Upper-ocean variability in Drake Passage and the Weddell Sea : Measuring the oceanic response to air-sea and ice-ocean interactions

In the first part of this dissertation, reanalysis heat flux products and profiles from a 15 year time series of high-resolution, near-repeat expendable bathythermograph / expendable conductivity-temperature-depth (XBT/XCTD) sampling in Drake Passage are used to examine sources of upper-ocean variab...

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Bibliographic Details
Main Author: Stephenson, Gordon Ronald
Format: Doctoral or Postdoctoral Thesis
Language:unknown
Published: eScholarship, University of California 2012
Subjects:
Online Access:http://www.escholarship.org/uc/item/4vw1n01f
http://n2t.net/ark:/20775/bb6247079s
id ftcdlib:qt4vw1n01f
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institution Open Polar
collection University of California: eScholarship
op_collection_id ftcdlib
language unknown
topic Dissertations
Academic Oceanography. (Discipline) UCSD
spellingShingle Dissertations
Academic Oceanography. (Discipline) UCSD
Stephenson, Gordon Ronald
Upper-ocean variability in Drake Passage and the Weddell Sea : Measuring the oceanic response to air-sea and ice-ocean interactions
topic_facet Dissertations
Academic Oceanography. (Discipline) UCSD
description In the first part of this dissertation, reanalysis heat flux products and profiles from a 15 year time series of high-resolution, near-repeat expendable bathythermograph / expendable conductivity-temperature-depth (XBT/XCTD) sampling in Drake Passage are used to examine sources of upper-ocean variability, with a focus on the nature of MLD variations and their impact on a first-order, one- dimensional heat budget for the upper ocean in the regions north and south of the Polar Front. Results show that temperature and density criteria yield different MLD estimates, and that these estimates can be sensitive to the choice of threshold. The difficulty of defining MLD in low-stratification regions, the large amplitude of wintertime MLD (up to 700 m in Drake Passage), and the natural small-scale variability of the upper ocean result in considerable cast-to-cast variability in MLD, with changes of up to 200 m over 10 km horizontal distance. In contrast, the heat content over a fixed-depth interval of the upper ocean shows greater cast-to-cast stability and clearly measures the ocean response to surface heat fluxes. In particular, an annual cycle in upper ocean heat content is in good agreement with the annual cycle in heat flux forcing, which explains 24% of the variance in heat content above 400 m depth north of the Polar Front and 63% of the variance in heat content south of the Polar Front. At interannual timescales, the primary drivers of interannual variations in upper-ocean heat content in Drake Passage are advective processes; up to 40% of the variance of cross-Passage average upper-ocean heat content is due to meanders of the Polar Front, while 14% of the variability results from mesoscale eddies. Heat flux anomalies contribute less variance (5-10%) on interannual timescales. Teleconnections with ENSO and SAM contribute to anomalies in meridional winds and heat fluxes. As a result, ENSO and SAM contribute variability in upper ocean heat content at near-zero lags; ENSO and SAM are also correlated with upper ocean heat content anomalies on timescales of ̃2-5 years. The second part of this dissertation explores a melting iceberg as a source of upper-ocean variability. Observations near a large tabular iceberg in the Weddell Sea in March and April 2009 show evidence that water from ice melting below the surface is dispersed in two distinct ways. Warm, salty anomalies in T -S diagrams suggest that water from the permanent thermocline is transported vertically as a result of turbulent entrainment of meltwater at the iceberg's base. Stepped profiles of temperature, salinity, and density in the seasonal thermocline are more characteristic of double -diffusive processes that transfer meltwater horizontally away from the vertical ice face. These processes contribute comparable amounts of meltwater --O(0.1 m³) to the upper 200 m of a 1 m² water column--but only basal melting results in significant upwelling of water from below the Winter Water layer into the seasonal thermocline. This suggests that these two processes may have different effects on vertical nutrient transport near an iceberg
format Doctoral or Postdoctoral Thesis
author Stephenson, Gordon Ronald
author_facet Stephenson, Gordon Ronald
author_sort Stephenson, Gordon Ronald
title Upper-ocean variability in Drake Passage and the Weddell Sea : Measuring the oceanic response to air-sea and ice-ocean interactions
title_short Upper-ocean variability in Drake Passage and the Weddell Sea : Measuring the oceanic response to air-sea and ice-ocean interactions
title_full Upper-ocean variability in Drake Passage and the Weddell Sea : Measuring the oceanic response to air-sea and ice-ocean interactions
title_fullStr Upper-ocean variability in Drake Passage and the Weddell Sea : Measuring the oceanic response to air-sea and ice-ocean interactions
title_full_unstemmed Upper-ocean variability in Drake Passage and the Weddell Sea : Measuring the oceanic response to air-sea and ice-ocean interactions
title_sort upper-ocean variability in drake passage and the weddell sea : measuring the oceanic response to air-sea and ice-ocean interactions
publisher eScholarship, University of California
publishDate 2012
url http://www.escholarship.org/uc/item/4vw1n01f
http://n2t.net/ark:/20775/bb6247079s
op_coverage 1 PDF (1 online resource xviii, 118 p.)
