Abstract

In the period 1991–1996 the WOCE hydrographic section A1E/AR7E between Greenland and Ireland was repeated five times. The observed thermohaline changes altered the baroclinic structure along the eastern margin of the subpolar gyre significantly. Between June 1995 and August 1996 an overall increase of the temperature and thickness and a decrease of the density of the Subpolar Mode Water (SPMW) layer were observed, accompanied by an increase of its salinity east of the Reykjanes Ridge and a decrease of its salinity in the Irminger Sea. The changes were most pronounced in the Iceland Basin, where the Subarctic Front retreated westwards, coinciding with a strong weakening of the Westerlies as determined by the North Atlantic Oscillation. They are related to a local reduction of the Ekman upwelling and the ocean-to-atmosphere heat flux on the one hand and to the advection of anomalies from the subtropics on the other hand. The eastward spreading of the different Labrador Sea Water (LSW) vintages led to a corresponding cooling of the LSW in the Irminger Sea and in the Iceland Basin in the period 1991–1996. The renewal of the LSW in the Rockall Trough occurred more sporadically, indicating that the North Atlantic Current (NAC) impedes the southward spreading of LSW in the eastern Atlantic. The changes in 1996 seem to have also counteracted this spreading.

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