Press release: Tides stir up deep Atlantic Heat in the Arctic Ocean

Published: 16 Feb 2015

The results, published this week in the journal Nature Geoscience, (16.2.14 10.1038/ngeo2350) show that tidal flows in the Arctic are causing deep, warm water (originating from the Gulf Stream) to mix with cold, fresh water lying above, in turn contributing to melting the floating sea-ice.

Past research on how warm layers of ocean water mix with cold layers lying above has focused on turbulence driven by winds and waves, rather than on tidal mixing, since tidal flows around the Arctic Ocean are generally weak. However, direct measurements of turbulence from across the seasonally ice-free Arctic Ocean show that tidal motions interacting with steep sea bed slopes are in fact a major cause of vertical mixing.

Lead author, Tom Rippeth from Bangor University explains,

“Our oceans are not made up of one body of water, but contain waters of different temperatures and salinity, lying in different ‘layers’, so the Arctic Ocean is a bit like a jam sandwich, where the “bread” is the cold water layers above and below the “jam”, which is the warm, salty water that enters the Arctic from the Atlantic.  Sea-ice floating on the surface of the ocean is insulated from the heat of the Atlantic layer by the “top slice” of cold polar water.

“We studied the warm body of water from the Atlantic that represents the largest oceanic input of heat into the Arctic – it is four degrees Celsius warmer than the surrounding water, and it is the warmest it has been in nearly two thousand years. The top of the warm layer sits at depths between 40 and 200 m, and its heat slowly diffuses upwards into the cold, fresher water above, but sometimes this movement of heat can be greatly accelerated by turbulence which drives mixing. We have found that tides are producing significant amounts of turbulence over steep sea bed topography, and so are greatly enhancing the upward movement of heat in these regions.  In areas where tidal currents interact with steep sea bed slopes, this process causes mixing of the warmer waters with the over-lying colder waters, and this in turn can generate ‘hotspots’ for sea-ice melt or thinning.”

Sheldon Bacon, from the National Oceanography Centre, says,

“Arctic sea ice is likely to retreat further in coming decades, and if it does, interactions between the wind and ocean currents may strengthen. These mixing hotspots may then grow into other areas of the Arctic Ocean with steep sea bed slopes, resulting in further sea-ice retreat. We know that the Arctic is already warming faster than the rest of the planet, and other research conducted in the past few years is pointing to the impact of Arctic warming on mid-latitude weather, so the Arctic may have had a role in recent weather extremes in the US, UK and Europe. Therefore the importance of the discovery of this new mechanism for moving heat up towards the Arctic ocean surface lies in its potential to further enhance Arctic warming.”

Bangor University, the Norwegian Polar Research Institute (NPI) and the National Oceanography Centre (NOC) collaborated on four extensive Arctic research cruises covering the Arctic Ocean north of Svalbard, north of eastern and western Siberia, and in the Canada Basin. This was done by directly measuring turbulence around the Arctic Ocean and showing its direct correlation with tidal energy dissipation estimates made using satellite data.

The new research is part of the TEA-COSI consortium project: “The Environment of the Arctic:  Climate, Ocean, Sea Ice”, led by Sheldon Bacon. 

ENDS

For more information contact Bangor University Press Office:

Tel: +44 (0)1248 383298; Email: press@bangor.ac.uk

Notes for editors

The Bangor University School of Ocean Sciences team is a world leader in measuring turbulence in the world’s oceans.

Measurements were made over the continental shelf break north of Svalbard through dense ice cover in autumn 2008, and spring and early summer of 2010 and 2011, and more open-water conditions in the summers of 2012 and 2013; north of Severnaya Zemlya ( Russia), the Laptev Sea  (Russia) and the East Siberian Sea during the ice-free September 2007, and then again through first year ice cover in October 2008 and the largely ice-free Canada Basin in the summer of 2012.

Image credit: Sea Ice Copyright Joshua Griffiths, Bangor University