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2021 ◽  
Vol 932 ◽  
Author(s):  
Cara B.G. James ◽  
Nicola Mingotti ◽  
Andrew W. Woods

We present new experiments of particle-driven turbulent plumes issuing from a constant source of dense particle-laden fluid, with buoyancy flux, $B$ , in a uniform horizontal current, $u$ . Experiments show that a turbulent, well-mixed plume develops, in which the downward vertical speed $w$ decreases with depth $z$ according to $w = 0.76 (B/uz)^{1/2}$ while the horizontal speed rapidly asymptotes to the current speed $u$ , provided that the Stokes settling speed of the particles $v<0.92 w$ . For $v > 0.92 w$ , the particles separate from the plume fluid, and their depth $z$ increases according to the simple sedimentation trajectory $\textrm {d}z/{\textrm {d}\kern0.7pt x} = v/u$ . As the particles sediment, they form clusters of particles, which lead to fluctuations in the particle load with position, but do not appear to change the time-average sedimentation speed. We explore the impact of these results for deep-sea mining, in which the fate of the plume water as well as the particles is key for assessing potential environmental impacts.


2021 ◽  
Vol 12 (1) ◽  
Author(s):  
Masahiro Minowa ◽  
Shin Sugiyama ◽  
Masato Ito ◽  
Shiori Yamane ◽  
Shigeru Aoki

AbstractBasal melting of ice shelves is considered to be the principal driver of recent ice mass loss in Antarctica. Nevertheless, in-situ oceanic data covering the extensive areas of a subshelf cavity are sparse. Here we show comprehensive structures of temperature, salinity and current measured in January 2018 through four boreholes drilled at a ~3-km-long ice shelf of Langhovde Glacier in East Antarctica. The measurements were performed in 302–12 m-thick ocean cavity beneath 234–412 m-thick ice shelf. The data indicate that Modified Warm Deep Water is transported into the grounding zone beneath a stratified buoyant plume. Water at the ice-ocean interface was warmer than the in-situ freezing point by 0.65–0.95°C, leading to a mean basal melt rate estimate of 1.42 m a−1. Our measurements indicate the existence of a density-driven water circulation in the cavity beneath the ice shelf of Langhovde Glacier, similar to that proposed for warm-ocean cavities of larger Antarctic ice shelves.


2021 ◽  
Vol 51 (4) ◽  
pp. 1113-1131 ◽  
Author(s):  
Tao Wang ◽  
Roy Barkan ◽  
James C. McWilliams ◽  
M. Jeroen Molemaker

AbstractSubmesoscale currents (SMCs), in the forms of fronts, filaments, and vortices, are studied using a high-resolution (~150 m) Regional Oceanic Modeling System (ROMS) simulation in the Mississippi River plume system. Fronts and filaments are identified by large horizontal velocity and buoyancy gradients, surface convergence, and cyclonic vertical vorticity with along-coast fronts and along-plume-edge filaments notably evident. Frontogenesis and arrest/destruction are two fundamental phases in the life cycle of fronts and filaments. In the Mississippi River plume region, the horizontal advective tendency induced by confluence and convergence plays a primary role in frontogenesis. Confluent currents sharpen preexisting horizontal buoyancy gradients and initiate frontogenesis. Once the fronts and filaments are formed and the Rossby number reaches O(1), they further evolve frontogenetically mainly by convergent secondary circulations, which can be maintained by different cross-front momentum balance regimes. Confluent motions and preexisting horizontal buoyancy gradients depend on the interaction between wind-induced Ekman transport and the spreading plume water. Consequently, the direction of wind has a significant effect on the temporal variability of SMCs, with more active SMCs generated during a coastally downwelling-favorable wind and fewer SMCs during an upwelling-favorable wind. Submesoscale instabilities (~1–3 km) play a primary role in the arrest and fragmentation of most fronts and filaments. These instabilities propagate along the fronts and filaments, and their energy conversion is a mixed barotropic–baroclinic type with horizontal-shear instabilities dominating.


