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Nansen and Niskin bottles
The measurement of salinity and oxygen, nutrients and tracer concentrations requires the collection of water samples from various depths. This essential task is achieved through the use of “water bottles”. The first water bottle was developed by Fritj of Nansen and is thus known as the Nansen bottle. It consists of a metal cylinder with two rotating closing mechanisms at both ends. The bottle is attached to a wire. When the bottle is lowered to desired depth it is open at both ends, so the water flows through it freely. At the depth where the water sample is to be taken the upper end of the bottle disconnects from the wire and the bottle is turned upside down. This closes the end valves and traps the sample, which can then be brought to the surface. In an “ocean graphic cast” several bottles are attached at intervals on a thin wire and lowered into the sea. When the bottles have reached the desired depth, a metal weight (“messenger”) is dropped down the wire to trigger the turning mechanism of the uppermost bottle. The same mechanism releases a new messenger from the bottle; that messenger now travels down the wire to release the second bottle, and so on until the last bottle is reached. The Nansen bottle has now widely been displace by the Niskin bottle. Based on Nansen’s idea, it incorporates two major modifications. Its cylinder is made from plastic, which eliminates chemical reaction between the bottle and the sample that may inter face with the measurement of tracers. Its closing mechanism no longer requires a turning over of the bottle; the top and bottom valves are held open by strings and closed by an elastic band. Because the Niskin bottle is fixed on the wire at two points instead of one(as is the case with the Nansen bottle) it makes it easier to increase its sample volume. Niskin bottles of different sizes are used for sample collection for various tracers. Nansen and Niskin bottles are used on conjunction with reversing thermometers. On the Nansen bottle the thermometers are mounted in a fixed frame, the reversal being achieved by the turning over of the bottle. On Niskin bottles thermometers are mounted on a rotating frame. |