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  • 1
    Publication Date: 2024-02-27
    Keywords: Calculated; CTD, Seabird; CTD, Sea-Bird SBE 911plus; CTD-R; CTD-yoyo; Date/Time of event; Density, sigma-theta (0); DEPTH, water; Elevation of event; Event label; Latitude of event; Longitude of event; Maria S. Merian; MSM09/1; MSM09/1_342-1; MSM09/1_343-1; MSM09/1_344-1; MSM09/1_345-1; MSM09/1_346-1; MSM09/1_347-1; MSM09/1_348-1; MSM09/1_349-1; MSM09/1_350-1; MSM09/1_351-1; MSM09/1_352-1; MSM09/1_353-1; MSM09/1_354-1; MSM09/1_355-1; MSM09/1_356-1; MSM09/1_357-1; MSM09/1_358-1; MSM09/1_359-1; MSM09/1_360-1; MSM09/1_362-1; MSM09/1_363-1; MSM09/1_364-1; MSM09/1_365-1; MSM09/1_365-2; MSM09/1_366-1; MSM09/1_366-2; MSM09/1_367-1; MSM09/1_368-1; MSM09/1_369-1; MSM09/1_370-1; MSM09/1_371-1; MSM09/1_372-1; MSM09/1_373-1; MSM09/1_376-1; MSM09/1_377-1; MSM09/1_378-1; MSM09/1_380-1; MSM09/1_381-1; MSM09/1_382-1; MSM09/1_383-1; MSM09/1_384-1; MSM09/1_385-1; MSM09/1_386-1; MSM09/1_387-1; MSM09/1_388-1; MSM09/1_389-1; MSM09/1_390-1; MSM09/1_391-1; MSM09/1_392-1; MSM09/1_393-1; MSM09/1_394-1; MSM09/1_395-1; MSM09/1_396-1; MSM09/1_397-1; MSM09/1_401-1; MSM09/1_401-10; MSM09/1_401-11; MSM09/1_401-12; MSM09/1_401-2; MSM09/1_401-3; MSM09/1_401-4; MSM09/1_401-5; MSM09/1_401-6; MSM09/1_401-7; MSM09/1_401-8; MSM09/1_401-9; MSM09/1_402-1; MSM09/1_402-2; MSM09/1_402-3; MSM09/1_402-4; MSM09/1_402-5; MSM09/1_403-1; MSM09/1_404-1; MSM09/1_405-1; MSM09/1_406-1; MSM09/1_407-1; MSM09/1_408-1; MSM09/1_409-1; MSM09/1_410-1; MSM09/1_411-1; MSM09/1_412-1; MSM09/1_413-1; MSM09/1_414-1; Pressure, water; Salinity; South Atlantic Ocean; Temperature, water; Temperature, water, potential; Yoyo-CTD
    Type: Dataset
    Format: text/tab-separated-values, 1348730 data points
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  • 2
    Publication Date: 2023-01-31
    Description: Vast amounts of methane hydrates are potentially stored in sediments along the continental margins, owing their stability to low temperature – high pressure conditions. Global warming could destabilize these hydrates and cause a release of methane (CH 4) into the water column and possibly the atmosphere. Since the Arctic has and will be warmed considerably, Arctic bottom water temperatures and their future evolution projected by a climate model were analyzed. The resulting warming is spatially inhomogeneous, with the strongest impact on shallow regions affected by Atlantic inflow. Within the next 100 years, the warming affects 25% of shallow and mid-depth regions containing methane hydrates. Release of methane from melting hydrates in these areas could enhance ocean acidification and oxygen depletion in the water column. The impact of methane release on global warming, however, would not be significant within the considered time span.
    Type: Article , PeerReviewed
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  • 3
    Publication Date: 2023-01-31
    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, 2]. 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, it is debated whether shallow Arctic hydrate deposits could be destabilized in the near future [3, 4]. 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. Here we present the results of a recent comprehensive study of the future fate of Arctic methane hydrates [5]. Our multi-disciplinary analysis provides a closer look into regional developments of submarine Arctic gas hydrate deposits under future global warming scenarios and reveals where and over which time scales gas hydrates could be destabilized and affect oceanic pH, oxygen, and atmospheric methane. Arctic bottom water temperatures and their future evolution are projected by a climate model. 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. [1]Hester, K.C. and P.G. Brewer, Clathrate Hydrates in Nature. Annual Review of Marine Science, 2009. 1: p. 303-327. [2]Buffett, B.A. and D. Archer, Global inventory of methane clathrate: Sensitivity to changes in the deep ocean. Earth and Planetary Science Letters, 2004. 227: p. 185 - 199. [3]Reagan, M.T. and G.J. Moridis, Oceanic gas hydrate instability and dissociation under climate change scenarios. 2007. 34: p. L22709. [4]Kerr, R.A., 'Arctic Armageddon'Needs More Science, Less Hype. Science, 2010. 329: p. 620. [5]Biastoch, A., et al., Rising Artic ocean temperatures cause gas hydrate destabilization and ocean acidification. Geophysical Research Letters, 2011. 38(L08602).