2019 ◽  
Vol 15 (3) ◽  
pp. 943-955 ◽  
Author(s):  
Rodrigo da Costa Portilho-Ramos ◽  
Tainã Marcos Lima Pinho ◽  
Cristiano Mazur Chiessi ◽  
Cátia Fernandes Barbosa

Abstract. This study explores the mechanisms behind the high glacial productivity in the southern Brazilian margin (SBM) during the last 70 kyr using planktonic foraminifera assemblage and subsurface temperature information derived using the modern analogue technique. We show that enhanced glacial productivity was driven by the synergy of two mechanisms operating in different seasons: (i) enhanced productivity in the upwelling region during short austral summer events; and (ii) the persistent presence of the Plata Plume Water (PPW) due to prolonged austral winter conditions. We suggest that the upwelling systems in the southern Brazilian margin were more productive during the last glacial period due to the enhanced Si supply for diatom production by high-Si thermocline waters preformed in the Southern Ocean. We hypothesize that orbital forcing did not have a major influence on changes in upwelling during the last glacial period. However, the more frequent northward intrusions of the Plata Plume Water were modulated by austral winter insolation at 60∘ S via changes in the strength of alongshore southwesterly winds. After the Last Glacial Maximum, the reduced Si content of thermocline waters decreased upwelling productivity, while lower austral winter insolation decreased the influence of the Plata Plume Water over the southern Brazilian margin, reducing regional productivity.


2018 ◽  
Vol 217 ◽  
pp. 389-399 ◽  
Author(s):  
Guillaume Jouvet ◽  
Yvo Weidmann ◽  
Marin Kneib ◽  
Martin Detert ◽  
Julien Seguinot ◽  
...  

2018 ◽  
Vol 15 (16) ◽  
pp. 5237-5247
Author(s):  
Young-Tae Son ◽  
Jae-Hyoung Park ◽  
SungHyun Nam

Abstract. We present intensive observational data of surface chlorophyll a bloom episodes occurring over several days in the summers of 2011, 2012 and 2013, accompanying the equatorward advection of low sea surface salinity (SSS) water near the east coast of the Korean Peninsula. Time-series analysis of meteorological and oceanographic (physical and biochemical) parameter data, such as chlorophyll fluorescence (CF) from surface mooring, ocean color (chlorophyll a and total suspended sediment), sea surface height (satellite-derived) and serial hydrographic data (from in situ measurements), was used to investigate the relationship between surface bloom events and changes in seawater characteristics and currents. In the summers of the 3 years, a total of 10 bloom events (E01–E10) were identified during which the surface CF was significantly (> 2 µg L−1) enhanced over a relatively long (> 1 day) period. The bloom events in the summers of 2011 and 2012 were accompanied by low or decreasing SSS for several days to a week after heavy rainfall at upstream stations and equatorward currents. Unlike the typical 8 of the 10 events (80 %), E07 was potentially derived from the onshore advection of high CF offshore water of southern origin into the coastal zone near the mooring, whereas E10 possibly prevailed by offshore advection of high CF plume water trapped by the coastal area. Contrasting with many coastal systems, these findings indicate that event-scale productivity near the east coast of the Korean Peninsula in summer is not controlled by local blooms triggered by either nutrients or light availability, but by the equatorward and cross-shore advection of high CF plume water.


2018 ◽  
Author(s):  
Rodrigo da C. Portilho-Ramos ◽  
Tainã M. L. Pinho ◽  
Cristiano M. Chiessi ◽  
Cátia F. Barbosa

Abstract. This study explores the mechanisms behind the high glacial productivity in the southern Brazilian margin during the last 70 kyr. Therefore, we use planktonic foraminifera assemblage and subsurface temperatures derived through the Modern Analogue Technique. We show that enhanced glacial productivity was driven by the synergy of two mechanisms operating in different seasons: (i) a high productivity upwelling during short austral summer events; and (ii) the persistent presence of the Plata Plume Water due to prolonged austral winter conditions. We suggest that the upwelling systems in the southern Brazilian margin were more productive during the last glacial period due to the enhanced Si supply for diatom production through high-Si thermocline waters preformed in the Southern Ocean. We hypothesize that orbital forcing did not have a major influence on changes in upwelling during the last glacial period. However, the more frequent northward intrusions of the Plata Plume Water were modulated by austral winter insolation at 65 °S through changes in the strength of alongshore SW-winds. After the Last Glacial Maximum, the reduced Si content of thermocline waters decreased upwelling productivity, while lower austral winter insolation decreased the influence of the Plata Plume Water over the southern Brazilian margin, reducing regional productivity.


2018 ◽  
Vol 15 (8) ◽  
pp. 2551-2563 ◽  
Author(s):  
Qian P. Li ◽  
Weiwen Zhou ◽  
Yinchao Chen ◽  
Zhengchao Wu

