that is of interest.

    How to hook a Niskin bottle
    Mike Dempsey shows how to correctly trigger a Niskin bottle while Kenny Scozzafava looks on.

    Will it fit?
    Mike Dempsey makes sure that Waldek Walczowski's LADCP will fit through the shack door!

    The Rosette is so big and so heavy that it must be put in the water using a winch. Once in the water, it is lowered all the way down to a maximum depth. Then it is raised up slowly and, at specific intervals, each Niskin bottle is tripped closed via computer. In this way, water can be collected at different depths - giving scientists a "picture" of the Arctic ocean water column, from bottom to top.

    Putting the Rosette in
    After receiving permission from the Bridge, the Rosette is lowered into the water.

    Watch the video at the bottom of this page to see a Rosette deployment. (Note that this footage was shot at the next Rosette deployment, at 1AM CDT. Check out the light conditions!)As the Rosette gets close to the surface, scientists gather ready to draw samples. Some samples must be drawn right away because the elements in the water are very susceptible to contamination.

    Waiting for the Rosette
    Melissa Hennekes, Kristina Brown, Brian Hunt, Chad Cuss and Rick Nelson wait in the Rosette shack, ready to samples.

    The Rosette is carefully maneuvered into the shack..........

    Bringing in the Rosette
    Will Burt and Mike Dempsey and a LSSL deck hand bring the Rosette into the shack. Removing samples from the 24 bottles can take more than two hours. The shack provides shelter for the scientists.

    ....and the sampling begins!

    Gas sampling
    Nes Sutherland and Rick Nelson are the first to collect their samples because they are measuring CFC gases which are most likely to be contaminated by the air.

    After all samples are drawn, the Rosette is cleaned and checked and ready to go back in. The run-through has gone well and everyone is ready for the real thing. We will reach our first sampling station at about midnight tonight. Then, the Rosette will take a sample in another part of the ocean, and then another, and another again..........at the end of the cruise, scientists will have sort of a "3-D picture" of the Beaufort SeaThe Beaufort Sea lies to the north of Alaska and the Yukon and Northwest Territories.. They can begin to compare and contrast the amount of specific elements at different places and at different times. From these data, they can begin to understand how this most beautiful part of the world is changing.How do you think the Rosette got its name??So long, for now, from the Louis!

    Video

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    Location
    Amundsen Gulf, Arctic Ocean

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