Not exact matches
Thus, the data suggests that rising
seawater temperature caused by climate change has buffered against
measures for the protection of the Baltic Sea.
Prior to World War II, the most common way to
measure ocean
temperatures was dropping a bucket over the side of a ship and scooping up some
seawater and dunking a thermometer in.
If
temperature and
seawater δ18O stayed constant through time, the
measured δ18O of would be constant too.»
At first, the
seawater was sampled using a bucket, hauling it onto the ship's deck and
measuring the water
temperature with a thermometer.
pCO2 in water is a mix of
temperature, pH, bio life and total carbon (DIC) content... In general
measured by mixing
seawater with air till equilibrium and
measuring the CO2 level in the air.