Articles | Volume 17, issue 6
https://doi.org/10.5194/essd-17-3073-2025
https://doi.org/10.5194/essd-17-3073-2025
Data description paper
 | 
01 Jul 2025
Data description paper |  | 01 Jul 2025

Tracer-based Rapid Anthropogenic Carbon Estimation (TRACE)

Brendan R. Carter, Jörg Schwinger, Rolf Sonnerup, Andrea J. Fassbender, Jonathan D. Sharp, Larissa M. Dias, and Daniel E. Sandborn

Viewed

Total article views: 532 (including HTML, PDF, and XML)
HTML PDF XML Total Supplement BibTeX EndNote
431 82 19 532 38 21 28
  • HTML: 431
  • PDF: 82
  • XML: 19
  • Total: 532
  • Supplement: 38
  • BibTeX: 21
  • EndNote: 28
Views and downloads (calculated since 11 Dec 2024)
Cumulative views and downloads (calculated since 11 Dec 2024)

Viewed (geographical distribution)

Total article views: 532 (including HTML, PDF, and XML) Thereof 526 with geography defined and 6 with unknown origin.
Country # Views %
  • 1
1
 
 
 
 
Latest update: 01 Jul 2025
Download
Short summary
We infer ocean gas exchange and circulation from ocean tracer measurements and use this to create code to estimate the amount of carbon dioxide dissolved in the ocean that is there due to human emissions of CO2 into the atmosphere. The code works across the ocean depths for the past, present, or future from information about the location, temperature, and salinity of the seawater. We produce a data product with estimates throughout the ocean throughout the last ~300 and the next ~500 years.
Share
Altmetrics
Final-revised paper
Preprint