Dataset
British Antarctic Survey Automatic Weather Station (AWS) data from the Orographic Flows and the Climate of the Antarctic Peninsula (OFCAP) project (2011)
Abstract
Ground-based meteorological data from Automatic weather stations (AWS) were collected to observe the atmospheric flow along a transect across the Antarctic Peninsula mountains around 67 degrees south during the NERC-funded Orographic Flows and the Climate of the Antarctic Peninsula (OFCAP) project (2011). These AWS were located on the Avery Plateau, Cole Peninsula and North Adelaide Island.
Details
Previous Info: |
No news update for this record
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Previously used record identifiers: |
http://badc.nerc.ac.uk/view/badc.nerc.ac.uk__ATOM__ACTIVITY_39c56db4-3ff0-11e4-8d87-00163e251233
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Access rules: |
Public data: access to these data is available to both registered and non-registered users.
Use of these data is covered by the following licence(s): http://www.nationalarchives.gov.uk/doc/open-government-licence/version/3/ When using these data you must cite them correctly using the citation given on the CEDA Data Catalogue record. |
Data lineage: |
Data were collected and prepared by the British Antarctic Survey Automatic Weather Station team before submission to the BADC for archiving. |
File Format: |
Data availability and file format
AWS Data supplied to the BADC by the OFCAP project are stored in the OFCAP AWS data archive at the BADC. Data are publicly available but users of the data are requested to acknowledge the data providers and use the citation below Files are available in NASA Ames ASCII format BAS MASIN aircraft data and BAS radiosonde data from OFCAP are also available in OFCAP data archive. |
More Information (under review)
Ground-based Automatic weather station (AWS) data were collected on and around the Antarctic Peninsula during the NERC-funded Orographic Flows and the Climate of the Antarctic Peninsula (OFCAP) project. The Antarctic Peninsula is currently one of the most rapidly warming regions on Earth. Large environmental changes have occurred as a result of this warming, most notably the retreat and rapid disintegration of some of the floating ice shelves that fringe the Peninsula. Subsequent to the loss of ice shelves, glaciers draining the Peninsula ice sheet have accelerated, contributing to global sea level rise. The forces driving this rapid regional warming are not fully understood, but analysis of limited climatiological data from the region suggests a link between rapid summer warming on the eastern side of the Peninsula and an increase in the strength of the prevailing westerly winds. The strengthening of the westerlies has already been attributed, with some degree of confidence, to atmospheric circulation changes associated with anthropogenic forcing, particularly stratospheric ozone depletion and increases in greenhouse gases. It is thus highly probable that anthropogenic forcing is contributing to the rapid warming of the Peninsula. The OFCAP project conducted an integrated programme of field observations, analysis and modelling aimed at understanding of how the westerly winds interact with the mountains of the Antarctic Peninsula and how those interactions control the climate of the eastern side of the Peninsula. This dataset comprises of data from the month-long intensive field campaign beginning in January 2011.
During this period, atmospheric flow along a transect across the Antarctic Peninsula mountains around 67 degrees south was observed using the British Antarctic Survey (BAS) automatic weather stations at Avery Plateau, Cole Peninsula and North Adelaide Island along the line of the transect. These measurements were made in conjunction with MASIN- Twin-otter instrumented aircraft observations balloon-borne radiosondes were released from the Larsen Ice shelf camp and Rothera base on the upwind (western) and downwind (eastern) sides of the mountains. These observations were then analysed in conjunction with the results of high-resolution atmospheric model simulations in order to obtain a more complete picture of the flow across the Peninsula.
OFCAP was funded by the Natural Environment Research Council (NERC) for three years from Sept 2009 (NERC Reference: NE/G014124/1).
AWS Data supplied to the BADC by the OFCAP project are stored in the OFCAP AWS data archive at the BADC. Data are publicly available but users of the data are requested to acknowledge the data providers and use the citation below
Files are available in NASA Ames ASCII format
BAS MASIN aircraft data and BAS radiosonde data from OFCAP are also available in OFCAP data archive.
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Natural Environment Research Council, [King, J. C. ; Kirchgaessner, A.; Lachlan-Cope, T.]. British Antarctic Survey Automatic Weather Station (AWS) data from the Orographic Flows and the Climate of the Antarctic Peninsula (OFCAP) project (2011), [Internet]. NCAS British Atmospheric Data Centre, 2014, 24th September 2014. Available from doi:10.5285/3e4cdaa3-5e89-47ae-834b-34dfee248ea4
AWS Data supplied to the BADC by the OFCAP project are stored in the OFCAP AWS data archive at the BADC. Data are publicly available but users of the data are requested to acknowledge the data providers and use the citation below
Files are available in NASA Ames ASCII format
BAS MASIN aircraft data and BAS radiosonde data from OFCAP are also available in OFCAP data archive.
Related Documents
Dataset catalogue record for OFCAP data |
Citations: 1
The following citations have been automatically harvested from external sources associated with this resource where DOI tracking is possible. As such some citations may be missing from this list whilst others may not be accurate. Please contact the helpdesk to raise any issues to help refine these citation trackings.
King, J.C., Kirchgaessner, A., Bevan, S., Elvidge, A.D., Kuipers Munneke, P., Luckman, A., Orr, A., Renfrew, I.A. & van den Broeke, M.R. (2017) The Impact of Föhn Winds on Surface Energy Balance During the 2010–2011 Melt Season Over Larsen C Ice Shelf, Antarctica. Journal of Geophysical Research: Atmospheres 122. https://doi.org/10.1002/2017jd026809 https://doi.org/10.1002/2017jd026809 |
Process overview
Instrument/Platform pairings
Automatic Weather Station (AWS) | Deployed on: Cole Peninsula |
Automatic Weather Station (AWS) | Deployed on: Adelaide Island |
Automatic Weather Station (AWS) | Deployed on: Avery Plateau |
Output Description | None |
- units: None
Co-ordinate Variables
Temporal Range
2011-01-01T00:00:00
2012-01-01T00:00:00
Geographic Extent
-66.6500° |
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-67.7300° |
-63.8100° |
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-68.8800° |