An updated batch-to-batch difference table of IAPSO standard seawater (SSW) up
to P145 is proposed. The batch-to-batch difference table is based on several recent
SSW comparison experiments, including the experiments conducted independently
at the Japan Agency for Marine-Earth Science and Technology (JAMSTEC) and Woods
Hole Institute of Oceanography (WHOI) at about the same time using the same procedure.
Proposed batch-to-batch differences range from 1.2 × 10–3 to –1.9 × 10–3 with
reference to the average of those from P91 to P102. Batch-to-batch differences
from P29 to P145 with reference to the recent batches and this average over every
5 years since 1960 are also presented, together with standard deviation. This
reveals that inconsistency among batches has improved since 1980s. In particular,
the standard deviation was 0.3 × 10–3 in this decade, which is about one-half
the value reported previously and almost equal to the modern measurement precision
(0.2 × 10–3) and is withinbatch difference (<0.3 × 10–3). Proposed batch-to-batch
differences were applied to the observational results of the WOCE hydrographic
onetime section (WHP onetime) in the Indian Ocean. Average absolute salinity differences
at 14 crossover points in the Indian Ocean were slightly larger, from 1.2 × 10–3
to 1.5 × 10–3, when the batch-tobatch difference table was applied; however, when
results from the Indian, Pacific, and Atlantic Oceans were combined, application
of the batch-to-batch difference table yielded statistically acceptable salinity
differences. The table was also applied to WHP sections P1 and P17 (revisited
about 10 years after the original observations during the WOCE period) and sections
I1, I7, and I8 (visited twice by different research vessels in the same year).
In all cases, the table corrected unrealistically large salinity changes in space
and time. The results suggest that the application of the batch-to-batch table
to well-controlled salinity data such as WOCE datasets would be effective in making
the datasets more consistent in space and time.