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Floats Reveal Unknown Ocean Pathways

Posted by Will Ramos on Friday, October 23rd, 2009 at 12:25 pm
Filed under: Discovery,News & Resources
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(Click to enlarge image) Starting in 2003, oceanographers released 76 floats off Newfoundland at depths of either 700 or 1,500 meters in the Deep Western Boundary Current (DWBC), considered the main conduit for southward-flowing water from the northern North Atlantic. They tracked the floats daily over two years using moored sound sources. (Data courtesy of Amy Bower, WHOI)

(Click to enlarge image) Starting in 2003, oceanographers released 76 floats off Newfoundland at depths of either 700 or 1,500 meters in the Deep Western Boundary Current (DWBC), considered the main conduit for southward-flowing water from the northern North Atlantic. They tracked the floats daily over two years using moored sound sources. (Data courtesy of Amy Bower, WHOI)

The North Atlantic’s circulation is more complex than previously thought

(From Oceanus) — Oceanographers have long known that the image they used to portray the oceans’ global circulation—called the Ocean Conveyor—was an oversimplification. It’s useful, but akin to describing Beethoven’s Fifth Symphony as a catchy tune.

The upper part of the Ocean Conveyor is comprised of warm surface waters from the tropics that are pulled northward along the Gulf Stream. As they head north, these waters release heat to the atmosphere, becoming colder and denser. These denser waters sink into the lower part of the conveyor and reverse direction, flowing southward along the “Deep Western Boundary Current,” which hugs the North American continental slope from Canada to the equator. To replace the waters flowing down, more Gulf Stream waters are pulled north.

Now, researchers led by physical oceanographers Amy Bower of Woods Hole Oceanographic Institution (WHOI) and Susan Lozier of Duke University have teased out new and surprising intricacies in the symphony of global ocean circulation.

In a study published May 14, 2009, in the journal Nature, they show that much of the southward flow of cold water from the Labrador Sea does not move along the Deep Western Boundary Current, but along previously unknown pathways in the interior of the North Atlantic Ocean.

(Click to enlarge image) RAFOS floats are designed to take measurements of temperature, salinity, and pressure in layers of ocean water at any depth. (Illustration by Jayne Doucette, WHOI)

(Click to enlarge image) RAFOS floats are designed to take measurements of temperature, salinity, and pressure in layers of ocean water at any depth. (Illustration by Jayne Doucette, WHOI)

“This new path is not constrained by the continental shelf—it’s more diffuse,” said Bower. “It’s a swath in the wide-open, turbulent interior of the North Atlantic and much more difficult to access and study.”

That complicates matters for climate change researchers seeking to understand the ocean circulation’s large influence on Earth’s climate.

“This finding means it is going to be more difficult to measure climate signals in the deep ocean,” Lozier said. “We thought we could just measure them in the Deep Western Boundary Current, but we really can’t.”

Lozier and Bower developed an elaborate project involving the building of 76 special Range and Fixing of Sound (RAFOS) floats by engineers at WHOI. The floats were launched into the current south of the Labrador Sea from 2003 to 2006. The ambitious program would have been prohibitively expensive without a collaboration with Eugene Colbourne of the Northwest Atlantic Fisheries Centre in St. Johns, Newfoundland. Colbourne, who regularly conducts hydrographic surveys around the Grand Banks, agreed to deploy six of the team’s RAFOS floats every three months for three years.

The RAFOS floats submerged 700 or 1,500 meters deep into a layer of cold water called Labrador Sea Water, which originally sank from the surface of the Labrador Sea. It is one constituent of the dense North Atlantic waters that sink and eventually flow south.

 

(Click to enlarge image) Susan Lozier, professor of physical oceanography at Duke University (left) and Ana Rappold, a Duke graduate student at the time, prepare to launch an expendable bathythermograph, or XBT, on a 2003 cruise aboard the research vessel Oceanus. The XBT collects measurements of water temperatures at depths within the ocean. (Photo by Jaime Palter, Duke University )

(Click to enlarge image) Susan Lozier, professor of physical oceanography at Duke University (left) and Ana Rappold, a Duke graduate student at the time, prepare to launch an expendable bathythermograph, or XBT, on a 2003 cruise aboard the research vessel Oceanus. The XBT collects measurements of water temperatures at depths within the ocean. (Photo by Jaime Palter, Duke University )

The floats drifted with the currents for two years, recording their locations as well as temperature and pressure measurements once a day. After two years, the floats returned to the surface and transmitted all their data via satellite to scientists in the lab.

 

Only 8 percent of the RAFOS floats followed the Deep Western Boundary Current, or DWBC—“a remarkably low number in light of the expectation that the DWBC is the dominant pathway for Labrador Sea Water,” the researchers wrote in Nature. About 75 percent of them “escaped” that coast-hugging deep underwater pathway and instead drifted into the open ocean before rounding the Grand Banks.

Lozier, her graduate student Stefan Gary, and German oceanographer Claus Boning also used a modeling program to simulate the launch and dispersal of more than 7,000 virtual “e-floats” from the same starting point.

“The new float observations and simulated float trajectories provide evidence that the southward interior pathway is more important for the transport of Labrador Sea Water through the subtropics than the DWBC, contrary to previous thinking,” their report concluded.

—Stephanie Murphy

The National Science Foundation supported this research.


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