H. Melling et Rm. Moore, MODIFICATION OF HALOCLINE SOURCE WATERS DURING FREEZING ON THE BEAUFORT SEA SHELF - EVIDENCE FROM OXYGEN ISOTOPES AND DISSOLVED NUTRIENTS, Continental shelf research, 15(1), 1995, pp. 89-113
During some, but not all winters, waters on the Mackenzie shelf of the
Beaufort Sea become sufficiently saline to ventilate the halocline of
the adjacent Canada Basin. This occurred in March 1988, at which time
a survey of the temperature, salinity, dissolved nutrient and O-38 pr
operties of the ventilating waters was completed. The regional hydrogr
aphy of 1988 was Very similar to that of 1981, when ventilation also o
ccurred in this area. The delta(18)O-salinity properties of the cold,
saline shelf waters revealed that in the winter of 1987-1988, ice was
grown from water initially more saline by about 1.5 [psu] than is typi
cal for the area. The higher initial salinity appears to have been a c
onsequence of a two-stage conditioning of shelf waters by storms in th
e autumn of 1987. Since the amount of ice growth, and consequent salt
rejection, over the winter of 1987-1988 was abnormally low, this condi
tioning played a crucial role in the formation of the ventilating wate
r mass. Nutrient concentrations in ventilating waters were the same as
those of waters unaffected by freezing. Thus significant regeneration
of nutrients within the cold saline shelf waters did not occur during
their 6-month period of formation. In consequence, the nutrient signa
tures carried into the arctic halocline by winter shelf waters from th
is area tended to erode, rather than to reinforce the nutrient maxima.
For this reason they are not the dominant source of supply to the arc
tic halocline. Waters in the Chukchi and northern Bering Seas during t
he same period had delta(18)O values intermediate between those on the
Mackenzie shelf and those in the arctic halocline. Thus winter shelf
waters are supplied to the arctic halocline with a range of nutrient,
temperature, salinity and delta(18)O properties. On average, the south
ern Canada Basin is an impressive net producer of sea ice. The net rat
e of production from waters in the upper 350 m in this area is about 2
m y(-1) approximately twice the net rate of production in the central
Arctic Ocean.