RUSSIAN JOURNAL OF EARTH SCIENCES, VOL. 19, ES5005, doi:10.2205/2019ES000679, 2019


Thermohaline structure of Antarctic Bottom Water in the abyssal basins of the South Atlantic

D. I. Frey, E. G. Morozov, I. Ansorge, V. V. Fomin, N. A. Diansky, R. Yu. Tarakanov

Abstract

Antarctic Bottom Water (AABW) occupies the lowest ocean layer in the major part of the Atlantic. Despite the fact that this water has the same origin from the Weddell Sea, thermohaline properties of bottom layers vary strongly in different deep basins. Temperature and salinity increase along the pathways of bottom water propagation is caused by mixing of AABW with the warmer and more saline water in the overlying layers. This mixing strongly intensifies over underwater ridges; in addition, these ridges determine the pathways of bottom water spreading. Thus, the ocean topography plays the most important role in the formation of thermohaline structure of deep basins. In particular, the properties of AABW in the western and eastern parts of the South Atlantic significantly differ from each other. In this paper we compare temperature and salinity structure of the abyssal waters of the Southeast and Southwest Atlantic. We used the results of high spatial resolution modeling and hydrographic measurements for this study. We also simulated the velocity field in the bottom layer of the South Atlantic.

Received 30 August 2019; accepted 5 September 2019; published 11 October 2019.


      Powered by MathJax


Citation: Frey D. I., E. G. Morozov, I. Ansorge, V. V. Fomin, N. A. Diansky, R. Yu. Tarakanov (2019), Thermohaline structure of Antarctic Bottom Water in the abyssal basins of the South Atlantic, Russ. J. Earth Sci., 19, ES5005, doi:10.2205/2019ES000679.


Generated from LaTeX source by ELXfinal, v.2.0 software package.