Arctic-Subarctic Ocean Fluxes

Arctic-Subarctic Ocean Fluxes

Author: Robert R. Dickson

Publisher: Springer Science & Business Media

Published: 2008-03-04

Total Pages: 728

ISBN-13: 1402067739

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We are only now beginning to understand the climatic impact of the remarkable events that are now occurring in subarctic waters. Researchers, however, have yet to agree upon a predictive model that links change in our northern seas to climate. This volume brings together the body of evidence needed to develop climate models that quantify the ocean exchanges through subarctic seas, measure their variability, and gauge their impact on climate.


Ocean Circulation and Climate

Ocean Circulation and Climate

Author: Janet Sprintall

Publisher: Elsevier Inc. Chapters

Published: 2013-10-22

Total Pages: 71

ISBN-13: 0128058684

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Interocean and interbasin exchanges occur at choke points of relatively limited extent and so provide natural geographic constraints for observing the variability of the global circulation. However, the complex bathymetry of interconnected straits and sills at these choke points and the many unique dynamical processes associated with interocean and interbasin exchanges provide challenges for observations and models alike. While overall the exchanges tend to reduce property gradients between and within ocean basins and marginal seas, they may also introduce contrasting thermohaline fluxes that can potentially influence the strength and stability of the meridional overturning circulation. In this chapter, the present knowledge of interocean exchange through the high-latitude Drake Passage and Agulhas system in the Southern Ocean and the low-latitude Indonesian seas is discussed. Examples of interbasin exchange from marginal seas illustrate their importance as source regions for the forcing of the circulation, or as regions where water masses are formed that modify and mark the variability in the global climate system. Finally, deep passage overflows that permit the exchange of deep and bottom waters between neighboring ocean basins, their characteristics and dynamics are reviewed.


The Nordic Seas

The Nordic Seas

Author: Burton G. Hurdle

Publisher: Springer Science & Business Media

Published: 2012-12-06

Total Pages: 788

ISBN-13: 1461580358

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" ... as soon as one has traversed the greater part of the wild sea, one comes upon such a huge quantity of ice that nowhere in the whole world has the like been known." "This ice is of a wonderful nature. It lies at times quite still, as one would expect, with openings or large fjords in it; but sometimes its movement is so strong and rapid as to equal that of a ship running before the wind, and it drifts against the wind as often as with it." Kongespeilet - 1250 A.D. ("The Mirror of Kings") Modern societies require increasing amounts influence on the water mass and on the resulting of scientific information about the environment total environment of the region; therefore, cer tain of its characteristics will necessarily be in whieh they live and work. For the seas this information must describe the air above the sea, included.


Deep water exiting the Nordic Seas: a pacemaker of North Atlantic circulation

Deep water exiting the Nordic Seas: a pacemaker of North Atlantic circulation

Author: McDonagh, Elaine

Publisher: Nordic Council of Ministers

Published: 2022-04-28

Total Pages: 12

ISBN-13: 9289373342

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Available online: https://pub.norden.org/temanord2022-533/ This project focused on the deep water exported from the southern boundary of the Nordic Seas at the Greenland-Scotland Ridge through a series of sills. These so-called overflow waters contribute to the structure and strength of the overturning circulation that is fundamental to our climate system. Further these overflow waters contribute to the deep and long-term storage of heat and carbon that reduces atmospheric increases in heat and carbon and mitigate climate change.The project brought together Nordic experts at a three-day workshop in June 2021 to assess available observations and models regarding the properties, transports and fate of the overflow waters. In addition to identifying knowledge gaps the group proposed a list of recommendations for a strategy for observations and modelling in order to improve future monitoring and understanding.


Meridional Exchanges and Mixing at the Iceland-Faroe Ridge

Meridional Exchanges and Mixing at the Iceland-Faroe Ridge

Author: Nicholas L. Beaird

Publisher:

Published: 2013

Total Pages: 147

ISBN-13:

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The Greenland-Scotland Ridge influences the exchange of warm and cold water masses between the North Atlantic and the Nordic Sea, a circulation with significant impact on global ocean circulation and climate. This study examines aspects of the exchange east of Iceland. Data from three years of intense Seaglider hydrographic surveys of the region are used. The dense overflows across the Iceland-Faroe Ridge (IFR) and Faroe Bank Channel (FBC) are investigated in Chapter 2. The flow of dense overflow on the Atlantic side of the IFR is found to be directed along-slope with speeds averaging 21.5 cm/s. The overflow/ambient interface lays parallel to the IFR topography. Mesoscale eddy deformation of the interface is generally small compared with the topographically induced slope. The mean FBC overflow transport is estimated at 1.8±0.2 Sv, and an indirect calculation produces a lower bound estimate of IFR overflow of 0.8 Sv. The dominant IFR overflow branch (mean 0.48 Sv) is at the northwestern end of the ridge, where a highly variable narrow jet along the Iceland shelf break transports dense water to the southwest. Chapter 3 outlines a method to infer dissipation of turbulent kinetic energy using Seaglider observations of finescale vertical velocity and density. The resulting Seaglider-inferred dissipation estimates compare well with observations made by a standard microstructure shear probe. Application of the method to the full set of Seaglider dives from the field campaign reveals regions of elevated dissipation and mixing which are crucial to the development of North Atlantic Deep Water (NADW) and the lower branch of the Atlantic Meridional Overturning Circulation (AMOC). A seasonal flux of fresh water across the IFR is explored in Chapter 4. Low salinity thermohaline intrusions are subducted in winter time at the Iceland Faroe Front, injecting cold, fresh water into the large volume of Atlantic Subpolar Mode Water south of the ridge. The associated heat and salt flux are comparable to previous estimates of eddy induced and intrusion driven fluxes at the front. The heat and salt flux is inconsequential relative to the total heat and salt budgets of the Nordic Seas, but is important locally.


