4.6 Article

Deep-Water Warming in the Gulf of Mexico from 2003 to 2019

Journal

JOURNAL OF PHYSICAL OCEANOGRAPHY
Volume 51, Issue 4, Pages 1021-1035

Publisher

AMER METEOROLOGICAL SOC
DOI: 10.1175/JPO-D-19-0295.1

Keywords

Buoyancy; Climate change; Temperature; In situ oceanic observations; Time series; Decadal variability

Categories

Funding

  1. PEMEX Exploracion y Produccion under contracts SAP [428217896, 428218855, 428229851]
  2. National Council of Science and Technology of Mexico
  3. Mexican Ministry of Energy, Hydrocarbon Trust [201441]
  4. Gulf of Mexico Research Consortium (CIGoM)
  5. CICESE's internal funds

Ask authors/readers for more resources

Climate change results in the warming of deep waters, especially in semi-enclosed basins like the Gulf of Mexico. The stable warming trend in deep waters of the Gulf is connected to the heating of the densest waters spilling from the North Atlantic over millennia.
A key consequence in climate change is the warming of deep waters, away from the faster warming rates of near-surface subtropical and tropical waters. Since surface and near-surface oceanic temperatures have been measured far more frequently in time and space than deep waters (>2000 m), deep measurements become quite valuable. Semi-enclosed basins, such as the Gulf of Mexico, are of particular interest as the waters below sills that connect with the neighboring oceans have residence times much longer than upper layers. Within the western Gulf of Mexico, near-bottom measurements at similar to 3500-m depths at four sites show a stable linear warming trend of similar to 16 +/- 2 m degrees C decade(-1) for the period 2007-18, and CTD data from eight oceanographic cruises occurring from 2003 to 2019 show a trend of similar to 18 +/- similar to 2 m degrees C decade(-1) from the bottom to similar to 2000 m below the surface. The bottom geothermal heat flux is a contributing factor to be considered in the warming and renewal of such waters, but it has not changed over millennia and is therefore unlikely to be the cause of the observed trend. The densest waters that spill into the Gulf of Mexico, over the Yucatan Channel sill, must mix substantially during their descent and in the near-bottom interior, losing their extreme values. A simple box model connects the observed warming, well within the Gulf interior, with that expected in the densest waters that spill from the North Atlantic into the Cayman Basin through Windward Passage and suggests that the source waters at the entrance to the Caribbean have been warming for at least 100 years.

Authors

I am an author on this paper
Click your name to claim this paper and add it to your profile.

Reviews

Primary Rating

4.6
Not enough ratings

Secondary Ratings

Novelty
-
Significance
-
Scientific rigor
-
Rate this paper

Recommended

No Data Available
No Data Available