
Αρκετά ενδιάφερουσα ανακάλυψη απο τους επιστήμονες σχετικά με την ύπαρξη ενός παγωμένου ρεύματος νερού στο νότιο ημισφαίριο μεταξύ Αυστραλίας και Ανταρκτικής.
Work in Japan and Australia has revealed that a deep-ocean current is carrying frigid water rapidly northward from Antarctica along the edge of a giant underwater plateau.
Other research teams had previously identified a deep current along the eastern edge of the Kerguelen Plateau, a more than 2,200-kilometre-long rise some 3,000 kilometres south-west of Australia. But estimates of its speed, taken as “snapshots” by instruments deployed from research vessels, had been “all over the place”, says Steve Rintoul, a physical oceanographer at the Antarctic Climate and Ecosystem Cooperative Research Centre in Hobart, Australia, and a co-author of the new study1.
Yasushi Fukamachi, an ocean scientist at Hokkaido University in Sapporo, Japan, led a team effort to determine the exact nature of the current. The researchers moored over 30 current and temperature recorders across its probable path and left these in place for two years. When they retrieved their instruments, the scientists discovered that the current, which flows at depths well below 3,000 metres, sometimes hit speeds greater than 700 metres per hour, carrying volumes as high as 30 million cubic metres per second. No other deep current in the Southern Hemisphere is known to move that quickly.
The current is formed by cold water sinking in the Ross Sea and off the coast of Adelie Land, on the Australian-facing side of Antarctica. Once in the abyss, the water flows eastward along the coast of Antarctica before hitting the Kerguelen Plateau. Then, just as the Gulf Stream hugs the eastern edge of North America, Coriolis force from Earth’s rotation causes the Antarctic water to embrace the plateau’s eastern flank. The result is a narrow, and so fast-moving, stream, about 50 kilometres wide.
This is significant because it represents a “fast lane” by which climatic and environmental changes affecting the Southern Ocean can propagate northward, says Alejandro Orsi, a physical oceanographer at Texas A & M University in College Station, who was not involved in the study. Proof that this is already occurring, he adds, can be seen from the fact that the deep waters near the Kerguelen Plateau already show “clear signs” of reduced salinity relating to changes in the rate of melting of Antarctic ice sheets.
Natural experiment
Understanding such currents could help scientists to predict how the world will react to increasing levels of carbon dioxide, says Richard Alley, a geoscientist at Pennsylvania State University in University Park. To begin with, he says, if heat goes into warming the deep ocean rather than surface waters, it will have less effect on sea-level rise because cold water in the ocean’s depths expands less than warm surface waters. Similarly, heat and carbon dioxide contained in deep-ocean currents are sequestered from the atmosphere until the water rises back the surface, many years later.
via NatureNews
2 comments
2 pings
MadAGu
April 27, 2010 at 4:58 pm (UTC 2)
This is a great discovery indeed, but to be honest to predict the effects of global warming even in a small area is too difficult, mainly on the large number of parameters you have to include to your model, but anyway we have to make efforts in order to protect our planet.
And to be a little sarcastic: at least in other countries they have serious research labs that produce something usefull…
Virtuosofriend
May 1, 2010 at 11:18 pm (UTC 2)
The like feature rocks.
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