31 Jul 2008, 6:03pm

by Layne

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Vienna Standard Mean Ocean Water

Vienna Standard Mean Ocean Water, is an isotopic water standard defined in 1968 by the International Atomic Energy Agency. Despite the somewhat misleading phrase “ocean water”, VSMOW refers to pure water H2O and does not include any salt or other substances in seawater. VSMOW serves as a reference standard for comparing hydrogen and oxygen isotope ratios, mostly in water samples. Very pure, distilled VSMOW water is also used for making high accuracy measurement of water’s physical properties and for defining laboratory standards since it is considered to be representative of “average ocean water”, in effect representing the water content of Earth.

Previously average ocean water and melted snow were used as reference points. These were further refined in the 1960s by the standardized definition of Standard Mean Ocean Water (SMOW). The U.S. National Bureau of Standards (now the NIST) created physical water standards for global use. However, the physical integrity of the U.S. standards soon came into question.

Vienna Standard Mean Ocean Water – Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

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