Hi Roy,

There has been a trend as you suggest, although it started a few decades ago, e.g., "silicic acid" is used instead of "silicate" in the following:

Gordon, L. I., Jennings Jr, J. C., Ross, A. A., & Krest, J. M. (1993). A suggested protocol for continuous flow automated analysis of seawater nutrients (phosphate, nitrate, nitrite and silicic acid) in the WOCE Hydrographic Program and the Joint Global Ocean Fluxes Study. WOCE Operations Manual, Part, 3(3), 91-1.

Knap, A. H., Michaels, A., Close, A. R., Ducklow, H., & Dickson, A. G. (1996). Protocols for the joint global ocean flux study (JGOFS) core measurements.

For our purposes though, both terms can be used synonymously. To avoid confusion, would you agree to the following 2nd correction to the CF Standard Name List:

(2) '"Dissolved inorganic silicon" means the sum of all dissolved silicon in solution (including silicic acid and its first dissociated anion SiO(OH)3-)' i.e., for the definition of mole_concentration_of_dissolved_inorganic_silicon_in_sea_water

I've just now replaced 'silicate' with 'its first dissociated anion SiO(OH)3-' to keep the more general sense of silicate intact. For simplicity, we may want to remove the chemical formula after the word 'anion'.

Your thoughts?

Jim

On Mon, 27 Mar 2017, Lowry, Roy K. wrote:


Many thanks James,


I like it. I had visions of tens of thousands of files needing to be edited - 
we're bringing in semantically
aware compliance checkers that require action if deprecated terms are used.


Interesting, in 36 years I have never heard an oceanographer refer to silicic 
acid - it's always been
'silicate' referring to the measurement made by the standard colorometric 
analytical technique. 


Out of curiosity I'll sound out my own organisation (UK National Oceanography 
Centre) on the usage of DIP and
DISi to see if there is any change in the viewpoint in the younger 
oceanographers.


Cheers, Roy.

_____________________________________________________________________________________________________________
From: James Orr <james....@lsce.ipsl.fr>
Sent: 25 March 2017 14:21
To: Lowry, Roy K.
Cc: John Dunne - NOAA Federal; <martin.juc...@stfc.ac.uk>; Alison Pamment; 
cf-metadata@cgd.ucar.edu
Subject: Re: [CF-metadata] Silicate vs. dissolved inorganic silicon  
Hi Roy,

I understand your concern and would agree that it would be fine to keep
the standard names but to explain what we mean by them in the
definitions.

So in response to Martin's questions, I would suggest the following
corrections in the CF Standard Name List:

(1) '"Dissolved inorganic phosphorus" means the sum of all dissolved
inorganic phosphorus in solution (including phosphate, hydrogen
phosphate, dihydrogen phosphate, and phosphoric acid)' for the
definition of
mole_concentration_of_dissolved_inorganic_phosphorus_in_sea_water, and

(2) '"Dissolved inorganic silicon" means the sum of all dissolved
silicon in solution (including silicic acid and silicate)' for the
definition of
mole_concentration_of_dissolved_inorganic_silicon_in_sea_water

By the way, although many oceanographers refer only to silicate as you
mention, many others refer only to silicic acid.  In both cases though
what is meant is the sum of both.

Best regards,

Jim

On Fri, 24 Mar 2017, Lowry, Roy K. wrote:

>
> Dear All,
>
>
> That would make no sense at all for the observational oceanographic community 
who have referred to silicate
> and phosphate for decades because all the various types of phosphate and 
silicate react to the standard
> colorometric reagents in exactly the same way. Replacing terminology in 
common usage with more pedantic
> synonyms can only result in confusion.
>
>
> So, the situation we have is that we have a technically precise Standard 
Names and Standard Names that
> reflect terminology in common usage.  One solution might be to leave all four 
Standard Names in place but
to
> clarify the definitions. In our server the pairs could be mapped as synonyms 
if Alison requests it.
>
>
> Cheers, Roy.
>
>
> Please note that I partially retired on 01/11/2015. I am now only working 7.5 
hours a week and can only
> guarantee e-mail response on Wednesdays, my day in the office. All vocabulary 
queries should be sent to
> enquir...@bodc.ac.uk. Please also use this e-mail if your requirement is 
urgent.
>
>
>
>____________________________________________________________________________________________________________
_
> From: John Dunne - NOAA Federal <john.du...@noaa.gov>
> Sent: 24 March 2017 17:14
> To: <martin.juc...@stfc.ac.uk>
> Cc: James Orr; Lowry, Roy K.; Alison Pamment; cf-metadata@cgd.ucar.edu
> Subject: Re: [CF-metadata] Silicate vs. dissolved inorganic silicon  
> Is the plan also to demote the "silicate" and "phosphate" names?  That would 
seem to make sense to me,
> consistent with Jim's points.
>
> On Fri, Mar 24, 2017 at 12:13 PM, <martin.juc...@stfc.ac.uk> wrote:
>       Dear Jim,
>
>       thanks. I think that means that we need a corrections to the 
statements, from the CF Standard
>       Name list, that:
>
>       (1) '"Dissolved inorganic phosphorus" means phosphate ions in solution' 
in the CF Standard Name
>       definition for 
mole_concentration_of_dissolved_inorganic_phosphorus_in_sea_water, and
>       (2) '"Dissolved inorganic silicon" means silicate ions in solution' in 
the definition of
>       mole_concentration_of_dissolved_inorganic_silicon_in_sea_water
>
>       regards,
>       Martin
>       ________________________________________
>       From: James Orr [james....@lsce.ipsl.fr]
>       Sent: 24 March 2017 15:46
>       To: Lowry, Roy K.
>       Cc: Juckes, Martin (STFC,RAL,RALSP); cf-metadata@cgd.ucar.edu
>       Subject: Re: [CF-metadata] Silicate vs. dissolved inorganic silicon
>
>       Dissolved inorganic phosphorus in seawater takes several forms, with
>       phosphate (P043-) being only one of them. Furthermore, PO43- is not
>       even the most abundant form at normal seawater pH. Rather it is HPO42-
>       (hydrogen phosphate). Oceanographers do often refer to phosphate but
>       what they really taking about is total dissolved inorganic phosphorus
>       (the sum of all inorganic forms).
>
>       The seawater system for dissolved inorganic silicon is simpler because
>       we only need to consider two forms: silicic acid (Si(OH)4) and silicate
>       (SiO(OH)3-). The former is more abundant than the latter in seawater.
>
>       It is best then to refer to
>       - total dissolved inorganic phosphorus rather than phosphate and
>       - total dissolved inorganic silicon rather than silicate.
>
>       For more insight see the last figure in the OMIP-BGC protocols paper
>       in the CMIP6 special issue at
>
>       http://www.geosci-model-dev-discuss.net/gmd-2016-155/
GMDD - Biogeochemical protocols and diagnostics for the ...
www.geosci-model-dev-discuss.net
Biogeochemical protocols and diagnostics for the CMIP6 Ocean Model 
Intercomparison Project (OMIP)


