Ocean-sea ice dynamics in the Nordic Seas across a stadial-interstadial transition – a modelling and data perspective

We will present results of ABRUPT, a project in which we simulate and reconstruct the sea ice conditions, ocean hydrography and climate of the Nordic Seas, over two targeted Dansgaard-Oechger events. Multi-model output from three transient glacial GCM simulations (NorESM, CESM, MPI-ESM) and high-res...

Full description

Bibliographic Details
Main Authors: Guo, C., Risebrobakken, B., Wang, W., Klockmann, M., Vettoretti, G.
Format: Conference Object
Language:English
Published: 2023
Subjects:
Online Access:https://gfzpublic.gfz-potsdam.de/pubman/item/item_5017551
Description
Summary:We will present results of ABRUPT, a project in which we simulate and reconstruct the sea ice conditions, ocean hydrography and climate of the Nordic Seas, over two targeted Dansgaard-Oechger events. Multi-model output from three transient glacial GCM simulations (NorESM, CESM, MPI-ESM) and high-resolution reconstructions from an eastern Nordic Seas transect (from the Faeroe-Shetland Channel to the Fram Strait) show that ocean-atmosphere-sea ice processes and dynamics during the transition from H4 to GI8 are strongly coupled. Both model results and reconstructions suggest subsurface ocean warming and polynya events in the southern- and northernmost Nordic Seas during the cold stadial. For a short time during the stadial to interstadial transition, a corridor of open water and hence sea ice-free conditions existed from the southern Nordic Seas all the way to the Fram Strait. The breakup of the sea ice cover is likely caused by the overshoot of AMOC during the transition and the associated enhanced ocean heat transport into the Nordic Seas. After the transition, winter sea ice grows back in the Fram Strait during the interstadial state, but the Southern Nordic Seas remain ice-free.