How deep water surfaces around Antarctica

3-D maps of upwelling could help climate scientists understand heat, carbon absorption

ice shelves in western Antarctic Peninsula

MELT OFF  Off the coast of the western Antarctic Peninsula (shown), upwelling of relatively warm, deep water has been linked to the melting of ice shelves, which help buttress the region’s glaciers.

Jo Crebbin/Shutterstock

View the video

There’s no signpost to mark it, but about 3,000 meters underwater off the southeast coast of South America, a stream of deep water from the Atlantic Ocean spills into the Southern Ocean. Now new maps reveal in 3-D how the path of that water, called the North Atlantic Deep Water, spirals southeastward and up toward the surface around Antarctica.

The incoming water, part of the global conveyor belt of currents circulating throughout the oceans, is relatively warm and salty compared with the rest of the Southern Ocean. Researchers marshaled ocean temperature and salinity data to broadly map the deep water’s path (see map, below left). The data show that some of the water upwells close to the continental shelf along the western Antarctic Peninsula. Such intrusions have been linked to the melting of ice shelves.

For a detailed look at what controls the upwelling, the researchers turned to high-resolution climate and ocean simulations to track virtual particles traveling in the deep water (see map, below right). For example, two particles (dark blue dots) enter in water from the Atlantic and spiral clockwise toward the surface (red dots).

This and other simulations show that five key spots at large ridges and plateaus drive most of the upwelling. Deep water passing these features spawns whirlpools that in turn push the water southward and upward, the researchers report August 2 in Nature Communications. Deep water entering the Southern Ocean from the Indian and Pacific oceans follows a similar pattern.

“Until now, we mostly thought about upwelling as this really broad thing that’s just happening everywhere” in the Southern Ocean, says study coauthor Veronica Tamsitt of the Scripps Institution of Oceanography in La Jolla, Calif.

Understanding this upwelling matters because the deep water carries a lot of heat and carbon. As the climate changes, Southern Ocean upwelling may increase, which could accelerate ice shelf melting, release more carbon into the atmosphere and limit the ocean’s ability to absorb heat and carbon dioxide from the atmosphere. Today, the Southern Ocean accounts for almost half of the anthropogenic CO2 and 75 percent of the heat that the world’s oceans soak up from the atmosphere.

GO WITH THE FLOW Using climate and ocean simulations, researchers tracked virtual particles traveling in deep ocean water from the Atlantic as that water spirals and surfaces around Antarctica. V. Tamsitt et al/Nature Communications 2017

Emily DeMarco is the deputy news editor. She has a bachelor's degree in English from Furman University and a master of environmental science and management from the University of California, Santa Barbara.

More Stories from Science News on Oceans

From the Nature Index

Paid Content