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  2. Artificial seawater - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Artificial_Seawater

    Artificial seawater (abbreviated ASW) is a mixture of dissolved mineral salts (and sometimes vitamins) that simulates seawater. Artificial seawater is primarily used in marine biology and in marine and reef aquaria , and allows the easy preparation of media appropriate for marine organisms (including algae , bacteria , plants and animals ).

  3. Vienna Standard Mean Ocean Water - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Vienna_Standard_Mean_Ocean...

    Based on the results of Gonfiantini (1978), the IAEA defined the delta scale with SLAP at −55.5‰ for 18 O and −428‰ for 2 H. That is, SLAP was measured to contain approximately 5.55% less oxygen-18 and 42.8% less deuterium than does VSMOW, and these figures were used to anchor the scale at two points. [8]

  4. Seawater - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Seawater

    Seawater, or sea water, is water from a sea or ocean. On average, seawater in the world's oceans has a salinity of about 3.5% (35 g/L, 35 ppt, 600 mM). This means that every kilogram (roughly one liter by volume) of seawater has approximately 35 grams (1.2 oz) of dissolved salts (predominantly sodium ( Na +

  5. TEOS-10 - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/TEOS-10

    TEOS-10 includes the Gibbs Seawater (GSW) Oceanographic Toolbox which is available as open source software in MATLAB, Fortran, Python, C, C++, R, Julia and PHP. While TEOS-10 is generally expressed in basic SI-units, the GSW package uses input and output data in commonly used oceanographic units (such as g/kg for Absolute Salinity S A and dbar ...

  6. Salinity - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Salinity

    For practical reasons salinity is usually related to the sum of masses of a subset of these dissolved chemical constituents (so-called solution salinity), rather than to the unknown mass of salts that gave rise to this composition (an exception is when artificial seawater is created).

  7. Redfield ratio - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Redfield_ratio

    Redfield’s analysis of the empirical data led to him to discover that across and within the three oceans and Barents Sea, seawater had an N:P atomic ratio near 20:1 (later corrected to 16:1), and was very similar to the average N:P of phytoplankton. To explain this phenomenon, Redfield initially proposed two mutually non-exclusive mechanisms:

  8. Marine chemistry - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Marine_chemistry

    Marine chemistry, also known as ocean chemistry or chemical oceanography, is the study of the chemical composition and processes of the world’s oceans, including the interactions between seawater, the atmosphere, the seafloor, and marine organisms. [2]

  9. Deuterium-depleted water - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Deuterium-depleted_water

    In Vienna Standard Mean Ocean Water (VSMOW) that defines the isotopic composition of seawater, deuterium occurs at a concentration of 155.76 ppm. [5] For the SLAP (Standard Light Antarctic Precipitation) standard that determines the isotopic composition of natural water from the Antarctic, the concentration of deuterium is 89.02 ppm. [6]