Abstract
AbstractThe inflow across the Iceland-Scotland Ridge determines the amount of heat supplied to the Nordic Seas from the subpolar North Atlantic (SPNA). Consequently, variable inflow properties and volume transport at the ridge influence marine ecosystems and sea ice extent further north. Here, we identify the upstream pathways of the Nordic Seas inflow, and assess the mechanisms responsible for interannual inflow variability. Using an eddy-permitting ocean model hindcast and a Lagrangian analysis tool, numerical particles are released at the ridge during 1986-2015 and tracked backward in time. We find an inflow that is well-mixed in terms of its properties, where 64% comes from the subtropics and 26% has a subpolar or Arctic origin. The local instantaneous response to the NAO is important for the overall transport of both subtropical and Arctic-origin waters at the ridge. In the years before reaching the ridge, the subtropical particles are influenced by atmospheric circulation anomalies in the gyre boundary region and over the SPNA, forcing shifts in the North Atlantic Current (NAC) and the subpolar front. An equatorward shifted NAC and westward shifted subpolar front correspond to a warmer, more saline inflow. Atmospheric circulation anomalies over the SPNA also affect the amount of Arctic-origin water re-routed from the Labrador Current toward the Nordic Seas. A high transport of Arctic-origin water is associated with a colder, fresher inflow across the Iceland-Scotland Ridge. The results thus demonstrate the importance of gyre dynamics and wind forcing in affecting the Nordic Seas inflow properties and volume transport.
Highlights
Warm and saline Atlantic water supplied by the North Atlantic Current (NAC) flows into the Nordic seas over the Iceland–Scotland Ridge (Fig. 1)
In line with previous studies (e.g., McCartney and Mauritzen 2001; Daniault et al 2016), water from the subtropics supplied by the NAC is found to be the main component of the Nordic seas inflow (Fig. 4a)
64% of the annual mean inflow comes from the subtropics, while 26% has a subpolar or Arctic origin, either coming from the Davis Strait, Hudson Bay, Denmark Strait, or circulating within the subpolar North Atlantic (SPNA) for at least 10 years prior to reaching the ridge (Fig. 5)
Summary
ASBJØRNSEN ET AL. HELENE ASBJØRNSEN,a,b HELEN L. JOHNSON,c AND MARIUS ÅRTHUNa,b a Geophysical Institute, University of Bergen, Bergen, Norway b Bjerknes Centre for Climate Research, Bergen, Norway c Department of Earth Sciences, University of Oxford, Oxford, United Kingdom (Manuscript received 27 November 2020, in final form 27 May 2021)
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