The age of water in the World Ocean is studied using a passive age tra
cer introduced into a global ocean model. Additional information is de
rived from a transient ''dye'' tracer that tracks the time-dependent s
preading of surface waters into the model ocean interior. Of particula
r interest is the nature of ocean ventilation over the 10-100-yr times
cale, as well as the simulated age of deep and bottom water masses. In
the upper model levels young water is found to correspond with region
s of convergence (and downwelling) in the surface Ekman layer. Upwelli
ng and convection are both shown to age the upper ocean by entraining
older waters into the surface mixed layer. In the deep model levels, w
ater age varies greatly between oceans, with young water found in conv
ectively active regions (in the North Atlantic and in the Ross and Wed
dell Seas), and old water found in the deep North Pacific. The oldest
water mass mixture (located at 2228-m depth in the western Pacific Oce
an) is dated at 1494 years, made up of a combination of sources of wat
er whose age varies between 500 and 5000 years. In the bottom layers o
f the model, Antarctic Bottom Water ventilates the extreme Southern Oc
ean over a 50-100-yr timescale, whereas the age approaches 1000 years
in the northern limit of the Pacific basin. An analysis of age on the
sigma(t) = 27.4 kg m(-3) isopycnal surface shows North Atlantic Deep W
ater (NADW) leaving the Atlantic Ocean with an average age of 300 year
s, although part of this water mass mixture is as young as 60 years. T
he young signal of NADW penetrates the Indian Ocean and the South Paci
fic via the circumpolar current over a timescale as short as 15 years,
although water penetrating the far deep North Pacific is not detected
in significant quantities (using a 10% concentration criterion) until
about 500 years after the NADW formation time. A volumetric census of
age in the World Ocean model shows relative maxima at 2 degrees-3 deg
rees C, 1200 years (corresponding to water in the deep North Pacific),
and at 3 degrees C, 300-500 years (corresponding to water in the deep
Atlantic Ocean). The parameterization of mixing in the ocean model pa
rtly determines age, with an isopycnal mixing scheme reducing the deep
and bottom water ventilation timescale by about 30%. By monitoring th
e gradual penetration of surface dye into the most remote ocean grid b
oxes, the time taken to ventilate the entire World Ocean model can be
estimated to be around 5000 years.