Thermocline ventilation and pathways of tropical-subtropical water mass exchange

Authors
Citation
S. Harper, Thermocline ventilation and pathways of tropical-subtropical water mass exchange, TELLUS A, 52(3), 2000, pp. 330-345
Citations number
28
Categorie Soggetti
Earth Sciences
Journal title
TELLUS SERIES A-DYNAMIC METEOROLOGY AND OCEANOGRAPHY
ISSN journal
02806495 → ACNP
Volume
52
Issue
3
Year of publication
2000
Pages
330 - 345
Database
ISI
SICI code
0280-6495(200005)52:3<330:TVAPOT>2.0.ZU;2-0
Abstract
The mechanism of thermocline ventilation is investigated using a global, hi gh-resolution ocean GCM, with realistic topography and surface wind forcing . Because 2-dimensional representations of circulation can be misleading, t he subsurface flow is examined by visualizing the trajectories of particles which subduct in the mid-latitudes and travel within the ventilated thermo cline. Three model runs are performed, each with identical surface forcing but with different initial particle distributions. Results from these runs show that the pathways of water mass exchange between the tropics and the s ubtropics are functions of the surface wind forcing, background density str ucture, and basin geometry. In the Pacific, ventilated waters from the nort hern and southern mid-latitudes reach the tropical thermocline through both the western boundary and the interior of the basin. In the Atlantic Ocean, the equatorial thermocline is ventilated primarily through water mass exch ange with the southern hemisphere alone. In the Indian Ocean, the pathways of water mass exchange have patterns similar to those in the Atlantic and P acific basins, though the lack of a mid-latitude gyre in the northern basin restricts the deep subduction and ventilation to the southern hemisphere.