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  1. Specific activities of long-lived dissolved radium (Ra-226, Ra-228), collected from U.S. Geological Survey small boat operations in the West Florida Shelf from November 2022 to March 2024. Small boat samples include surface water, bottom water, and submarine groundwaters from three well transects along Nature Coast, Indian Rocks Beach, and Venice Headlands. This project investigates how boundary sources, including rivers and submarine groundwater discharge, deliver important nutrients and metals to the coastal ecosystems of the West Florida Shelf. Here, dissolved radium isotopes have been measured to trace boundary sources of nutrients and metals entering the West Florida Shelf. 
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  2. This dataset includes the specific activities of dissolved radon-222 collected from grab samples during STING I cruise AE2305 on R/V Atlantic Explorer (February to March 2023) and STING II cruise EN704 on R/V Endeavor in the Gulf of Mexico (June to July 2023). Additional data collected from underway samples during STING II are provided in the related dataset. This project investigates how boundary sources, including rivers and submarine groundwater discharge, deliver important nutrients and metals to the coastal ecosystems of the West Florida Shelf. Here, dissolved radon-222 has been measured to trace boundary sources of nutrients and metals entering the West Florida Shelf, including submarine groundwater discharge. 
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  3. Activities of dissolved radium (Ra-223, Ra-224, Ra-226, Ra-228), Th-228, and Ac-227, collected on two cruises in the Gulf of Mexico. STING I cruise AE2305 on R/V Atlantic Explorer was deployed from February to March 2023. STING II consisted of EN704 on R/V Endeavor and U.S. Geological Survey small boat surveys and took place from June to July 2023. This project investigates how boundary sources, including rivers and submarine groundwater discharge, deliver important nutrients and metals to the coastal ecosystems of the West Florida Shelf. Here, dissolved radium and parent isotopes have been measured to trace boundary sources of nutrients and metals entering the West Florida Shelf. 
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  4. In 2021, a collaborative scientific investigation (National Science Foundation Grant Award OCE-2148989, Project 880516) was started for the purpose of quantifying shelf inventories and boundary fluxes of dissolved organic nitrogen and dissolved iron to the West Florida Shelf (WFS) to assess their role in supporting the oligotrophic WFS ecosystem. To assess the spatial and temporal variability in submarine groundwater as a boundary source to the shelf, scientists from the U.S. Geological Survey (USGS), St. Petersburg Coastal and Marine Science Center (SPCMSC) designed a marine well network (three transects of wells across different coastal regions) and conducted five sampling events over a 16-month period. For each trip, samples were collected from shallow (< 10 meters [m] water depth) offshore groundwater wells and coincidental water column stations. Samples were collected from the different water types for the determination of naturally occurring, short-lived isotopes of radium (Ra): Ra-223 (half-life, t1/2 = 11.4 days) and Ra-224 (t1/2 = 3.63 days). Identifiers for the transects and subsequent samples are two to three letter acronyms based on coastal communities or geographic features in Florida: Nature Coast near Hudson (NC); Indian Rocks Beach near Indian Rocks Beach (IRB), and Venice Headland near Venice (VH). Radium-223 and Radium-224 were absorbed onto manganese (di)oxide impregnated fibers (referred to as Mn-fibers from hereon) following exposure to seawater and the fiber was retained as the sample. The activities of Radium-223 and Radium-224 absorbed onto the Mn-fibers were measured on a set of Radium Delayed Coincidence Counters (RaDeCC) as outlined originally in Moore and Arnold (1996) and updated for procedural recommendations by Diego-Feliu and others (2020). Data included in this data release correspond to USGS Field Activity Number (FAN) 2022-340-FA, with associated events spanning over one year (November 2022 to March 2024) and are distinguished by alternative field activity numbers (Alt FANs) of 22WFS05, 23WFS01, 23WFS02, 23WFS03, 23WFS04, 24WFS01. Samples were acquired in November 2022, January-February 2023, May-June 2023, September 2023, December 2023, and February-March 2024, respectively. Moore, W.S., and Arnold, R., 1996, Measurement of 223Ra and 224Ra in coastal waters using a delayed coincidence counter: Journal of Geophysical Research, v. 101, no. C1, p. 1321-1329, https://doi.org/10.1029/95JC03139. Note: This data release was versioned on August 13, 2025. Please see the Suggested Citation section for details. 
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