A Study of the Large Scale Circulation and Water Mass Formation in the Nordic Seas and Arctic Ocean

A Study of the Large Scale Circulation and Water Mass Formation in the Nordic Seas and Arctic Ocean

Author: Cecilie Mauritzen

Publisher:

Published: 1993

Total Pages: 212

ISBN-13:

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In this thesis, production of dense water that feeds the dense overflows across the Greenland-Scotland Ridge has been considered A new circulation scheme is developed which is consistent with the water masses, currents and air-sea fluxes in the region, and with the important observation that the dense overflows show little or no seasonal or interannual variability. An inverse box model has been constructed that shows that the new circulation scheme is consistent with conservation statements for mass, heat and salt as well. According to the new circulation scheme the major buoyancy is lost in the North Atlantic Current, which enters the Norwegian Sea between Iceland and Scotland, and flows northward towards the Arctic Ocean and the Barents Sea. The transformation is due to a large net annual heat loss over the North Atlantic Current, combined with a long residence time (2-3 years) and a large surface area. After subduction, one branch of the North Atlantic Current enters the Arctic Ocean, is modified in hydrographic properties into those associated with the Denmark Strait Overflow Waters in the western North Atlantic, exits the Arctic Ocean in the western Fram Strait and flows with the East Greenland Current towards the Denmark Strait Another branch of the North Atlantic Current recirculates directly in the Fram Strait and flows towards the Denmark Strait with the East Greenland Current This branch will not sink to the bottom of the North Atlantic as it is less compressible than the Arctic branch. The third branch of the North Atlantic Current enters the Barents Sea, continues to lose buoyancy, and enters the Arctic Ocean at intermediate depth. This branch exits the Arctic Ocean in the western Fram Strait, circulates around the Greenland Sea, enters the Norwegian Sea, and flows towards the Faeroe-Shetland Channel. The traditional view holds that the major sources of the dense overflows are the Iceland and Greenland gyres, west of the North Atlantic Current. Aside from the finding that the new circulation scheme is more likely in terms of water mass properties, currents etc., one fundamental problem with the old scheme lies with supplying a substantial overflow. There are indications that the production of dense water in the gyres is sensitive to the highly variable surface conditions and that indeed the production tends to shut on and off. The reservoirs in the gyres are so small that they would be drained within a few years if they were to supply the overflows during a shutdown period. Production of dense water within the North Atlantic Current is less sensitive to surface conditions. The density in the gyres is gained at a temperature around freezing, whereas in the North Atlantic Current the density is gained well above freezing. Therefore a freshwater anomaly in the two domains will have different consequences for vertical · overturning: within the North Atlantic Current the freshening can be overcome by further cooling, whereas in the gyres freezing will occur and the vertical overturning will cease. The observed lack of a significant seasonal signal associated with the dense overflows is consistent with the new circulations scheme. The net annual cooling dominates the seasonal oscillation in the atmospheric heat loss for time scales comparable with the residence time of the Atlantic Water within the domain. Thus winter formation of dense water within the North Atlantic Current does not induce a seasonal signal in the transport field of the dense water.


The Nordic Seas

The Nordic Seas

Author: Helge Drange

Publisher: American Geophysical Union

Published: 2005-01-14

Total Pages: 366

ISBN-13: 0875904238

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Published by the American Geophysical Union as part of the Geophysical Monograph Series, Volume 158. The world's largest positive temperature deviation from zonal mean temperatures lies within the realm of the Nordic Seas, comprising bodies of water variously referred to as the Norwegian Sea, the Iceland Sea, and the Greenland Sea. Its role as a mixing cauldron for waters entering from the North Atlantic and the Arctic Oceans, and its function as a major source of deep and abyss water, make our understanding of the Nordic Seas a crucial element in advancing the knowledge of climate dynamics in the Northern Hemisphere. In this context, its small extent (covering only 0.75% of the area of the world's oceans) and its unique location, which allows for accessibility and detailed exploration, are of special significance. The current book speaks to that significance specifically and also to assessing the region's present and future response to, and influence on, global climate change. It is the first such work since B. G. Hurdle's groundbreaking The Nordic Seas (published in 1986).


Atlantic Water in the Nordic Seas

Atlantic Water in the Nordic Seas

Author: Waldemar Walczowski

Publisher: Springer Science & Business Media

Published: 2013-11-19

Total Pages: 188

ISBN-13: 3319012797

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The book presents a wide description of hydrographic conditions in the studied area of the Norwegian and Greenland Seas. Variability of the Atlantic Water properties have been presented on the basis of time series obtained from oceanographic measurements performed each summer from 2000 to 2007 by the Institute of Oceanology Polish Academy of Sciences. The warming observed in that period has been described in detail as well as cooling of the Atlantic Water flowing towards the Fram Strait in 2007. Furthermore, concepts regarding multi-branch structure of the West Spitsbergen Current have been presented, types of flows in individual branches as well as variability of the flows. Description of the structure, transports and variability of the sea currents is based mostly on hydrographic measurements and baroclinic calculations. The results confirm a leading role of the ocean in climate shaping and acknowledges the importance of the Thermohaline Circulation for the climate.