scholarly journals Supplementary material to "Definitive evidence of the Mediterranean Outflow heterogeneity. Part 1: at the Strait of Gibraltar entrance"

Author(s):  
Claude Millot
2017 ◽  
Author(s):  
Claude Millot

Abstract. All most recent papers about the Mediterranean Outflow (MO) assume that it is homogeneous at least in the western side of the Strait of Gibraltar and that its splitting into veins in the Atlantic Ocean is due to bathymetric effects at the Strait exit while we demonstrate that proofs about the MO heterogeneity within the whole Strait have been available since the mid 1980's at least. We focus herein on data collected at the Strait entrance in 1985 (Part 1), before analyzing 1985–1986 data within the Strait (Part 2) and data collected during the MO-2009 experiment at the Strait exit (Part 3). Having demonstrated that the MO is markedly heterogeneous from the Strait entrance to the Strait exit, our three papers demonstrate that the splitting into veins is essentially a direct consequence of the sea functioning. Indeed, veins have hydrological characteristics mainly dependent on those of the intermediate and deep Mediterranean Waters (MWs) formed in both the eastern and the western basins of the Sea, as well as on those of the Atlantic Waters (AWs) that mixed in the Strait with these MWs, the bathymetry at and downstream from the Strait exit playing a negligible role. Herein, we demonstrate that four-five MWs can be clearly identified at the Strait entrance, as we previously hypothesized, moreover forming relatively thick and homogeneous superimposed layers that are much more individualized than anywhere else in the Sea. For the first time ever, we provide numerous examples of density instabilities in all these layers that clearly illustrate the processes leading to such an increased stratification at the Strait entrance. So as to motivate theoretical analyses and numerical simulations that appear to be of dramatic interest, we hypothesize that the isopycnals slope (of a few %) across the Strait within the MO itself, that is a direct consequence of both the Coriolis effect and the different outflowing or overflowing velocities of the MWs, could be the main mechanism responsible for such a layering of the MO.


Author(s):  
Jesús García-Lafuente ◽  
Antonio Sánchez-Román ◽  
Cristina Naranjo ◽  
José C. Sánchez-Garrido

2009 ◽  
Vol 114 (C10) ◽  
Author(s):  
J. García-Lafuente ◽  
J. Delgado ◽  
A. Sánchez Román ◽  
J. Soto ◽  
L. Carracedo ◽  
...  

2007 ◽  
Vol 112 (C10) ◽  
Author(s):  
J. García Lafuente ◽  
A. Sánchez Román ◽  
G. Díaz del Río ◽  
G. Sannino ◽  
J. C. Sánchez Garrido

2010 ◽  
Vol 7 (6) ◽  
pp. 2043-2058
Author(s):  
C. Millot ◽  
J. Garcia-Lafuente

Abstract. CTD time series from the HYDRO-CHANGES programme and INGRES projects have been collected simultaneously (2004–2008) on the Moroccan shelf and at the Camarinal and Espartel Sills in the strait of Gibraltar. They provide information that supports results recently obtained from the analysis of the two former time series, as well as from a reanalysis of CTD GIBEX profiles (1985–1986). The outflow of Mediterranean Waters, which does not show a clear seasonal variability before entering the strait, strongly mixes within the strait, due mainly to the internal tide, with the seasonally variable inflow of Atlantic Water. The outflow thus gets marked seasonal and fortnightly variabilities within the strait. Furthermore, since the outflow entering the strait displays marked spatial heterogeneity and long-term temporal variabilities, predicting its characteristics when in the ocean appears almost impossible.


Geology ◽  
2014 ◽  
Vol 42 (3) ◽  
pp. 227-230 ◽  
Author(s):  
F.J. Hernández-Molina ◽  
E. Llave ◽  
B. Preu ◽  
G. Ercilla ◽  
A. Fontan ◽  
...  

2017 ◽  
Author(s):  
Claude Millot

Abstract. We have demonstrated in Part 1, with only a CTD transect across the Strait at 6°05' W, that the Mediterranean Outflow (MO) was definitely heterogeneous there. A yo-yo CTD time series has also provided astounding examples of both the marked layering that the Mediterranean Waters (MWs) display on the vertical at the Strait entrance (5°43' W), i.e. just upstream from the Camarinal sills (5°45' W), as well as the tremendous instability processes occurring in all layers. We focus herein on similar data collected within the Strait at both 5°50' W and 6°05' W (downstream from the Camarinal and Espartel sills, resp.) during five campaigns of the 1985–1986 GIBEX. We first show additional transects supporting the demonstration we made at 6°05' W, and we demonstrate that the marked heterogeneity of the MO within the Strait is clearly on the horizontal; as we expected, densest (resp. lightest) MWs flow on the bottom on its left-hand (resp. right-hand) side and all MWs are juxtaposed side by side. We also demonstrate that the density range within the MO in the western side of the Strait (6°05' W) is at least 0.5 kg m−3, which is the density range, in the vicinity of the Cape St Vincent (8°30' W), of the four veins formed by the MO splitting. We show that the lightest component of the MO has started to be split as soon as Camarinal sills and sink all along the Strait. The splitting of the MO into veins is thus mainly due to its intrinsic heterogeneity, which is a direct consequence of the Sea functioning and of the mixing, within the Strait itself, of the MO with this or that type of Atlantic Waters (AWs). Therefore, the bathymetry in the Strait, and even in the Strait exit surroundings (near 6°20' W), has no major effect on the MO characteristics in the whole Ocean. We also focus on a yo-yo CTD time series collected during ~24 h at 6°05' W which shows that markedly different MWs have been passing by, clearly demonstrating that the horizontally heterogeneous MO is significantly meandering within the Strait. Finally, we confirm one of our previous results that, provided the temporal variabilities of both the MWs and the AWs are not too large, significant relationships can possibly be established between the characteristics of the MWs at the Strait extremities, or at least that the slope of the mixing lines on a q-S diagram provides significant information. Parts 1 and 2 of our trilogy must be assimilated before reading Part 3.


Ocean Science ◽  
2011 ◽  
Vol 7 (3) ◽  
pp. 421-428 ◽  
Author(s):  
C. Millot ◽  
J. Garcia-Lafuente

Abstract. CTD time series from the HYDRO-CHANGES programme and INGRES projects have been collected simultaneously (2004–2008) on the shelf of Morocco and at the sills of Camarinal and Espartel in the strait of Gibraltar. They provide information that supports results recently obtained from the analysis of the two former time series, as well as from a reanalysis of GIBEX CTD profiles (1985–1986). The outflow of Mediterranean Waters, which does not show a clear seasonal variability before entering the strait, strongly mixes within the strait, due mainly to the internal tide, with the seasonally variable inflow of Atlantic Water. The outflow thus gets marked seasonal and fortnightly variabilities within the strait. Furthermore, since the outflowing waters entering the strait display marked spatial heterogeneity and long-term temporal variabilities, accurately predicting the characteristics of the Mediterranean outflow into the North Atlantic Ocean appears almost impossible.


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