>
>       Cheers,
>
>       Jim
>
>       On Fri, 24 Mar 2017, Lowry, Roy K. wrote:
>
>       > Dear All,
>       >
>       >
>       > If one makes the assumption that all the silicon and phosphorus atoms 
not associated with
>       organic ligands are
>       > in a single chemical form associated with oxygen in solution then 
what Martin says is correct.
>       In my
>       > experience I have never known anybody challenge this assumption and I 
cannot think of any other
>       anions
>       > incorporating P and Si. Consequently, I would agree that whilst there 
is a theoretical semantic
>       difference
>       > between the members of each Standard Name pair I would agree that 
this could be ignored and
>       they could be
>       > considered synonyms.
>       >
>       >
>       > Note, this only holds true as these are MOLE concentrations. The MASS 
concentration of
>       inorganic phosphorus
>       > is very different from the MASS concentration of phosphate as the 
oxygen atoms have mass.
>       >
>       >
>       > If the decision is taken to take action on this then I would 
recommend that the
>       'inorganic_silicon' and
>       > 'inorganic_phosphorus' names be than ones to be converted to aliases. 
This is based on common
>       terminology
>       > usage in the oceanographic community.
>       >
>       >
>       > Cheers, Roy.
>       >
>       >
>       > Please note that I partially retired on 01/11/2015. I am now only 
working 7.5 hours a week and
>       can only
>       > guarantee e-mail response on Wednesdays, my day in the office. All 
vocabulary queries should be
>       sent to
>       > enquir...@bodc.ac.uk. Please also use this e-mail if your requirement 
is urgent.
>       >
>       >
>       >
>      
>___________________________________________________________________________________________________________
_
>       _
>       > From: CF-metadata <cf-metadata-boun...@cgd.ucar.edu> on behalf of 
martin.juc...@stfc.ac.uk
>       > <martin.juc...@stfc.ac.uk>
>       > Sent: 24 March 2017 08:48
>       > To: cf-metadata@cgd.ucar.edu
>       > Subject: [CF-metadata] Silicate vs. dissolved inorganic silicon
>       > Hello Alison, others,
>       >
>       > the standard name list includes both
>       > (1) mole_concentration_of_dissolved_inorganic_silicon_in_sea_water 
and (2)
>       > mole_concentration_of_silicate_in_sea_water
>       >
>       > The definition of the first says that "dissolved inorganic silicon" 
means silicate ions in
>       solution. Both
>       > have units of "mol m-3". It looks to me as though they are describing 
the same thing. If this
>       is true, should
>       > one be demoted to the alias of the other? If they are different, what 
is the difference?
>       >
>       > The same question applies to 
mole_concentration_of_dissolved_inorganic_phosphorus_in_sea_water
>       and
>       > mole_concentration_of_phosphate_in_sea_water.
>       >
>       > regards,
>       > Martin
>       >
>       > _______________________________________________
>       > CF-metadata mailing list
>       > CF-metadata@cgd.ucar.edu
>       > http://mailman.cgd.ucar.edu/mailman/listinfo/cf-metadata
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disclosed by NERC unless it is exempt
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>____________________________________________________________________________________________________________
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>

--
LSCE/IPSL, Laboratoire des Sciences du Climat et de l'Environnement
CEA-CNRS-UVSQ

LSCE/IPSL, CEA Saclay           http://www.ipsl.jussieu.fr/~jomce
Bat. 712 - Orme                 mailto:  james....@lsce.ipsl.fr
Point courrier 132
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to the Freedom of Information
Act 2000 and the contents of this email and any reply you make may be disclosed 
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electronic records management
system.

_____________________________________________________________________________________________________________



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CEA-CNRS-UVSQ

LSCE/IPSL, CEA Saclay           http://www.ipsl.jussieu.fr/~jomce
Bat. 712 - Orme                 mailto:  james....@lsce.ipsl.fr
Point courrier 132
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