    Type: Conference or Workshop Item , NonPeerReviewed
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  • 4
    Publication Date: 2019-09-23
    Description: Understanding the causes of the observed expansion of tropical ocean's oxygen minimum zones (OMZs) is hampered by large biases in the representation of oxygen distribution in climate models, pointing to incorrectly represented mechanisms. Here we assess the oxygen budget in a global biogeochemical circulation model, focusing on the Atlantic Ocean. While a coarse (0.5°) configuration displays the common bias of too large and too intense OMZs, the oxygen concentration in an eddying (0.1°) configuration is higher and closer to observations. This improvement is traced to a stronger oxygen supply by a more realistic representation of the equatorial and off-equatorial undercurrents, outweighing the concurrent increase in oxygen consumption associated with the stronger nutrient supply. The sensitivity of the eastern tropical Atlantic oxygen budget to the equatorial current intensity suggests that temporal changes in the eastward oxygen transport from the well-oxygenated western boundary region might partly explain variations in the OMZs.
    Type: Article , PeerReviewed
    Format: text
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  • 5
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    AGU (American Geophysical Union) | Wiley
    In:  Geophysical Research Letters, 41 (11). pp. 3972-3978.
    Publication Date: 2019-09-23
    Description: The abyssal warming around Antarctica is one of the most prominent multidecadal signals of change in the global ocean. Here we investigate its dynamical impacts on the Atlantic Meridional Overturning Circulation (AMOC) by performing a set of experiments with the ocean-sea ice model NEMO-LIM2 at 1/2 degrees horizontal resolution. The simulations suggest that the ongoing warming of Antarctic Bottom Water (AABW), already affecting much of the Southern Hemisphere with a rate of up to 0.05 degrees C decade(-1), has important implications for the large-scale meridional overturning circulation in the Atlantic Ocean. While the abyssal northward flow of AABW is weakening, we find the upper AMOC cell to progressively strengthen by 5-10% in response to deep density changes in the South Atlantic. The simulations suggest that the AABW-induced strengthening of the AMOC is already extending into the subtropical North Atlantic, implying that the process may counteract the projected decrease of the AMOC in the next decades.
    Type: Article , PeerReviewed
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  • 6
    Publication Date: 2020-02-18
    Description: All climate models predict a freshening of the North Atlantic at high latitude that may induce an abrupt change of the Atlantic Meridional Overturning Circulation (hereafter AMOC) if it resides in the bistable regime, where both a strong and a weak state coexist. The latter remains uncertain as there is no consensus among observations and ocean reanalyses, where the AMOC is bistable, versus most climate models that reproduce a mono-stable strong AMOC. A series of four hindcast simulations of the global ocean at 1/12° resolution, which is presently unique, are used to diagnose freshwater transport by the AMOC in the South Atlantic, an indicator of AMOC bistability. In all simulations, the AMOC resides in the bistable regime: it exports freshwater southward in the South Atlantic, implying a positive salt advection feedback that would act to amplify a decreasing trend in subarctic deep water formation as projected in climate scenarios.
    Type: Article , PeerReviewed , info:eu-repo/semantics/article
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  • 7
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    AGU (American Geophysical Union) | Wiley
    In:  Journal of Geophysical Research: Oceans, 119 (9). pp. 6221-6237.
    Publication Date: 2019-09-23
    Description: Previous studies have shown that ENSO's anomalous equatorial winds, including the observed southward shift of zonal winds that occurs around the event peak, can be reconstructed with the first two Empirical Orthogonal Functions (EOFs) of equatorial region wind stresses. Using a high-resolution ocean general circulation model, we investigate the effect of these two EOFs on changes in warm water volume (WWV), interhemispheric mass transports, and Indonesian Throughflow (ITF). Wind stress anomalies associated with the first EOF produce changes in WWV that are dynamically consistent with the conceptual recharge oscillator paradigm. The ITF is found to heavily damp these WWV changes, reducing their variance by half. Wind stress anomalies associated with the second EOF, which depicts the southward wind shift, are responsible for WWV changes that are of comparable magnitude to those driven by the first mode. The southward wind shift is also responsible for the majority of the observed interhemispheric upper ocean mass exchanges. These winds transfer mass between the Northern and the Southern Hemisphere during El Niño events. Whilst water is transferred in the opposite direction during La Niña events, the magnitude of this exchange is roughly half of that seen during El Niño events. Thus, the discharging of WWV during El Niño events is meridionally asymmetric, while the WWV recharging during a La Niña event is largely symmetric. The inclusion of the southward wind shift is also shown to allow ENSO to exchange mass with much higher latitudes than that allowed by the first EOF alone.
