TY - JOUR
T1 - Convective chimneys in the greenland sea
T2 - a review of recent observations
AU - Wadhams, Peter
PY - 2005
Y1 - 2005
N2 - The nature and role of chimneys as a mode of open-ocean winter convection in the Greenland Sea are reviewed, beginning with a brief summary of Greenland Sea circulation and of observations of convection and of the resulting water structure. Then recent observations of long-lived chimneys in Greenland Sea are described, setting them within the context of earlier observations and models. The longest-lived chimney yet seen in the world ocean was discovered in March 2001 at about 75-degrees-N 0-degrees-W, and subsequent observations have shown that it has survived for a further 26 months, having been remapped in summer 2001, winter 2002, summer 2002, and April-May 2003. The has chimney an anticyclonically rotating core with a uniform rotation rate of f/2 to a diameter of 9 km; it passes through an annual cycle in which it is uniform in properties from the surface to 2500 m in winter, while being capped by lower-density water in summer (primarily a 50-m-thick near-surface layer of low salinity and 500-m-thick layer of higher salinity). The most recent cruise also discovered a second chimney some 70 km NW of the first, and accomplished a tightly gridded survey of 15,000 km(2) of the gyre centre, effectively excluding the possibility of further chimneys. The conclusion is that the 75-degrees/0-degrees chimney is not a unique feature, but that Greenland Sea chimneys are rare and are probably rarer than in 1997, when at least four rotating features were discovered by a float survey. This has important implications for ideas about chimney formation, for deepwater renewal in the Greenland Sea, and for the role of the Greenland Sea convection in the North Atlantic circulation.
AB - The nature and role of chimneys as a mode of open-ocean winter convection in the Greenland Sea are reviewed, beginning with a brief summary of Greenland Sea circulation and of observations of convection and of the resulting water structure. Then recent observations of long-lived chimneys in Greenland Sea are described, setting them within the context of earlier observations and models. The longest-lived chimney yet seen in the world ocean was discovered in March 2001 at about 75-degrees-N 0-degrees-W, and subsequent observations have shown that it has survived for a further 26 months, having been remapped in summer 2001, winter 2002, summer 2002, and April-May 2003. The has chimney an anticyclonically rotating core with a uniform rotation rate of f/2 to a diameter of 9 km; it passes through an annual cycle in which it is uniform in properties from the surface to 2500 m in winter, while being capped by lower-density water in summer (primarily a 50-m-thick near-surface layer of low salinity and 500-m-thick layer of higher salinity). The most recent cruise also discovered a second chimney some 70 km NW of the first, and accomplished a tightly gridded survey of 15,000 km(2) of the gyre centre, effectively excluding the possibility of further chimneys. The conclusion is that the 75-degrees/0-degrees chimney is not a unique feature, but that Greenland Sea chimneys are rare and are probably rarer than in 1997, when at least four rotating features were discovered by a float survey. This has important implications for ideas about chimney formation, for deepwater renewal in the Greenland Sea, and for the role of the Greenland Sea convection in the North Atlantic circulation.
KW - SCALE PROCESSES
KW - INTERANNUAL VARIABILITY
KW - FRAM STRAIT
KW - SALT FLUX
KW - THERMOHALINE CIRCULATION
KW - CLIMATE MODEL
KW - Marine & Freshwater Biology
KW - DOUBLE-DIFFUSION
KW - DEEP-WATER
KW - Oceanography
KW - MARGINAL ICE-ZONE
KW - OCEAN CONVECTION
M3 - Article
SN - 0078-3218
SP - 1
EP - 27
JO - Oceanography and Marine Biology
JF - Oceanography and Marine Biology
IS - 2
ER -