Optimal multiparameter analysis of source water distributions in the Southern Drake Passage

National Science Foundation [ANT0444134, ANT0948338, OCE0957342, OCE0622740] In order to evaluate the effects of horizontal advection on iron supply in the vicinity of the Shackleton Transverse Ridge (SIR) in the southern Drake Passage, the water composition in the region is estimated along the isop...

Full description

Bibliographic Details
Main Authors: Frants, Marina, Gille, Sarah T., Hewes, Christopher D., Holm-Hansen, Osmund, Kahru, Mati, Lombrozo, Aaron, Measures, Christopher I., Mitchell, B. Greg, Wang, Haili, Zhou, Meng, 王海黎
Format: Article in Journal/Newspaper
Language:English
Published: PERGAMON-ELSEVIER SCIENCE LTD 2013
Subjects:
SEA
Online Access:http://dspace.xmu.edu.cn/handle/2288/88019
Description
Summary:National Science Foundation [ANT0444134, ANT0948338, OCE0957342, OCE0622740] In order to evaluate the effects of horizontal advection on iron supply in the vicinity of the Shackleton Transverse Ridge (SIR) in the southern Drake Passage, the water composition in the region is estimated along the isopycnal containing the subsurface iron peak. Optimal Multiparameter (OMP) analysis of temperature, salinity, oxygen and nutrient data is used to estimate the water composition at CID stations sampled in summer 2004 and winter 2006. The highest iron concentrations in the Ona Basin are found below the mixed layer, both in summer and in winter. The water composition derived from the OMP analysis is consistent with a scenario in which iron-rich shelf waters from the South Shetland Islands and the Antarctic Peninsula are advected northward on the eastern side of the SIR, where they interact with the low-iron waters of the Antarctic Circumpolar Current (ACC) in the Ona Basin. The shelf waters and the ACC waters appear to interact through a stirring process without fully mixing, resulting in a filamented distribution that has also been inferred from the satellite data. To the west of the STR, the shelf waters are primarily confined to the continental shelf, and do not extend northwards. This source of water distribution is consistent with the idea that iron enters the Ona Basin from the continental shelf through advection along an isopycnal, resulting in an iron concentration peak occurring below the winter mixed layer in the Ona Basin. (c) 2012 Elsevier Ltd. All rights reserved.