geographic Drake Passage
Weddell
Weddell Sea
geographic_facet Drake Passage
Weddell
Weddell Sea
genre Drake Passage
Weddell Sea
genre_facet Drake Passage
Weddell Sea
op_source Stephenson, Gordon Ronald. (2012). Upper-ocean variability in Drake Passage and the Weddell Sea : Measuring the oceanic response to air-sea and ice-ocean interactions. UC San Diego: Retrieved from: http://www.escholarship.org/uc/item/4vw1n01f
op_relation http://www.escholarship.org/uc/item/4vw1n01f
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spelling ftcdlib:qt4vw1n01f 2023-05-15T16:02:30+02:00 Upper-ocean variability in Drake Passage and the Weddell Sea : Measuring the oceanic response to air-sea and ice-ocean interactions Stephenson, Gordon Ronald 1 PDF (1 online resource xviii, 118 p.) 2012-01-01 application/pdf http://www.escholarship.org/uc/item/4vw1n01f http://n2t.net/ark:/20775/bb6247079s unknown eScholarship, University of California http://www.escholarship.org/uc/item/4vw1n01f qt4vw1n01f http://n2t.net/ark:/20775/bb6247079s public Stephenson, Gordon Ronald. (2012). Upper-ocean variability in Drake Passage and the Weddell Sea : Measuring the oceanic response to air-sea and ice-ocean interactions. UC San Diego: Retrieved from: http://www.escholarship.org/uc/item/4vw1n01f Dissertations Academic Oceanography. (Discipline) UCSD dissertation 2012 ftcdlib 2016-04-02T18:58:47Z In the first part of this dissertation, reanalysis heat flux products and profiles from a 15 year time series of high-resolution, near-repeat expendable bathythermograph / expendable conductivity-temperature-depth (XBT/XCTD) sampling in Drake Passage are used to examine sources of upper-ocean variability, with a focus on the nature of MLD variations and their impact on a first-order, one- dimensional heat budget for the upper ocean in the regions north and south of the Polar Front. Results show that temperature and density criteria yield different MLD estimates, and that these estimates can be sensitive to the choice of threshold. The difficulty of defining MLD in low-stratification regions, the large amplitude of wintertime MLD (up to 700 m in Drake Passage), and the natural small-scale variability of the upper ocean result in considerable cast-to-cast variability in MLD, with changes of up to 200 m over 10 km horizontal distance. In contrast, the heat content over a fixed-depth interval of the upper ocean shows greater cast-to-cast stability and clearly measures the ocean response to surface heat fluxes. In particular, an annual cycle in upper ocean heat content is in good agreement with the annual cycle in heat flux forcing, which explains 24% of the variance in heat content above 400 m depth north of the Polar Front and 63% of the variance in heat content south of the Polar Front. At interannual timescales, the primary drivers of interannual variations in upper-ocean heat content in Drake Passage are advective processes; up to 40% of the variance of cross-Passage average upper-ocean heat content is due to meanders of the Polar Front, while 14% of the variability results from mesoscale eddies. Heat flux anomalies contribute less variance (5-10%) on interannual timescales. Teleconnections with ENSO and SAM contribute to anomalies in meridional winds and heat fluxes. As a result, ENSO and SAM contribute variability in upper ocean heat content at near-zero lags; ENSO and SAM are also correlated with upper ocean heat content anomalies on timescales of ̃2-5 years. The second part of this dissertation explores a melting iceberg as a source of upper-ocean variability. Observations near a large tabular iceberg in the Weddell Sea in March and April 2009 show evidence that water from ice melting below the surface is dispersed in two distinct ways. Warm, salty anomalies in T -S diagrams suggest that water from the permanent thermocline is transported vertically as a result of turbulent entrainment of meltwater at the iceberg's base. Stepped profiles of temperature, salinity, and density in the seasonal thermocline are more characteristic of double -diffusive processes that transfer meltwater horizontally away from the vertical ice face. These processes contribute comparable amounts of meltwater --O(0.1 m³) to the upper 200 m of a 1 m² water column--but only basal melting results in significant upwelling of water from below the Winter Water layer into the seasonal thermocline. This suggests that these two processes may have different effects on vertical nutrient transport near an iceberg Doctoral or Postdoctoral Thesis Drake Passage Weddell Sea University of California: eScholarship Drake Passage Weddell Weddell Sea