4.7 Article

The contribution of the Weddell Gyre to the lower limb of the Global Overturning Circulation

Journal

JOURNAL OF GEOPHYSICAL RESEARCH-OCEANS
Volume 119, Issue 6, Pages 3357-3377

Publisher

AMER GEOPHYSICAL UNION
DOI: 10.1002/2013JC009725

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Categories

Funding

  1. National Environmental Research Council [NE/E01366X/1]
  2. NSF [OCE-1231803]
  3. NERC [noc010009, NE/F01242X/1, NE/E01366X/1, NE/E013341/1, NE/K012843/1, NE/E013538/1, bas0100028, NE/F010427/1] Funding Source: UKRI
  4. Division Of Ocean Sciences
  5. Directorate For Geosciences [1231803] Funding Source: National Science Foundation
  6. Natural Environment Research Council [NE/E01366X/1, NE/E013341/1, noc010012, NE/E013538/1, bas0100028, NE/F01242X/1, NE/F010427/1, NE/K012843/1, noc010009] Funding Source: researchfish

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The horizontal and vertical circulation of the Weddell Gyre is diagnosed using a box inverse model constructed with recent hydrographic sections and including mobile sea ice and eddy transports. The gyre is found to convey 42 +/- 8 Sv (1 Sv = 106 m3 s-1) across the central Weddell Sea and to intensify to 54 +/- 15 Sv further offshore. This circulation injects 36 +/- 13 TW of heat from the Antarctic Circumpolar Current to the gyre, and exports 51 +/- 23 mSv of freshwater, including 13 +/- 1 mSv as sea ice to the midlatitude Southern Ocean. The gyre's overturning circulation has an asymmetric double-cell structure, in which 13 +/- 4 Sv of Circumpolar Deep Water (CDW) and relatively light Antarctic Bottom Water (AABW) are transformed into upper-ocean water masses by midgyre upwelling (at a rate of 2 +/- 2 Sv) and into denser AABW by downwelling focussed at the western boundary (8 +/- 2 Sv). The gyre circulation exhibits a substantial throughflow component, by which CDW and AABW enter the gyre from the Indian sector, undergo ventilation and densification within the gyre, and are exported to the South Atlantic across the gyre's northern rim. The relatively modest net production of AABW in the Weddell Gyre (6 +/- 2 Sv) suggests that the gyre's prominence in the closure of the lower limb of global oceanic overturning stems largely from the recycling and equatorward export of Indian-sourced AABW.

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