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Journal article

Atlantic-Pacific asymmetry in deep-water formation

Abstract:
While the Atlantic Ocean is ventilated by high-latitude deep water formation and exhibits a pole-to-pole overturning circulation, the Pacific Ocean does not. This asymmetric global overturning pattern has persisted for the past 2–3 million years, with evidence for different ventilation modes in the deeper past. In the current climate, the Atlantic-Pacific asymmetry occurs because the Atlantic is more saline, enabling deep convection. To what extent the salinity contrast between the two basins is dominated by atmospheric processes (larger net evaporation over the Atlantic) or oceanic processes (salinity transport into the Atlantic) remains an outstanding question. Numerical simulations have provided support for both mechanisms; observations of the present climate support a strong role for atmospheric processes as well as some modulation by oceanic processes. A major avenue for future work is the quantification of the various processes at play to identify which mechanisms are primary in different climate states.
Publication status:
Published
Peer review status:
Peer reviewed

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Publisher copy:
10.1146/annurev-earth-082517-010045

Authors



More from this funder
Funding agency for:
Eldevik, T
Grant:
NORTH
More from this funder
Funding agency for:
Cessi, P
McManus, J
Schneider, T
Grant:
OCE-1634128
AGS-1635019
AGS-1019211


Publisher:
Annual Reviews
Journal:
Annual Review of Earth and Planetary Sciences More from this journal
Volume:
46
Pages:
327-352
Publication date:
2018-03-15
Acceptance date:
2017-11-15
DOI:
ISSN:
1545-4495 and 0084-6597


Keywords:
Pubs id:
pubs:842357
UUID:
uuid:664e066c-be34-4ed9-9dcf-0cc705a26202
Local pid:
pubs:842357
Source identifiers:
842357
Deposit date:
2018-04-20

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