Effects of Drake Passage on a strongly eddying global ocean
The climate impact of ocean gateway openings during the Eocene-Oligocene transition is still under debate. Previous model studies employed grid resolutions at which the impact of mesoscale eddies has to be parameterized. We present results of a state-of-the-art eddy-resolving global ocean model with...
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Zusammenfassung: | The climate impact of ocean gateway openings during the Eocene-Oligocene
transition is still under debate. Previous model studies employed grid
resolutions at which the impact of mesoscale eddies has to be parameterized. We
present results of a state-of-the-art eddy-resolving global ocean model with a
closed Drake Passage, and compare with results of the same model at non-eddying
resolution. An analysis of the pathways of heat by decomposing the meridional
heat transport into eddy, horizontal, and overturning circulation components
indicates that the model behavior on the large scale is qualitatively similar
at both resolutions. Closing Drake Passage induces (i) sea surface warming
around Antarctica due to changes in the horizontal circulation of the Southern
Ocean, (ii) the collapse of the overturning circulation related to North
Atlantic Deep Water formation leading to surface cooling in the North Atlantic,
(iii) significant equatorward eddy heat transport near Antarctica. However,
quantitative details significantly depend on the chosen resolution. The warming
around Antarctica is substantially larger for the non-eddying configuration
(5.5{degree sign}C) than for the eddying configuration (2.5{degree sign}C).
This is a consequence of the subpolar mean flow which partitions differently
into gyres and circumpolar current at different resolutions. We conclude that
for a deciphering of the different mechanisms active in Eocene-Oligocene
climate change detailed analyses of the pathways of heat in the different
climate subsystems are crucial in order to clearly identify the physical
processes actually at work. |
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DOI: | 10.48550/arxiv.1510.04141 |