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  2. Upwelling - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Upwelling

    Upwelling intensity depends on wind strength and seasonal variability, as well as the vertical structure of the water, variations in the bottom bathymetry, and instabilities in the currents. In some areas, upwelling is a seasonal event leading to periodic bursts of productivity similar to spring blooms in coastal waters. Wind-induced upwelling ...

  3. Southern Ocean overturning circulation - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Southern_Ocean_overturning...

    The densities of these waters change due to heat and buoyancy fluxes which result in upwelling in the upper cell and downwelling in the lower cell. [ 5 ] The Southern Ocean plays a key role in the closure of the Atlantic meridional overturning circulation by compensating for the North Atlantic downwelling by upwelling of North Atlantic Deep ...

  4. Pycnocline - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Pycnocline

    The permanent thermocline coincides with a change in water density between the warmer, low-density surface waters and the underlying cold dense bottom waters. The region of rapid density change is known as the pycnocline, and it acts as a barrier to vertical water circulation; thus it also affects the vertical distribution of certain chemicals ...

  5. Eddy pumping - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Eddy_pumping

    Evidence has shown that eddy pumping-induced upwelling and downwelling may play a significant role in shaping the way that carbon is stored in the ocean. Despite the fact that research in this field is only developing recently, first results show that eddies contribute less than 5% of the total annual export of phytoplankton to the ocean interior.

  6. Atmospheric circulation - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Atmospheric_circulation

    The large-scale atmospheric circulation "cells" shift polewards in warmer periods (for example, interglacials compared to glacials), but remain largely constant as they are, fundamentally, a property of the Earth's size, rotation rate, heating and atmospheric depth, all of which change little.

  7. Effects of climate change on oceans - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Effects_of_climate_change...

    Productivity in surface waters therefore depends in part on the transfer of nutrients from deep water back to the surface by ocean mixing and currents. The increasing stratification of the oceans due to climate change therefore acts generally to reduce ocean productivity. However, in some areas, such as previously ice covered regions ...

  8. Thermohaline circulation - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Thermohaline_circulation

    Computer models of ocean circulation increasingly place most of the deep upwelling in the Southern Ocean, associated with the strong winds in the open latitudes between South America and Antarctica. [28] Direct estimates of the strength of the thermohaline circulation have also been made at 26.5°N in the North Atlantic, by the UK-US RAPID ...

  9. Ocean stratification - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Ocean_stratification

    Change in annual and latitudinal means of for different ocean basins. This plot was generated using the GODAS Data [ 4 ] of 1980, 2000 and 2020. In many scientific articles, magazines and blogs, it is claimed that the stratification has increased in all of the ocean basins (e.g. in Ecomagazine.com [ 10 ] and NCAR & UCAR News [ 11 ] ).