Automated Author Profile

Druffel, Ellen

UC Irvine

Current S-Index

0.4

Sum of Dataset Indices for all datasets

Average Dataset Index per Dataset

0.1

Average Dataset Index per dataset

Total Datasets

5

Total datasets for this author

Average FAIR Score

15.4%

Average FAIR Score per dataset

Total Citations

0

Total citations to the author's datasets

Total Mentions

0

Total mentions of the author's datasets

S-Index Interpretation

S-Index Over Time

Cumulative Citations Over Time

Cumulative Mentions Over Time

Datasets

Radiocarbon in dissolved organic and inorganic carbon in the Arctic Ocean

Dissolved organic carbon (DOC) in the ocean is thousands of 14C years old, yet a portion of the DOC cycles on much shorter time scales (days to decades). We present 14C measurements of DOC in the Arctic Ocean and estimate that ≥8% of the DOC in the deep Eurasian Basin contains bomb 14C. While this is a limited data set, there appears to be selective loss of modern DOC in the surface and halocline waters of the open Beaufort Sea versus the Beaufort slope. At one of the Beaufort Sea stations, there is a linear relationship between DOC Δ14C values and previously measured total hydrolysable amino acid concentrations as reported by Shen et al. (2012), indicating that deep DOC contains small amounts of bioavailable DOC. The 14C data show that not all of the deep DOC is recalcitrant.

Authors

  • Druffel, Ellen
0 Citations0 Mentions15% FAIR0.1 Dataset Index
10.18739/a2fx73z4w2017

Dissolved Organic Carbon (C13 and C14) Measurements, Amundsen Basin, 2012, R/V Oden

Dissolved organic carbon (DOC) in the ocean is thousands of 14C years old, yet a portion of the DOC cycles on much shorter time scales (days to decades). We present 14C measurements of DOC in the Arctic Ocean and estimate that ≥8% of the DOC in the deep Eurasian basin contains bomb 14C. While this is a limited dataset, there appears to be selective loss of modern DOC in the surface and halocline waters of the open Beaufort Sea versus the Beaufort slope. At one of the Beaufort Sea stations, there is a linear relationship between DOC Δ14C values and previously measured total hydrolysable amino acid concentrations as reported by Shen et al. (2012), indicating that deep DOC contains small amounts of bioavailable DOC. The 14C data show that not all of the deep DOC is recalcitrant.

Authors

  • Druffel, Ellen
0 Citations0 Mentions15% FAIR0.1 Dataset Index
10.18739/a26d5pb572017

Dissolved Organic Carbon (C13 and C14) Measurements, Beaufort Sea, 2012 USCGC Healy

Dissolved organic carbon (DOC) in the ocean is thousands of 14C years old, yet a portion of the DOC cycles on much shorter time scales (days to decades). We present 14C measurements of DOC in the Arctic Ocean and estimate that ≥8% of the DOC in the deep Eurasian basin contains bomb 14C. While this is a limited dataset, there appears to be selective loss of modern DOC in the surface and halocline waters of the open Beaufort Sea versus the Beaufort slope. At one of the Beaufort Sea stations, there is a linear relationship between DOC ∆14C values and previously measured total hydrolysable amino acid concentrations as reported by Shen et al. (2012), indicating that deep DOC contains small amounts of bioavailable DOC. The 14C data show that not all of the deep DOC is recalcitrant.

Authors

  • Druffel, Ellen
0 Citations0 Mentions15% FAIR0.1 Dataset Index
10.18739/a22n4zj132017

Dissolved Organic Carbon (C13 and C14) Measurements, Beaufort Sea, 2009, CCGS Amundsen

Dissolved organic carbon (DOC) in the ocean is thousands of 14C years old, yet a portion of the DOC cycles on much shorter time scales (days to decades). We present 14C measurements of DOC in the Arctic Ocean and estimate that ≥8% of the DOC in the deep Eurasian basin contains bomb 14C. While this is a limited dataset, there appears to be selective loss of modern DOC in the surface and halocline waters of the open Beaufort Sea versus the Beaufort slope. At one of the Beaufort Sea stations, there is a linear relationship between DOC Δ14C values and previously measured total hydrolysable amino acid concentrations as reported by Shen et al. (2012), indicating that deep DOC contains small amounts of bioavailable DOC. The 14C data show that not all of the deep DOC is recalcitrant.

Authors

  • Druffel, Ellen
0 Citations0 Mentions15% FAIR0.1 Dataset Index
10.18739/a2xw47w7z2017

Radiocarbon in dissolved organic and inorganic carbon in the Arctic Ocean

Dissolved organic carbon (DOC) in the ocean is thousands of 14C years old, yet a portion of the DOC cycles on much shorter time scales (days to decades). We present 14C measurements of DOC in the Arctic Ocean and estimate that ≥8% of the DOC in the deep Eurasian Basin contains bomb 14C. While this is a limited data set, there appears to be selective loss of modern DOC in the surface and halocline waters of the open Beaufort Sea versus the Beaufort slope. At one of the Beaufort Sea stations, there is a linear relationship between DOC Δ14C values and previously measured total hydrolysable amino acid concentrations as reported by Shen et al. (2012), indicating that deep DOC contains small amounts of bioavailable DOC. The 14C data show that not all of the deep DOC is recalcitrant.

Authors

  • Druffel, Ellen
0 Citations0 Mentions15% FAIR0.1 Dataset Index
10.18739/a2c824f7z2017