Circulation in the Northern Japan Sea Studied Chiefly with Radiocarbon

Radiocarbon concentrations in the northernmost region of the Japan Sea were observed during the summer of 2002. The averaged surface ?14C (above 100 m depth) was 52 8, which is significantly higher compared with the values of the Pacific Ocean and Okhotsk Sea. The 14C in the deep water decreased wit...

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Bibliographic Details
Main Authors: Aramaki, T, Senjyu, T, Togawa, O, Otosaka, S, Suzuki, T, Kitamura, T, Amano, H, Volkov, Y N
Format: Article in Journal/Newspaper
Language:English
Published: Radiocarbon 2007
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Online Access:https://journals.uair.arizona.edu/index.php/radiocarbon/article/view/2985
Description
Summary:Radiocarbon concentrations in the northernmost region of the Japan Sea were observed during the summer of 2002. The averaged surface ?14C (above 100 m depth) was 52 8, which is significantly higher compared with the values of the Pacific Ocean and Okhotsk Sea. The 14C in the deep water decreased with density, and the minimum value was 70 By analyzing 14C and other hydrographic data, we found that i) the Tsushima Warm Current Water reaches to the surface layer in the southern Tatarskiy Strait; ii) deep convection did not occur in the northernmost region, at least not after the winter of 20012002; and iii) the bottom water that was previously formed in this region may step down southward along the bottom slope and mix with the Japan Sea Bottom Water. Furthermore, a new water mass characterized by high salinity (34.09 psu) was found in the subsurface layer in the area north of 46N.