Abstract

Two hydrographic voyages separated by 56 years reveal significant changes in the watermass properties in the southeast Indian Ocean along 110°E. The observations from the International Indian Ocean Expedition in 1963 and the reoccupation of the line in 2019 covered the full ocean depth from 40°S to 11°S, measuring physical, chemical, and biological properties. We focus on the physical and biogeochemical properties in watermass layers of the global meridional overturning circulation and the Indian Ocean’s shallow overturning cells.  The subtropical high salinity water (STHW), which forms the lower branch of the shallow overturning cells, has warmer and increased salinity. Subantarctic Mode Water has cooled and freshened on density levels and Antarctic Intermediate Water (AAIW) has warmed and increased in salinity. Both the SAMW and AAIW watermasses have decreased dissolved oxygen content but increased concentrations of nitrate and phosphate. The results show that changes within watermasses follow their northward pathways, suggesting influences from their formation regions, modified by interior mixing along the overturning pathways.

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