Depth profiles of carbon parameters were obtained monthly from 1991 to
1994 as the first time series from the weathership station M located
in the Norwegian Sea at 66 degrees N 2 degrees E. CO2 was extracted fr
om acidified seawater by a flushing procedure, with nitrogen as the ca
rrier gas. The pure CO2 gas was measured using a manometric technique,
and the gas was further used for C-13 and C-14 measurements. The prec
ision of the dissolved inorganic carbon (DIC) was better than +/-6 par
ts per thousand. Satisfactory agreement was obtained with standard sea
water from Scripps Institution of Oceanography. The partial pressure o
f CO2 (pCO(2)) was measured in the atmosphere and surface water, begin
ning in October 1991. The most visible seasonal variation in DIG, C-13
and pCO(2) was due to the plankton bloom in the upper 50-100 m. Typic
al values for surface water in the winter were: 2.140 +/- 0.012 mmol k
g(-1) for DIG, 1.00 +/- 0.04 parts per thousand for delta(13)C and 357
+/- 15 mu atm for pCO(2), and the corresponding values in the summer
were as low as 2.04 mmol kg(-1), greater than 2,1 parts per thousand,,
and as low as 270-300 mu atm. The values for deep water are more cons
tant during the year, with DIC values of about 2.17 +/- 0.01 mmol kg(-
1), and delta(13)C values between 0.97 and 1,14 parts per thousand,. A
simple one-dimensional biological model was applied in order to inves
tigate possible short-term variability in DIC caused by the phytoplank
ton growth and depth variations of the wind-mixed layer. The simulated
seasonal pattern was in reasonable agreement with the observed data,
but there were significant temporal variations with shorter time inter
val than the monthly measurements. As a supplement to the measurements
at station M, some representative profiles of DIG, delta(13)C, Delta(
14)C, salinity and temperature from other locations in the Nordic Seas
and the North Atlantic Ocean are also presented. The results are also
compared with some data obtained (Delta(14)C) by the TTO expedition i
n 1981 and the GEOSECS expedition in 1972. The carbon profiles reflect
the stable deep water in the Greenland and Norwegian Basins, and the
relatively young bottom water just south of Iceland. (C) 1998 Elsevier
Science Ltd. All rights reserved.