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Warming Trend in Antarctic Bottom Water in the Vema Channel in the South Atlantic

Edmo Campos, Mathias van Caspel, Walter Zenk, Е. Г. Морозов, D. I. Frey, Alberto Piola, Christopher S. Meinen, O. T. Sato, Renellys C. Perez, Shenfu Dong

2021Geophysical Research Letters42 citationsDOI

Abstract

Abstract The excess heat absorbed from the atmosphere has increased the temperature in the upper layers of the ocean (<2,000 m). In the abyss, infrequently repeated ship sections, deep Argo float measurements, and sparse moored observations have found signs of warming in the Southwest Atlantic, possibly linked to changes in the Weddell Sea. We present a new moored temperature time series sampled near the bottom in the Vema Channel, from February 2019 to August 2020. Together with historical data, the combined record confirms the warming of the abyssal waters, with an increase of 0.059°C in potential temperature between January 1991 and August 2020, embedded within intense high‐frequency variability. Moreover, the data suggest the possibility of an accelerated warming, with a change in the temperature trend from 0.0016°C yr −1 , between the early 1990s and 2005, to 0.0026°C yr −1 afterwards.

Topics & Concepts

ArgoAbyssal zoneAntarctic Bottom WaterOceanographyBottom waterGeologyClimatologyChannel (broadcasting)Weddell Sea Bottom WaterEnvironmental scienceSea surface temperatureSea iceArctic ice packAntarctic sea iceEngineeringElectrical engineeringOceanographic and Atmospheric ProcessesArctic and Antarctic ice dynamicsMarine and coastal ecosystems
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