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  • 2010-2014  (2)
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  • 1
    Publication Date: 2018-02-20
    Description: We examine ocean changes in response to changes in paleogeography from the Cretaceous to present in an intermediate complexity model and in the fully coupled CCSM3 model. Greenhouse gas concentrations are kept constant to allow a focus on effects arising from changing continental configurations. We find consistent and significant geography-related Cenozoic cooling arising from the opening of Southern Ocean (SO) gateways. Both models show significant deep ocean cooling arising from tectonic evolution alone. Simulations employing continental configurations associated with greenhouse climates, namely the Turonian and the Eocene simulations, systematically exhibit warm deep ocean temperatures at elevated pCO2 close to 10 °C. In contrast, continental configurations associated with (later) icehouse climates are associated with cooler deep ocean temperatures at identical pCO2, arising from a progressive strengthening of the Antarctic Circumpolar Current. This suggests that a component of the Cenozoic benthic cooling trend recorded in oxygen isotopes could arise directly from changes in continental configuration, and so be partially decoupled from the Cenozoic greenhouse gas history. In this paper we will present our model results against the background of an extensive review of previous work on ocean gateways and additional modelling results from several other global climate models.
    Type: Article , PeerReviewed
    Format: text
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  • 2
    Publication Date: 2022-05-26
    Description: Author Posting. © Sears Foundation for Marine Research, 2010. This article is posted here by permission of Sears Foundation for Marine Research for personal use, not for redistribution. The definitive version was published in Journal of Marine Research 68 (2010): 215-236, doi:10.1357/002224010793721424.
    Description: Using a fully-implicit high-resolution two-layer quasi-geostrophic model combined with pseudo-arclength continuation methods, we perform a bifurcation analysis of double-gyre ocean flows to study their initial oscillatory instabilities. In this model, both wind- and thermally-forced flows can be represented. We demonstrate that on the branch of anti-symmetric steady-state solutions the ratio, Ω, of the flow advective speed to the long internal Rossby wave speed determines the type of oscillatory modes to first become unstable. This is the same nondimensional parameter that controls the shape of the geostrophic contours in the linear limit of the circulation. For large values of Ω, the first Hopf bifurcations correspond to the classical baroclinic modes with inter-monthly time periods arising from shear instability of the flow. For small values of Ω, the first Hopf bifurcations correspond instead to barotropic Rossby modes with shorter, monthly periods arising from mixed barotropic-baroclinic instability of the flow. By considering both a wind-forced and a thermally-forced ocean, we show that this is a robust feature that does not depend on the type of forcing driving the circulation.
    Description: NSF Grant OCE-0423975, NSF Grants OCE-042975 and OCE-0850416
    Repository Name: Woods Hole Open Access Server
    Type: Article
    Format: application/pdf
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