Water
The water samples collected in Nansen bottles were transferred to polyethylene
bottles for storage until analysis. Only half of the samples from each station could be
analyzed immediately aboard ship because of limited facilities. Therefore, alternate
samples from the 12 Nansen bottles were analyzed at the time and the others were
analyzed later in the course or in the New York laboratory. All the samples from
the intermediate stations were analyzed immediately, while the surface samples
taken with each BT measurement were analyzed in port, or upon return to the
United States.
The analytical procedure suffers from poor counting statistics for most of the
samples taken. Therefore, a high degree of confidence cannot be placed in individual
samples and conclusions should be drawn only on the basis of the broad pictures involvingthe average of manysamples. Thecomplete water dataare givenin Appendices B
and C which cover the surface samples and Appendix D which covers the samples taken
at various stations. The calculations show some negative values, that is, the sample
count was less than the current background count. In all cases, these negative values
have been used in averaging.
As Miyake showed, most of the activity in sea water samples is due to material in
solution. Although the zooplankton activity appears to be 300 times the activity of sea
water per unit weight, the zooplankton organisms are present in great dilution (2 to
56g per 106 liters on Troll stations) and the Nansen bottle is a notoriously poor
sampler of zooplankton organisms. Filtration of 83 sea water samples through a

Millipore filter (0.5-4 pore size) showed on the average 9.6 percent of the activity re-

tained by the filter. This activity can probably be attributed to microphytoplankton
organisms which do not evade the Nansen bottle and appear to have a very high specific
activity.
The average surface activity along the entire track was 93 d/min/liter, with a
maximum of 450 d/min/liter. Low values were found on the return trip from Japan,
the average for 29 values between Yokosuka and Midway being 49 d/min/liter, the

Table 1
Distribution of Activity in Sea Water
Surface Samples*

Station Samples**

No, of

No. of

Stations

Values

Average

Values

Average

Region

4-15
16
17-21
22-27
28-31
32-33
34-38
39-40
41-44
45-46

109
9
46
63
48
24
54
17
45
15

49
72
118
115
107
134
146
166
45
13

144
11
60
71
48
24
60
24
48
24

64
88
95
110
72
74
89
70
45
40

North Equatorial
Transition
Dubious
North Equatorial
Counter Current
North Equatorial
Kuroshio
Cold Area
Kuroshio
Cold Area

Total

430

93

514

78

*All surface samples at stations and BT stops,
**kDepth samples to 600 m, l2 per cast,

*

*&

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