Abstract

Abstract. One-year long time series of current velocity and temperature from eight moorings deployed in the Faroe Bank Channel (FBC) are analysed to describe the structure and variability of the dense overflow plume on daily to seasonal timescales. Mooring arrays were deployed in two sections: located 25 km downstream of the main sill, in the channel that geographically confines the overflow plume at both edges (section C), and 60 km further downstream, over the slope (section S). At section C, the average volume transport of overflow waters ( < 3 °C) from the Nordic Seas towards the Iceland Basin was 1.3 ± 0.3 Sv; at section S, transport of modified overflow water ( < 6 °C) was 1.7 ± 0.7 Sv. The volume transport through the slope section was dominated by mesoscale variability at 3–5-day timescales. A simplified view of along-path entrainment of a gravity current may not be accurate for the FBC overflow. As the plume proceeds into the stratified ambient water, there is substantial detrainment from the deeper layer (bounded by the 3 °C isotherm), of comparable magnitude to the entrainment into the interfacial layer (between the 3 and 6 °C isotherms). A time series of gradient Richardson numbers suggests a quiescent plume core capped by turbulent near bottom and interfacial layers in the channel. At section S, in contrast, the entire overflow plume is turbulent. Based on a two-layer heat budget constructed for the overflow, time mean vertical diffusivities across the top of the bottom layer and across the interfacial layer were (30 ± 15) × 10−4 and (120 ± 43) × 10−4 m2 s−1, respectively.

Highlights

  • Cold waters that flow from intermediate levels in the Nordic Seas into the North Atlantic must cross the shallow Greenland–Scotland Ridge

  • As the plume proceeds into the stratified ambient water, there is substantial detrainment from the deeper layer, of comparable magnitude to the entrainment into the interfacial layer

  • One section was located in the narrow channel (C) that geographically constrains the overflow

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Summary

Introduction

Overflows occur both across the Iceland–Faroe Ridge and the Wyville Thomson Ridge, but the densest overflow plumes are those passing through the deepest gaps in the Greenland–Scotland Ridge, namely the Denmark Strait and the Faroese channels (Hansen and Østerhus, 2000; Saunders, 2001). This study is based on the first mooring measurements to cover the full width and height of the plume for a whole year, simultaneously by two arrays, one in the channel and a second one over the Iceland–Faroe slope These mooring data were first presented by Darelius et al (2015), who investigated variations in the strength and periodicity of mesoscale.

Data and methods
Thermal structure of the plume
Velocity characteristics
Volume transport
Variability in different frequency bands
Mesoscale variability
Stability
General overflow characteristics
Downstream transport evolution and flow bifurcation
Variability and mixing
Findings
Conclusions
Mooring movement and data interpolation
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