4.5 Article

Evolution and status of the Eastern Mediterranean Transient (1997-1999)

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JOURNAL OF MARINE SYSTEMS
卷 33, 期 -, 页码 91-116

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ELSEVIER SCIENCE BV
DOI: 10.1016/S0924-7963(02)00054-4

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water masses; deep-water formation; thermohaline circulation; tracers; Mediterranean Sea

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The Eastern Mediterranean Transient (EMT) was the major climatic event in the circulation and water mass properties of the Mediterranean in the last century. In this paper, we describe the present status of the EMT and its evolution since 1995 using hydrological and tracer data from 1997 to 1999. Few but important changes have been observed in the circulation pattern. The intrusion of the Asia Minor Current (AMC) that carries the saline Surface Levantine Waters into the Aegean has been reduced compared to the picture of late 1980s. This means that one of the mechanisms that increased the salt content of the Aegean during the peak of the EMT is no longer present. The Modified Atlantic Water (MAW) signal that has been weakened in the Levantine Basin during the early stages of the EMT has also been re-enhanced. The Aegean still functions as a source of deep (Cretan Deep Water, CDW) and intermediate waters (Cretan Intermediate Water, CIW) for the Eastern Mediterranean, although with modified characteristics. The most important changes in the thermohaline structure of the Cretan Sea (southern Aegean Sea) are the weakening of the signal of the old Mediterranean mid-depth waters and the modification of the properties of the CDW both leading to a reduced stratification. The outflowing CDW is no longer dense enough to reach the bottom of the adjacent basins, but ventilates layers between 1500 and 2500 in. Only the deep eastern Straits of the Cretan Arc are still active in the discharge of CDW, while at the western Strait (Antikithira), the density of the outflowing water was reduced significantly. The intermediate water CIW formed in the Aegean is characterized as a shallow CFC-12, temperature and salinity maximum layer, and differs much from the old CIW formed before the EMT, which was found in the layer below the Levantine Intermediate Water (LIW). The new CIW extends into the Ionian Basin through Antikithira Strait. It has lately been observed to enter the Adriatic, where its high salinity is expected to re-establish deep-water formation in this basin. The spreading of the CDW that had been deposited in the Cretan Passage in the first phase of the EMT has progressed further. The entire bottom layer of the Levantine Basin is now covered by the CDW. In the Ionian, the CDW has reached the Straits of Sicily and Otranto. Similar pathways in the Ionian are followed by the new shallower outflow of the CDW. (C) 2002 Elsevier Science B.V. All rights reserved.

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