Stable Isotopes as Tracers for Freshwater Fluxes into the North Atlantic

The Arctic acts as both an indicator and a facilitator of global climate change. Many studies have identified the manifold changes in the Arctic hydrological system resulting from global warming. These changes have affected the freshwater balance of the northern North Atlantic and therefore pose a p...

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Main Author: Cox, Katharine A.
Format: Thesis
Language:English
Published: 2010
Subjects:
Online Access:https://eprints.soton.ac.uk/191987/
https://eprints.soton.ac.uk/191987/1/Cox_2010_PhD.pdf
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spelling ftsouthampton:oai:eprints.soton.ac.uk:191987 2023-07-30T04:01:12+02:00 Stable Isotopes as Tracers for Freshwater Fluxes into the North Atlantic Cox, Katharine A. 2010-08-01 text https://eprints.soton.ac.uk/191987/ https://eprints.soton.ac.uk/191987/1/Cox_2010_PhD.pdf en eng https://eprints.soton.ac.uk/191987/1/Cox_2010_PhD.pdf Cox, Katharine A. (2010) Stable Isotopes as Tracers for Freshwater Fluxes into the North Atlantic. University of Southampton, School of Ocean and Earth Science, Doctoral Thesis, 178pp. Thesis NonPeerReviewed 2010 ftsouthampton 2023-07-09T21:22:54Z The Arctic acts as both an indicator and a facilitator of global climate change. Many studies have identified the manifold changes in the Arctic hydrological system resulting from global warming. These changes have affected the freshwater balance of the northern North Atlantic and therefore pose a problem to deep water formation in this region, further impacting the global climate. This thesis uses the quasi-conservative properties of oxygen and hydrogen isotopes in watermasses to identify and quantify the freshwater sources to the ocean currents exiting the Arctic into the northern North Atlantic. Comparison of historical oxygen isotope data from the East Greenland Current system with data presented here indicates that its freshwater isotope signature has not been temporally constant. Specifically, in 2005, there was a shift to a value ? 10 h heavier than the long-term mean, indicating a large increase in sea ice meltwater admixture that coincides with a large, short-term peak in the Fram Strait sea ice export. Therefore, interannual variations in the sea ice export are transported to the watermasses downstream. Oxygen isotope data from the West Greenland Current confirm that the freshwater signal in the East Greenland Current system is transferred around the tip of Greenland. However, there is an apparent decrease in the freshwater concentration in the West Greenland Current relative to the east. This potentially corroborates the previously reported retroflection of part of the East Greenland Current into the North Atlantic subpolar gyre. The primary freshwater sources to the Labrador Current are identified as Arctic surface waters exported via the Canadian Archipelago, Hudson Strait and the West Greenland Current. There is also considerable sea ice formation and melt influence on the Labrador Shelf. The world surface ocean oxygen and hydrogen isotope mixing relationship is observed to be regionally and seasonally robust, with the exception of areas with a high meteoric water influence. The use of hydrogen ... Thesis Arctic Canadian Archipelago Climate change East Greenland east greenland current Fram Strait Global warming Greenland Hudson Strait North Atlantic Sea ice University of Southampton: e-Prints Soton Arctic Greenland Hudson Hudson Strait ENVELOPE(-70.000,-70.000,62.000,62.000) Labrador Shelf ENVELOPE(-58.000,-58.000,56.000,56.000)
institution Open Polar
collection University of Southampton: e-Prints Soton
op_collection_id ftsouthampton
language English
description The Arctic acts as both an indicator and a facilitator of global climate change. Many studies have identified the manifold changes in the Arctic hydrological system resulting from global warming. These changes have affected the freshwater balance of the northern North Atlantic and therefore pose a problem to deep water formation in this region, further impacting the global climate. This thesis uses the quasi-conservative properties of oxygen and hydrogen isotopes in watermasses to identify and quantify the freshwater sources to the ocean currents exiting the Arctic into the northern North Atlantic. Comparison of historical oxygen isotope data from the East Greenland Current system with data presented here indicates that its freshwater isotope signature has not been temporally constant. Specifically, in 2005, there was a shift to a value ? 10 h heavier than the long-term mean, indicating a large increase in sea ice meltwater admixture that coincides with a large, short-term peak in the Fram Strait sea ice export. Therefore, interannual variations in the sea ice export are transported to the watermasses downstream. Oxygen isotope data from the West Greenland Current confirm that the freshwater signal in the East Greenland Current system is transferred around the tip of Greenland. However, there is an apparent decrease in the freshwater concentration in the West Greenland Current relative to the east. This potentially corroborates the previously reported retroflection of part of the East Greenland Current into the North Atlantic subpolar gyre. The primary freshwater sources to the Labrador Current are identified as Arctic surface waters exported via the Canadian Archipelago, Hudson Strait and the West Greenland Current. There is also considerable sea ice formation and melt influence on the Labrador Shelf. The world surface ocean oxygen and hydrogen isotope mixing relationship is observed to be regionally and seasonally robust, with the exception of areas with a high meteoric water influence. The use of hydrogen ...
format Thesis
author Cox, Katharine A.
spellingShingle Cox, Katharine A.
Stable Isotopes as Tracers for Freshwater Fluxes into the North Atlantic
author_facet Cox, Katharine A.
author_sort Cox, Katharine A.
title Stable Isotopes as Tracers for Freshwater Fluxes into the North Atlantic
title_short Stable Isotopes as Tracers for Freshwater Fluxes into the North Atlantic
title_full Stable Isotopes as Tracers for Freshwater Fluxes into the North Atlantic
title_fullStr Stable Isotopes as Tracers for Freshwater Fluxes into the North Atlantic
title_full_unstemmed Stable Isotopes as Tracers for Freshwater Fluxes into the North Atlantic
title_sort stable isotopes as tracers for freshwater fluxes into the north atlantic
publishDate 2010
url https://eprints.soton.ac.uk/191987/
https://eprints.soton.ac.uk/191987/1/Cox_2010_PhD.pdf
long_lat ENVELOPE(-70.000,-70.000,62.000,62.000)
ENVELOPE(-58.000,-58.000,56.000,56.000)
geographic Arctic
Greenland
Hudson
Hudson Strait
Labrador Shelf
geographic_facet Arctic
Greenland
Hudson
Hudson Strait
Labrador Shelf
genre Arctic
Canadian Archipelago
Climate change
East Greenland
east greenland current
Fram Strait
Global warming
Greenland
Hudson Strait
North Atlantic
Sea ice
genre_facet Arctic
Canadian Archipelago
Climate change
East Greenland
east greenland current
Fram Strait
Global warming
Greenland
Hudson Strait
North Atlantic
Sea ice
op_relation https://eprints.soton.ac.uk/191987/1/Cox_2010_PhD.pdf
Cox, Katharine A. (2010) Stable Isotopes as Tracers for Freshwater Fluxes into the North Atlantic. University of Southampton, School of Ocean and Earth Science, Doctoral Thesis, 178pp.
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