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Dive into the research topics where Dana Greeley is active.

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Featured researches published by Dana Greeley.


Deep-sea Research Part Ii-topical Studies in Oceanography | 2001

Consistency and synthesis of Pacific Ocean CO2 survey data

Marilyn F. Lamb; Christopher L. Sabine; Richard A. Feely; R. Wanninkhof; Robert M. Key; Gregory C. Johnson; Frank J. Millero; Kitack Lee; T.-H. Peng; Alexander Kozyr; John L. Bullister; Dana Greeley; Robert H. Byrne; David W. Chipman; Andrew G. Dickson; Catherine Goyet; Peter R. Guenther; Masayoshi Ishii; Kenneth M. Johnson; Charles D. Keeling; Tsueno Ono; K. Shitashima; Bronte Tilbrook; Taro Takahashi; Douglas W.R. Wallace; Yutaka W. Watanabe; Christopher D. Winn; C. S. Wong

Between 1991 and 1999, carbon measurements were made on twenty-five WOCE/JGOFS/OACES cruises in the Pacific Ocean. Investigators from 15 different laboratories and four countries analyzed at least two of the four measurable ocean carbon parameters (DIC, TAlk, fCO2, and pH) on almost all cruises. The goal of this work is to assess the quality of the Pacific carbon survey data and to make recommendations for generating a unified data set that is consistent between cruises. Several different lines of evidence were used to examine the consistency, including comparison of calibration techniques, results from certified reference material analyses, precision of at-sea replicate analyses, agreement between shipboard analyses and replicate shore based analyses, comparison of deep water values at locations where two or more cruises overlapped or crossed, consistency with other hydrographic parameters, and internal consistency with multiple carbon parameter measurements. With the adjustments proposed here, the data can be combined to generate a Pacific Ocean data set, with over 36,000 unique sample locations analyzed for at least two carbon parameters in most cases. The best data coverage was for DIC, which has an estimated overall accuracy of ∼3 μmol kg−1. TAlk, the second most common carbon parameter analyzed, had an estimated overall accuracy of ∼5 μmol kg−1. To obtain additional details on this study, including detailed crossover plots and information on the availability of the compiled, adjusted data set, visit the Global Data Analysis Project web site at: http://cdiac.esd.ornl.gov/oceans/glodap.


Global Biogeochemical Cycles | 2015

Climatological distribution of aragonite saturation state in the global oceans

Li-Qing Jiang; Richard A. Feely; B. R. Carter; Dana Greeley; Dwight K. Gledhill; Krisa M. Arzayus

Aragonite saturation state (Ωarag) in surface and subsurface waters of the global oceans was calculated from up-to-date (through the year of 2012) ocean station dissolved inorganic carbon (DIC) and total alkalinity (TA) data. Surface Ωarag in the open ocean was always supersaturated (Ω > 1), ranging between 1.1 and 4.2. It was above 2.0 (2.0–4.2) between 40°N and 40°S but decreased toward higher latitude to below 1.5 in polar areas. The influences of water temperature on the TA/DIC ratio, combined with the temperature effects on inorganic carbon equilibrium and apparent solubility product (K′sp), explain the latitudinal differences in surface Ωarag. Vertically, Ωarag was highest in the surface mixed layer. Higher hydrostatic pressure, lower water temperature, and more CO2 buildup from biological activity in the absence of air-sea gas exchange helped maintain lower Ωarag in the deep ocean. Below the thermocline, aerobic decomposition of organic matter along the pathway of global thermohaline circulation played an important role in controlling Ωarag distributions. Seasonally, surface Ωarag above 30° latitudes was about 0.06 to 0.55 higher during warmer months than during colder months in the open-ocean waters of both hemispheres. Decadal changes of Ωarag in the Atlantic and Pacific Oceans showed that Ωarag in waters shallower than 100 m depth decreased by 0.10 ± 0.09 (−0.40 ± 0.37% yr−1) on average from the decade spanning 1989–1998 to the decade spanning 1998–2010.


Global Biogeochemical Cycles | 2002

In situ calcium carbonate dissolution in the Pacific Ocean

Richard A. Feely; Christopher L. Sabine; Kitack Lee; Frank J. Millero; Marilyn F. Lamb; Dana Greeley; John L. Bullister; Robert M. Key; T.-H. Peng; Alexander Kozyr; Tsueno Ono; C. S. Wong


Journal of Geophysical Research | 2008

Decadal changes in Pacific carbon

Christopher L. Sabine; Richard A. Feely; Frank J. Millero; Andrew G. Dickson; Chris Langdon; Sabine Mecking; Dana Greeley


Global Biogeochemical Cycles | 2002

Inorganic carbon in the Indian Ocean: Distribution and dissolution processes

Christopher L. Sabine; Robert M. Key; Richard A. Feely; Dana Greeley


Global Biogeochemical Cycles | 2012

Decadal changes in the aragonite and calcite saturation state of the Pacific Ocean

Richard A. Feely; Christopher L. Sabine; Robert H. Byrne; Frank J. Millero; Andrew G. Dickson; Rik Wanninkhof; Akihiko Murata; Lisa A. Miller; Dana Greeley


Journal of Oceanography | 2004

Oxygen Utilization and Organic Carbon Remineralization in the Upper Water Column of the Pacific Ocean

Richard A. Feely; Christopher L. Sabine; Reiner Schlitzer; John L. Bullister; Sabine Mecking; Dana Greeley


Ecological Monographs | 2010

Global contribution of echinoderms to the marine carbon cycle: CaCO3 budget and benthic compartments

Mario Lebrato; Debora Iglesias-Rodriguez; Richard A. Feely; Dana Greeley; Daniel O.B. Jones; Nadia Suarez-Bosche; Richard S. Lampitt; Joan Enric Cartes; Darryl R. H. Green; Belinda J. Alker


Estuarine Coastal and Shelf Science | 2016

Chemical and biological impacts of ocean acidification along the west coast of North America

Richard A. Feely; Simone R. Alin; B. R. Carter; Nina Bednaršek; Burke Hales; Francis Chan; Tessa M. Hill; Brian Gaylord; Eric Sanford; Robert H. Byrne; Christopher L. Sabine; Dana Greeley; Lauren W. Juranek


Archive | 2008

A New Proxy Method for Estimating the Aragonite Saturation State of Coastal Waters Using Chemical and Hydrographic Data

Richard A. Feely; B. R. Hales; Christopher Sabine; Dana Greeley; Kitack Lee; Simone R. Alin; L. W. Juranek

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Richard A. Feely

National Oceanic and Atmospheric Administration

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Christopher L. Sabine

Pacific Marine Environmental Laboratory

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Marilyn F. Lamb

National Oceanic and Atmospheric Administration

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Rik Wanninkhof

Pacific Marine Environmental Laboratory

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John L. Bullister

National Oceanic and Atmospheric Administration

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Robert H. Byrne

Sewanee: The University of the South

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