Abstract

Observed variations in the Deep Western Boundary Current (DWBC) at 26.5°N, which carries the deep limb of the Atlantic Meridional Overturning Circulation (MOC), have been shown to greatly exceed in magnitude the variations of the overall basin-wide MOC, with strong variability at a range of time scales from weeks to multiple-months. Attribution of these strong DWBC variations will be crucial for understanding variations in the MOC itself. Nevertheless, despite many years of moored observations of the DWBC at 26.5°N, understanding of these variations has been elusive. Two years of observations from a high horizontal resolution array of pressure-equipped inverted echo sounders are used together with output from a modern high-resolution numerical model to investigate the mechanisms behind these ±20×106m3s−1 volume transport variations. The model and observational results together suggest that the strongest variations cannot be explained solely via either of the two most commonly proposed mechanisms – meandering or pulsation of the DWBC. The dominant mechanism appears to be propagation of Rossby Wave-like structures into the region from the east, and it is the impact of these features in the region that yield the largest transport anomalies. These waves have been observed and discussed in the past – however their key role as the dominant source of DWBC variability has not previously been recognized. The implications of these results are also discussed in the context of future observing systems for the DWBC.

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