Wilson Cycles and the Opening of the North Atlantic & Norwegian – Greenland Sea

Author(s):  
C.C. Parry
1998 ◽  
Vol 180 ◽  
pp. 163-167
Author(s):  
Antoon Kuijpers ◽  
Jørn Bo Jensen ◽  
Simon R . Troelstra ◽  
And shipboard scientific party of RV Professor Logachev and RV Dana

Direct interaction between the atmosphere and the deep ocean basins takes place today only in the Southern Ocean near the Antarctic continent and in the northern extremity of the North Atlantic Ocean, notably in the Norwegian–Greenland Sea and Labrador Sea. Cooling and evaporation cause surface waters in the latter region to become dense and sink. At depth, further mixing occurs with Arctic water masses from adjacent polar shelves. Export of these water masses from the Norwegian–Greenland Sea (Norwegian Sea Overflow Water) to the North Atlantic basin occurs via two major gateways, the Denmark Strait system and the Faeroe– Shetland Channel and Faeroe Bank Channel system (e.g. Dickson et al. 1990; Fig.1). Deep convection in the Labrador Sea produces intermediate waters (Labrador Sea Water), which spreads across the North Atlantic. Deep waters thus formed in the North Atlantic (North Atlantic Deep Water) constitute an essential component of a global ‘conveyor’ belt extending from the North Atlantic via the Southern and Indian Oceans to the Pacific. Water masses return as a (warm) surface water flow. In the North Atlantic this is the Gulf Stream and the relatively warm and saline North Atlantic Current. Numerous palaeo-oceanographic studies have indicated that climatic changes in the North Atlantic region are closely related to changes in surface circulation and in the production of North Atlantic Deep Water. Abrupt shut-down of the ocean-overturning and subsequently of the conveyor belt is believed to represent a potential explanation for rapid climate deterioration at high latitudes, such as those that caused the Quaternary ice ages. Here it should be noted, that significant changes in deep convection in Greenland waters have also recently occurred. While in the Greenland Sea deep water formation over the last decade has drastically decreased, a strong increase of deep convection has simultaneously been observed in the Labrador Sea (Sy et al. 1997).


2019 ◽  
Vol 47 (2) ◽  
pp. 198-219
Author(s):  
S. N. Moshonkin ◽  
V. B. Zalesny ◽  
A. V. Gusev ◽  
V. I. Byshev

Circulation patterns characterizing the variability of the dynamics of the active ocean layer describes in the regions of Greenland and Norwegian seas, in the Subpolar Gyre of the North Atlantic based on the analysis of numerical experiments for 1948–2009 with the model of the North Atlantic and the Arctic (step 0.25°, 40 levels). Density and current velocities anomalies were determined by subtracting the average annual cycle from the realizations for 0–300 m layer. Most covariant joint distributions (modes) for the spatiotemporal fields these anomalies defined by SVD analysis and investigated. An analysis of the structural, correlation, and dispersion characteristics of the main joint modes of variability of water density and current velocities anomalies is given. The second and third modes of circulation anomalies in the north of the Greenland Sea and in the Subpolar Gyre of the North Atlantic show the possibility of stabilizing the amplitude of the variability of heat and salt transport by currents and water exchange between the Atlantic and Arctic at a certain climatic level. These phenomena are characterized by the time scale from intra-monthly to six months in the north of the Greenland Sea. The change in the intensity of the anticyclonic water rotation in the Norwegian Basin balances the variability of the Atlantic Norwegian Current mass transport on a 2.5-year scale.


1892 ◽  
Vol 34 (872supp) ◽  
pp. 13940-13941
Author(s):  
Richard Beynon

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