Exploratory analyses of trichlorofluoromethane (F-11) in North Atlantic water columns

1978 ◽  
Vol 5 (8) ◽  
pp. 645-648 ◽  
Author(s):  
Paul M. Hammer ◽  
J. M. Hayes ◽  
W. J. Jenkins ◽  
R. B. Gagosian
2008 ◽  
Vol 41 (2) ◽  
pp. 265-277 ◽  
Author(s):  
Anne de Vernal ◽  
Claude Hillaire-Marcel

ABSTRACT Palynological and isotopic analysis in a few deep-sea cores from the Labrador Sea reveals strong environmental changes related to the Late Pleistocene glacial fluctuations over eastern Canada. On the whole, the Labrador Sea was characterized by strong exchanges between North Atlantic water masses, Arctic outflows, and meltwater discharges from Laurentide, Greenland and lnuitian ice sheets. The penetration of temperate Atlantic waters persisted throughout most of the Late Pleistocene, with a brief interruption during the Late Wisconsinan. During this glacial substage, a slight but continuous meltwater runoff from the Laurentide ice margins grounded on the northern Labrador Shelf is indicated by relatively low 18O values and low-salinity (< 30‰) dinocyst assemblages. The calving of the ice margin, the melwater outflow and the subsequent dilution of surface waters offshore Labrador probably contributed to the dispersal of floating ice and, consequently, to a southward displacement of the polar front restraining the penetration of North Atlantic waters into the Labrador Sea. The advection of southern air masses along the Laurentide ice margins, shown by pollen assemblages, was favourable to abundant precipitation and therefore, high ice accumulation rates, especially over northern Labrador during the Late Wisconsinan. The déglaciation is marked by a brief, but significant, melting event of northern Laurentide ice shortly after 17 ka. The main glacial retreat occurred after ca. 11 ka. It allowed restoration of WSW-ENE atmospheric trajectories, increased phytoplanktonic productivity, and penetration of North Atlantic water masses into the Labrador Sea.


2008 ◽  
Vol 5 (3) ◽  
pp. 507-543
Author(s):  
Y. Kasajima ◽  
T. Johannessen

Abstract. The contribution of cabbeling mixing to water mass modification in the Greenland Sea was explored from hydrographic observation across the Greenland Basin in summer 2006. Neutral surface was chosen as a reference frame, and the strength of cabbeling mixing was determined by the dianeutral velocity magnitude. Water types in the area were classified into North Atlantic Water (NAW), modified North Atlantic Water (mNAW), water from Barents Sea near Bear Island (BIW), Arctic Intermediate Water (AIW) and Deep Water (DW), and significant cabbeling-induced velocity (>1 m/day) appeared at the interfaces of these water types below the seasonal pycnocline. The mixing between BIW and NAW in the eastern periphery was the most vigorous, where mixing-induced velocity reached 7.5 m/day which accompanied NAW production of 123 m3/day through transformation of BIW. Cabbeling in the Arctic Frontal Zone was found of two types; mixing within NAW in the upper layer and mixing within mNAW in the lower layer with a maximum velocity of 3 m/day. Source waters in the central Greenland Basin were AIW and mNAW and produced a vertical velocity of 4 m/day. In the western part of the Greenland Basin, the areas of active cabbeling were widely separated and each mixing point appeared rather weak, with a maximum velocity of 2.5 m/day. The average density gain in the eastern periphery was 0.003 kg/m3 while it was 0.001 kg/m3 in the other areas, though the impact of cabbeling on the bulk buoyancy change was highest in the western Greenland Sea. The frontal areas occupied approximately 50% of the whole analysis area and the total density gain due to cabbeling mixing in the Greenland Basin as a whole was estimated as 6.7×10−4 kg/m3.


2004 ◽  
Vol 19 (2) ◽  
pp. n/a-n/a ◽  
Author(s):  
M. E. Raymo ◽  
D. W. Oppo ◽  
B. P. Flower ◽  
D. A. Hodell ◽  
J. F. McManus ◽  
...  

2001 ◽  
Vol 20 (2) ◽  
pp. 209-216 ◽  
Author(s):  
Jane O’Dwyer ◽  
Yoshie Kasajima ◽  
Ole Anders Nøst

2001 ◽  
Vol 20 (2) ◽  
pp. 209-216 ◽  
Author(s):  
Jane O'Dwyer ◽  
Yoshie Kasajima ◽  
Ole Anders Nøst

2014 ◽  
Vol 29 (3) ◽  
pp. 190-209 ◽  
Author(s):  
Geoffrey Gebbie

During the Joint Air-Sea Interaction Experiment (JASIN 1978) grids of temperature and salinity profiles were worked within an area of about 150 km x 150 km to obtain details of the mesoscale circulation around the location of the experiment in the North Rockall Trough. Data were also obtained from moored current meters and from research vessel observations in the surrounding waters. In the uppermost layers two water masses were present, North Atlantic Water from southern parts of the Rockall Trough and fresher Modified North Atlantic Water from the north and west. Beneath these an intermediate water formed by Atlantic Water in contact with Subarctic Intermediate Water was found and at greater depth distinctions could be drawn between water from the south, water with an admixture of Norwegian Sea Deep Water from the Scotland-Iceland ridges and, more sparse, water with a component of Arctic Intermediate Water from the Faroe-Shetland Channel. The patterns of circulation were found to change little between the lower depths and 200 m. An anticyclonic eddy of fresher, colder water moved westwards across the northern half of the grid at about 1.4 km day-1, the northern sector of a more saline meander expanded westwards across the southern part of the area, and smaller less well resolved circulations were found in the west. The eddy contained water of overflow origin and the meander appears to have been part of the main Atlantic to Norwegian Sea current. When inverse analysis was applied to two of the data sets to investigate choices of reference level, zero velocity at the bottom gave the only physically realistic solution. Although the necessary process of averaging the observations to data points 45 km apart obscured the resolution of smaller features, confidence in the reference level that satisfied the inverse analysis allowed classical geostrophic analysis to be performed on the full set of stations, supporting and quantifying the earlier analysis of patterns. The influence of the deeper circulation can be seen in the modification of the thermohaline structure in the seasonal thermocline and mixed layers. Boundaries between adjacent upper water masses were distorted by underlying convergences or fragmented by horizontal shears.


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