Transformation and upwelling of bottom water in fracture zone valleys

View/ Open
Date
2020-03-03Author
Thurnherr, Andreas M.
Concept link
Clément, Louis
Concept link
St. Laurent, Louis C.
Concept link
Ferrari, Raffaele
Concept link
Ijichi, Takashi
Concept link
Metadata
Show full item recordCitable URI
https://hdl.handle.net/1912/25701As published
https://doi.org/10.1175/JPO-D-19-0021.1DOI
10.1175/JPO-D-19-0021.1Keyword
Diapycnal mixing; Topographic effects; Turbulence; Upwelling/downwelling; Bottom currents/bottom waterAbstract
Closing the overturning circulation of bottom water requires abyssal transformation to lighter densities and upwelling. Where and how buoyancy is gained and water is transported upward remain topics of debate, not least because the available observations generally show downward-increasing turbulence levels in the abyss, apparently implying mean vertical turbulent buoyancy-flux divergence (densification). Here, we synthesize available observations indicating that bottom water is made less dense and upwelled in fracture zone valleys on the flanks of slow-spreading midocean ridges, which cover more than one-half of the seafloor area in some regions. The fracture zones are filled almost completely with water flowing up-valley and gaining buoyancy. Locally, valley water is transformed to lighter densities both in thin boundary layers that are in contact with the seafloor, where the buoyancy flux must vanish to match the no-flux boundary condition, and in thicker layers associated with downward-decreasing turbulence levels below interior maxima associated with hydraulic overflows and critical-layer interactions. Integrated across the valley, the turbulent buoyancy fluxes show maxima near the sidewall crests, consistent with net convergence below, with little sensitivity of this pattern to the vertical structure of the turbulence profiles, which implies that buoyancy flux convergence in the layers with downward-decreasing turbulence levels dominates over the divergence elsewhere, accounting for the net transformation to lighter densities in fracture zone valleys. We conclude that fracture zone topography likely exerts a controlling influence on the transformation and upwelling of bottom water in many areas of the global ocean.
Description
Author Posting. © American Meteorological Society, 2020. This article is posted here by permission of American Meteorological Society for personal use, not for redistribution. The definitive version was published in Journal of Physical Oceanography 50(3), (2020): 715-726, doi:10.1175/JPO-D-19-0021.1.
Collections
Suggested Citation
Thurnherr, A. M., Clement, L., St Laurent, L., Ferrari, R., & Ijichi, T. (2020). Transformation and upwelling of bottom water in fracture zone valleys. Journal of Physical Oceanography, 50(3), 715-726.Related items
Showing items related by title, author, creator and subject.
-
Influence of bottom topography on cross-shelf circulation forced by time dependent wind
Osychny, Vladimir I. (Massachusetts Institute of Technology and Woods Hole Oceanographic Institution, 1997-09)A series of numerical experiments is conducted in order to examine the role of topographic irregularities in generation of subinertial cross-channel barotropic currents and to obtain quantitative estimates of the offshore ... -
Discrete seawater samples collected at the surface, 1 m below the surface, and 1 m above the bottom two times a week at each mooring (Kelp and Outside) from June 12, 2018 to August 3, 2018.
Hirsh, Heidi; Nickols, Kerry J.; Takeshita, Yuichiro; Traiger, Sarah; Monismith, Stephen G.; Mucciarone, David; Dunbar, Robert B. (Biological and Chemical Oceanography Data Management Office (BCO-DMO). Contact: bco-dmo-data@whoi.edu, 2020-10-16)Discrete seawater samples collected at the surface, 1 m below the surface, and 1 m above the bottom two times a week at each mooring (Kelp and Outside) from June 12, 2018 to August 3, 2018. For a complete list of ... -
Precession-driven changes in Iceland–Scotland Overflow Water penetration and bottom water circulation on Gardar Drift since ~ 200 ka
Elmore, Aurora C.; Wright, James D.; Chalk, Thomas B. (2015-09-21)Benthic foraminiferal stable isotopic records from a transect of sediment cores south of the Iceland-Scotland Ridge reveal that the penetration depth of Iceland-Scotland Overflow Water (ISOW) varied on orbital timescales ...