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Atmospheric and Oceanic Circulation • Equatorial region receives more solar insolation than polar regions • Primary mechanisms for redistributing heat on the Earth – Atmospheric circulation – Oceanic circulation – Latent heat transfers Poleward Heat Transport Graedel and Crutzen- Atmospheric Change Atmosphere Troposphere8 km (poles) to 18 km (tropics) The atmosphere is heated from below Similar to Ruddiman Box 2-1- online Atmospheric Circulation • Based on simple principles 1. 2. 3. 4. 5. • Hot air rises Rising air creates low pressure at ground level Cold air sinks Sinking air creates high pressure at ground level Air flows from high pressure to low pressure regions As air rises and cools, water vapor condensesrain Atmospheric Circulation LP No rotation No land Hot air rises at the equator Cold air sinks at the poles HP HP LP Garrison, Essentials of Oceanography Atmospheric Circulation With rotation (coriolis) 3 cells/hemisphere Series of gears HP LP HP Hadley Cell Major winds: Trades (NE and SE) Westerlies Polar easterlies Intertropical Convergence Zone (ITCZ) - caloric equator - doldrums High and low pressure systems LP Similar to Ruddiman 2-16 online Atmospheric Circulation Hadley cells Subtropical High Precipitation vs. Evaporation Latent heat transport Polar frontal zone (jetstream) Ruddiman 2-16 ICTZ Atmospheric Pressure Systems ITCZ Monsoonal Circulation See Kump, Kasting and Crane 4-21 Surface Winds Surface Ocean Temperature Temperature- 3000m Ocean Circulation Structure of the ocean: Mixed Layer – stirred by wind Thermocline- rapid cooling Deep zone- constant, cold Garrison Ocean Circulation Depth to the thermocline varies with latitude and season (intensity of the wind) Stratification vs. overturning Ruddiman 2-25 online Ocean Circulation • Surface Circulation (mixed layer ~ top 100m) – Wind driven circulation – Broken up into gyres by physical boundaries • Gyres – Circular flow around the periphery of a basin Surface Ocean Circulation Garrison- note cross equatorial circ in Atlantic is missing in Ruddiman’s figure 2-21 Surface Ocean Circulation Ruddiman 2-21- online Surface Winds Ekman Spiral KKC 5-3a Energy rather than water spiraling downward Ekman Transport Similar to Ruddiman 2-22- online Surface Ocean Circulation Due to coriolis (Ekman Transport) Water tends to build up In the center of the Gyres. Sea level ~2m higher At the center of the gyre Ruddiman 2-23 online Surface Ocean Circulation Surface Ocean Circulation • Western Boundary currents – Center of “hill” offset to western margin – Water circulates around this high – Channeled, fast, strong on western boundary • Transport warm water poleward (100’s km/day) • Gulf Stream, Kuroshio Current, Brazil Current… – More diffuse, slower on eastern boundary • Transport cool water equatorward (10’s km/day) • California Current, Humbolt or Peru Current… Gulf Stream Upwelling Regions Garrison Surface Ocean Circulation • Upwelling • Mechanism for bringing cool, nutrientrich waters to the surface • Wind induced vertical movement of water leads to divergence – Coastal upwelling – Equatorial upwelling Coastal Upwelling Ekman Transport Ruddiman 2-27 (online) Equatorial Upwelling Ekman Transport Ruddiman 2-27 online Convergences and Divergences Garrison Equatorial Upwelling Ekman Transport N. Eq. Current NE Tr es d a Divergence Eq. Countercurrent ITCZ Convergence SE T S. Eq. Current Equatorial Divergence rad es Equator Vertical Motion Garrison Deep Ocean Circulation Thermohaline Circulation • Ocean is density stratified – – – – Temperature Salinity Cold and salty = dense Both properties are produced at the surface and transported into the deep ocean by downwelling at convergence zones Deep Ocean Circulation Deep Ocean Circulation • Layers with distinct densities are called water masses (identifiable by their temp and salinity) – – – – – Surface Waters Thermocline Waters Intermediate Waters Deep Waters Bottom Waters Deep Ocean Circulation • Today Deep/Bottom Waters mostly form (seasonally) in the: – North Atlantic- Norwegian-Greenland Sea • North Atlantic Deep Water (NADW)= 4°, 34.9 ppt – South Atlantic- Weddell Sea • Antarctic Bottom Water (AABW)= -0.4°, 34.66 ppt Water is cold (high latitude) and salty (salt rejection in SH, Med outflow in NH)) NADW North Atlantic Deep Water Greenland Iceland US NADW Broecker and Peng, Tracers in the Sea Norway NADW 60°N Norwegian Greenland Sea 70°N Export heat to Europe Cooled in winter Gulf Stream 8°C; 35.3 ppt NADW 4°C; 34.9 ppt Sinks Mixes (MOW) AABW Sea ice AABW Sea ice -0.5°C 34.6 ppt Intermediate Ocean Circulation • Intermediate waters form at convergences – water not cold enough or salty enough to sink to seafloor • Antarctic Intermediate Water (AAIW) 2-4°, 34.2 ppt Whole Ocean Circulation Ruddiman 2-26 (online) Whole Ocean Circulation Garrison Deep Ocean Circulation • Circumpolar Deep Water (CPW or CDW) – Below Westwind Drift wind mixes the water from the surface to seafloor – Combines AABW, NADW (AAIW, Pacific water) – ACC- “great mixmaster of the world” (Broecker) – Feeds out into deep Indian and Pacific Oceans Circumpolar Water Open University, Ocean Circulation Ocean Conveyor Belt Links: Surface and deep circulation Pinet Ocean Conveyor Belt IPCC 2001 Ocean Circulation Garrison Ocean Circulation • Intermediate and Deep Waters sink into the ocean in just a few places (downwelling) • Flow and maintain integrity throughout the oceans because of density contrasts (thermohaline circulation) • Mix upward gradually along isopycnal surfaces • Also mix upward from shallow depths by upwelling (<1000m) Ocean Circulation Garrison Global Conveyor Note upward mixing all along the path! Thus, return flow = deep water formation Particulate flux- alters chemistry along the flow path Broecker and Peng, 1-13, Also OC Fig. 218b Global Conveyor • How long does it take? ~ 1500 yrs • Records of pathway (tracers) – Oxygen – Nutrients (nitrate or phosphate) – Tritium – CFC’s – Nd isotopes Global Conveyor • Age of water – Defined as time since it was in contact with the surface (ventilation) • Longer it’s away from the surface = more decay of organics – Decrease is O2 – Increase in nutrients (Cd/Ca for geologic record) – Increase in silicate (hard part regeneration) – Heavier δ13C O2 as a Tracer of Circulation Modified from Broecker and Peng, Fig. 1-11 Nitrate as a Tracer Modified from Broecker and Peng, Fig. 1-10 Ocean Conveyor Belt Pinet