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  • IFM-GEOMAR  (1)
  • Nature Research  (1)
  • 2020-2024  (1)
  • 2010-2014  (2)
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  • 1
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    IFM-GEOMAR
    In:  IFM-GEOMAR Annual Report, 2010 . pp. 22-23.
    Publication Date: 2018-10-16
    Description: Globally averaged sea level has risen by just under 10 cm during the last 50 years as a consequence of global warming. The rise, however, is not uniform, neither in time nor in space. Natural climate fluctuations and associated changes in the ocean currents have contributed to the inhomogeneity and is an important factor which will determine the pattern of future sea level rise. While research in the past years has focused on the global-mean trend and its attribution to the melting of glaciers and the thermal expansion of sea water under global warming, attention is shifting to the geographical pattern of sea level change. This is essential for coastal impact assessments, but has not been practical yet because ocean projections from current climate models widely diverge. The improvement of regional sea level prediction requires a better understanding of the underlying dynamical causes.
    Type: Article , NonPeerReviewed
    Format: text
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  • 2
    Publication Date: 2023-11-08
    Description: Formed under low temperature – high pressure conditions vast amounts of methane hydrates are considered to be locked up in sediments of continental margins including the Arctic shelf regions[1-3]. Because the Arctic has warmed considerably during the recent decades and because climate models predict accelerated warming if global greenhouse gas emissions continue to rise [3], it is debated whether shallow Arctic hydrate deposits could be destabilized in the near future[4, 5]. Methane (CH4), a greenhouse gas with a global warming potential about 25 times higher than CO2, could be released from the melting hydrates and enter the water column and atmosphere with uncertain consequences for the environment. In a recent study, we explored Arctic bottom water temperatures and their future evolution projected by a climate model [1]. Predicted bottom water warming is spatially inhomogeneous, with strongest impact on shallow regions affected by Atlantic inflow. Within the next 100 years, the warming affects 25% of shallow and mid- depth regions (water depth 〈 600 m) containing methane hydrates. We have quantified methane release from melting hydrates using transient models resolving the change in stability zone thickness. Due to slow heat diffusion rates, the change in stability zone thickness over the next 100 years is small and methane release limited. Even if these methane emissions were to reach the atmosphere, their climatic impact would be negligible as a climate model run confirms. However, the released methane, if dissolved into the water column, may contribute to ocean acidification and oxygen depletion in the water column.
    Type: Book chapter , NonPeerReviewed
    Format: text
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  • 3
    Publication Date: 2024-02-07
    Description: Changes in the Atlantic Meridional Overturning Circulation (AMOC) represent a crucial component of Northern Hemisphere climate variability. In modelling studies decadal overturning variability has been attributed to the intensity of deep winter convection in the Labrador Sea. This linkage is challenged by transport observations at sections across the subpolar gyre. Here we report simulations with an eddy-rich ocean model which captures the observed concentration of downwelling in the northeastern Atlantic and the negligible impact of interannual variations in Labrador Sea convection during the last decade. However, the exceptionally cold winters in the Labrador Sea during the first half of the 1990s induced a positive AMOC anomaly of more than 20%, mainly by augmenting the downwelling in the northeastern North Atlantic. The remote effect of excessive Labrador Sea buoyancy forcing is related to rapid spreading of mid-depth density anomalies into the Irminger Sea and their entrainment into the deep boundary current off Greenland.
    Type: Article , PeerReviewed , info:eu-repo/semantics/article
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