390 likes | 666 Views
Ocean Circulation Deep Thermohaline currents. Density = mass/volume (gr/cm 3 ) D ( ρ ) ~(T, S). Density Layered Ocean! Surface layer – Ekman Spiral Pycnocline Layer – Geostrophic curr. Deep Ocean – Thermohaline curr. Ocean Circulation. Surface Circulation Wind Driven
E N D
Ocean Circulation Deep Thermohaline currents
Density = mass/volume (gr/cm3) D (ρ) ~(T, S)
Density Layered Ocean! Surface layer – Ekman Spiral Pycnocline Layer – Geostrophic curr. Deep Ocean – Thermohaline curr.
Ocean Circulation • Surface Circulation Wind Driven • Ekman Transport and Geostrophic Currents • Surface layer and Picnocline zone • 0 – 50,100m / 50,100m - ~1000m • Affects ~25% of total water mass • Fast (1-2 m/s)
Ocean Circulation • Surface Circulation Wind Driven • Ekman Transport and Geostrophic Currents • Surface layer and Picnocline zone • 0 – 50,100m / 50,100m - ~1000m • Affects ~25% of total water mass • Fast (1-2 m/s) • Deep Circulation Density Driven • Thermohaline Circulation • Below Picnocline zone (>~1000m) • Affects ~75% of total water mass • Slow (~ m/day)
Deep Thermohaline Circulation • T, S are CONSERVATIVE properties • TS properties attained at the surface • Change only by mixing • (Non-Conservative Properties) • O2, Nutrients • Oceans are layered according to water densities!!!
Seasonal changes of surface layer thermocline Surface seasonal thermocline Deep permanent thermocline
TS PlotsRepresent the influence of TS on density (iso-picnolines)
Example: CTD Casts Line ‘A’ T S D http://tabs.gerg.tamu.edu/gomoms/ctddata.html
Deep Thermohaline Circulation • So… where do Deep Waters Form? • TS properties attained at the surface • TS properties remain remarkably constant • TS properties only altered by water mixing
Major Water Masses – Thermohaline Circulation • Central Waters (0-1000m) • Intermediate Waters (1000-2000m) • Deep Waters (2000-5000m) • Bottom Waters (over ocean bottom)
Atlantic Deep Waters • AABW • Antarctic Atlantic Bottom Water • -1.9 oC - 34.6 o/oo (cold & “fresh”) • Forms in the Weddell Sea, during southern winter ice formation • NADW • North Atlantic Deep Water • 4 oC - 34.9 o/oo (“warm” & saline) • Forms by cooling of saline Atlantic surface waters during northern winters, in the Norwegian and Greenland Seas
Atlantic Deep Waters • AIW • Antarctic Intermediate Water • 2.2 oC - 33.8 o/oo (cold & “fresh”) • Forms in sub-polar regions, in the Antarctic Convergence zone • Extends Northward up to 25oN • (NAIW – North Atlantic Intermediate Water) • MIW • Mediterranean Intermediate Water • 11.9 oC - 35.5 o/oo (warm and very saline) • Spills from Mediterrenan over the Gibraltar Sill • Forms a tongue in the Atlantic ~1000m deep
Atlantic Surface Waters • NACW • North Atlantic Central Water • 24 oC - 36 o/oo (very warm & very saline) • Surface waters, low density