I entered the field of oceanography in order to spend more time doing science whilst out at sea so I’m always looking for my next ocean adventure. Therefore, I was delighted to be asked to help with oxygen analysis on the RAPID cruise, which services the 15 moorings and landers that make up the RAPID array, measuring the Atlantic Meridional Ocean Circulation (AMOC). The main reason I love going on research cruises is that the one thing they have in common is that whilst the science is underway there’s very rarely a dull moment. The RAPID cruise has quite a varied schedule but a typical day often unfolded as below. Although RAPID is a mooring cruise, a couple of days started relatively early in order to release an Argo float. Argo floats are free-drifting instruments that can take vertical profiles of temperature and salinity every 10 days for up to 10 years and beam their data straight to on online database ( http://www.argo.ucsd.edu/ ). There are currently ~3800 of these fl...
Expedition JC192 of the RRS James Cook in the North Atlantic Ocean