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Locations and mechanisms of ocean ventilation in the high-latitude North Atlantic in an eddy-permitting ocean model

Abstract:
A substantial fraction of the deep ocean is ventilated in the high-latitude North Atlantic. Consequently, the region plays a crucial role in transient climate change through the uptake of carbon dioxide and heat. However, owing to the Lagrangian nature of the process, many aspects of deep Atlantic Ocean ventilation and its representation in climate simulations remain obscure. We investigate the nature of ventilation in the high-latitude North Atlantic in an eddy-permitting numerical ocean circulation model using a comprehensive set of Lagrangian trajectory experiments. Backward-in-time trajectories from a model-defined North Atlantic Deep Water (NADW) reveal the locations of subduction from the surface mixed layer at high spatial resolution. The major fraction of NADW ventilation results from subduction in the Labrador Sea, predominantly within the boundary current (~60% of ventilated NADW volume) and a smaller fraction arising from open ocean deep convection (~25%). Subsurface transformations—due in part to the model’s parameterization of bottom-intensified mixing—facilitate NADW ventilation, such that water subducted in the boundary current ventilates all of NADW, not just the lighter density classes. There is a notable absence of ventilation arising from subduction in the Greenland–Iceland–Norwegian Seas, due to the re-entrainment of those waters as they move southward. Taken together, our results emphasize an important distinction between ventilation and dense water formation in terms of the location where each takes place, and their concurrent sensitivities. These features of NADW ventilation are explored to understand how the representation of high-latitude processes impacts properties of the deep ocean in a state-of-the-science numerical simulation.
Publication status:
Published
Peer review status:
Peer reviewed

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Publisher copy:
10.1175/jcli-d-20-0191.1

Authors


More by this author
Institution:
University of Oxford
Division:
MPLS
Department:
Earth Sciences
Role:
Author
More by this author
Institution:
University of Oxford
Division:
MPLS
Department:
Physics
Sub department:
Atmos Ocean & Planet Physics
Oxford college:
St Hugh's College
Role:
Author


Publisher:
American Meteorological Society
Journal:
Journal of Climate More from this journal
Volume:
33
Issue:
23
Pages:
10113–10131
Publication date:
2020-10-26
Acceptance date:
2020-08-27
DOI:
EISSN:
1520-0442
ISSN:
0894-8755


Language:
English
Keywords:
Pubs id:
1132293
Local pid:
pubs:1132293
Deposit date:
2020-09-15

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