    Type: Article , PeerReviewed
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  • 8
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    AGU (American Geophysical Union)
    In:  Geophysical Research Letters, 39 (24). L24606.
    Publication Date: 2019-09-23
    Description: For more than fifty years, it has been generally accepted by oceanographers that the Deep Western Boundary Current (DWBC) is the principal conduit of recently-convected Labrador Sea Water (LSW) exported from the high-latitude North Atlantic to the equator. Supporting this supposition is observational evidence that the waters of the DWBC have consistently greater equatorward velocities, higher concentrations of passive tracers, and younger ages compared to ocean interior waters. However, recent observations and simulations of floats launched in the DWBC in the Labrador Sea show that most water parcels are quickly ejected from the DWBC and follow instead interior pathways to the subtropics. Here, we show that tracer observations from the last three decades are compatible with the existence of both DWBC and basin-interior export pathways. From analyses of observational data and model output, we find that equatorward transport in the basin interior is consistent with the large-scale vorticity balance at mid-depth. Furthermore, from the modeling analysis we show that despite higher, localized concentrations of tracer and particles in the DWBC, only 5% of particles released in the Labrador Sea are transported from the subpolar to subtropical gyre via a continuous DWBC pathway. Thus, the interior pathway is a significant contributor to LSW export. Highlights: - Lagrangian observations of Labrador Sea Water match Eulerian observations - There is deep equatorward flow in the basin interior - This interior pathway is significant compared to the pathway along the boundary
    Type: Article , PeerReviewed
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  • 9
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    AGU (American Geophysical Union) | Wiley
    In:  Geophysical Research Letters, 40 (6). pp. 1138-1143.
    Publication Date: 2020-02-18
    Description: Recent work suggests that changes of the Southern Hemisphere (SH) winds led to an increase in Agulhas leakage and a corresponding salinification of the Atlantic. Climate model projections for the 21st century predict a progressive southward migration and intensification of the SH westerlies. The potential effects on the ocean circulation of such an anthropogenic trend in wind stress are studied here with a high-resolution ocean model forced by a step-function change in SH wind stress that involves a 7% increase in westerlies strength and a 2° shift in the zero wind stress curl. The model simulation suggests a rapid dynamic adjustment of Agulhas leakage by 4.5 Sv, about a third of its original value, after a few years. The change in leakage is reflected in a concomitant change in the transport of the South Atlantic subtropical gyre, but leads only to a small increase in the Atlantic Meridional Overturning Circulation (AMOC) of O(1 Sv) after three decades. A main effect of the increasing inflow of Indian Ocean waters with potential long-term ramifications for the AMOC is the salinification and densification of upper-thermocline waters in the South Atlantic, which extends into the North Atlantic within the first three decades.
    Type: Article , PeerReviewed
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  • 10
    Publication Date: 2019-09-23
    Description: Highlights: • OGCM simulations of the AMOC are highly sensitive to the subarctic freshwater forcing. • Trends in the simulated AMOC are linked to the salinity of the DSOW. • DSOW salinity trends can be traced back to the freshwater transport by the NAC. • The NAC freshwater budget is highly affected by the salinity restoring used in OGCMs. • Modifications in the subarctic precipitation can help to minimize the restoring flux. Global ocean sea-ice models with an atmospheric forcing based on bulk formulations of the air-sea fluxes exhibit spurious trends in key flow indices like the Atlantic Meridional Overturning Circulation (AMOC), constraining their use in investigations of multi-decadal ocean variability. To identify the critical model factors affecting the temporal evolution of the AMOC on time scales of up to 60 years, a series of experiments with both eddy-permitting (0.25°) and non-eddying (0.5°) ocean-ice models has been performed, focusing on the influence of artificial choices for the freshwater forcing, in particular the restoring of sea surface salinity towards climatological values. The atmospheric forcing builds on the proposal for Coordinated Ocean-ice Reference Experiments (CORE), utilizing the refined atmospheric reanalysis products for 1948–2006 compiled by Large and Yeager. Sensitivity experiments with small variations in precipitation (within the observational uncertainty) and sea surface salinity restoring in the subarctic Atlantic produce a wide range of AMOC transports, between upward drifts to more than 22 Sv and nearly-collapsed states with less than 7 Sv, reflecting the excessive role of the salinity feedback in such simulations. In all cases the AMOC is tightly related to the density of the Denmark Strait overflow; changes in that density are governed by the salinity in the Nordic Seas; and in turn, that salinity is strongly affected by the properties of the inflowing North Atlantic water.
    Type: Article , PeerReviewed , info:eu-repo/semantics/article
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