Abstract. Due to a strong river discharge during April–June 2016, a persistent salinity front, with freshwater flushing seaward on the surface but seawater moving landward at the bottom, was formed in the coastal waters west of the Pearl River estuary (PRE) over the northern South China Sea (NSCS) shelf. Hydrographic measurements revealed that the salinity front was influenced by both the river plume and coastal upwelling. On shipboard nutrient-enrichment experiments with size-fractionation chlorophyll a measurements were taken on both sides of the front as well as in the frontal zone to diagnose the spatial variations of phytoplankton physiology across the frontal system. We also assessed the size-fractionated responses of phytoplankton to the treatment of plume water at the frontal zone and the sea side of the front. The biological impact of vertical mixing or upwelling was further examined by the response of surface phytoplankton to the addition of local bottom water. Our results suggested that there was a large variation in phytoplankton physiology on the sea side of the front, driven by dynamic nutrient fluxes, although P limitation was prevailing on the shore side of the front and at the frontal zone. The spreading of plume water at the frontal zone would directly improve the growth of microphytoplankton, while nano- and picophytoplankton growths could have become saturated at high percentages of plume water. Also, the mixing of bottom water would stimulate the growth of surface phytoplankton on both sides of the front by altering the surface N∕P ratio to make it closer to the Redfield stoichiometry. In summary, phytoplankton growth and physiology could be profoundly influenced by the physical dynamics in the frontal system during the spring–summer of 2016.


2018 ◽  
Author(s):  
Young-Tae Son ◽  
Jae-Hyoung Park ◽  
SungHyun Nam

Abstract. We present intensive observational data of surface chlorophyll-a bloom episodes occurring over several days in the summers of 2011, 2012, and 2013, accompanying the equatorward advection of low sea-surface salinity (SSS) water near the east coast of Korea. Time-series analysis of meteorological and oceanographic (physical and biochemical) parameter data, such as chlorophyll fluorescence (CF) from surface mooring, ocean color (chlorophyll a and total suspended sediment), sea surface height (satellite-derived), and serial hydrographic data (from in-situ measurements) were used to investigate the relationship between surface bloom events and changes in seawater characteristics and currents. In the summers of the three years, a total of 10 bloom events (E01–E10) were identified where the surface CF was significantly (> 2 μg/l) enhanced over a relatively long (> 1 day) period. The bloom events in the summers of 2011 and 2012 accompanied low or decreasing SSS for several days to a week after heavy rainfalls at upstream stations and equatorward currents. Unlike the typical 8 of the 10 events (80 %), E07 was potentially derived from the onshore advection of high CF offshore water of southern origin into the coastal zone near the mooring, whereas E10 is likely prevailed by offshore advection of high CF plume water trapped by the coastal area. Contrasting with many coastal systems, these findings indicate that event-scale productivity near the east coast of Korea in summer is not controlled by local blooms triggered by either nutrients or light availability, but by the equatorward and cross-shore advections of high CF plume water.


Geofluids ◽  
2018 ◽  
Vol 2018 ◽  
pp. 1-20 ◽  
Author(s):  
Zhigang Zeng ◽  
Xiaoyuan Wang ◽  
Chen-Tung Arthur Chen ◽  
Haiyan Qi

Studies of the major components of hydrothermal plumes in seafloor hydrothermal fields are critical for an improved understanding of biogeochemical cycles and the large-scale distribution of elements in the submarine environment. The composition of major components in hydrothermal plume water column samples from 25 stations has been investigated in the middle and southern Okinawa Trough. The physical and chemical properties of hydrothermal plume water in the Okinawa Trough have been affected by input of the Kuroshio current, and its influence on hydrothermal plume water from the southern Okinawa Trough to the middle Okinawa Trough is reduced. The anomalous layers of seawater in the hydrothermal plume water columns have higher K+, Ca2+, Mn2+, B3+, Ca2+/SO42-, and Mn2+/Mg2+ ratios and higher optical anomalies than other layers. The Mg2+, SO42-, Mg2+/Ca2+, and SO42-/Mn2+ ratios of the anomalous layers are lower than other layers in the hydrothermal plume water columns and are consistent with concentrations in hydrothermal vent fluids in the Okinawa Trough. This suggests that the chemical variations of hydrothermal plumes in the Tangyin hydrothermal field, like other hydrothermal fields, result in the discharge of high K+, Ca2+, and B3+ and low Mg2+ and SO42- fluid. Furthermore, element ratios (e.g., Sr2+/Ca2+, Ca2+/Cl−) in hydrothermal plume water columns were found to be similar to those in average seawater, indicating that Sr2+/Ca2+ and Ca2+/Cl− ratios of hydrothermal plumes might be useful proxies for chemical properties of seawater. The hydrothermal K+, Ca2+, Mn2+, and B3+ flux to seawater in the Okinawa Trough is about 2.62–873, 1.04–326, 1.30–76.4, and 0.293–34.7 × 106 kg per year, respectively. The heat flux is about 0.159–1,973 × 105 W, which means that roughly 0.0006% of ocean heat is supplied by seafloor hydrothermal plumes in the Okinawa Trough.


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