Iconocast Logo

Welcome To Iconocast

How to add a URL link from your web site to the Iconocast web sites

Virtual tour of Southern California



 

Recent News and Articles on the Keywords: ocean + slow + southern  Related to the article below (Last Update: 8/5/2008)

It's winter, just weather it
Stuff.co.nz, New Zealand -
A weakness in upper-level winds in the mid-Pacific Ocean is affecting the normal movement of weather systems, pushing them out of place and slowing them ...
The TV Watch Eco-Emeril on Planet Green, With Mayo and ...
New York Times, United States -
The show?s regular hosts, Darren and Boise and Angela, swan around Southern California calling each other ?dude? as they recycle, down-size and party in a ...
Professor: Moderately Fertilizing Ocean May Slow Global Warming
Mountain Mail, NM - Jul 10, 2008
New Mexico Tech chemistry professor Oliver Wingenter and his colleagues believe modest fertilization of the Southern Ocean with iron might help slow some of ...
A lot of movement on O's pitch for Teixeira
Baltimore Sun, United States - Aug 3, 2008
Sure, Teixeira originally is an East Coast guy, but he has a home in Texas, so it's not as if he is tethered to the Atlantic Ocean. ...
Greenland meltwater will take slow wave around globe
New Scientist (subscription), UK - Jul 7, 2008
The strong currents in the Southern Ocean could prevent substantial sea-level rise from reaching much of the world for centuries. ...
Hopping marine hotspots linked to geology
ABC Science Online, Australia - Jul 31, 2008
The researchers found that the first hotspot was in the shallow ocean between Western Europe and Africa. This Mediterranean area, which was once linked to ...
My brain on drugs
PR CannaZine (press release), UK -
During another trip, wound up by side the Atlantic Ocean and looking out on the vast sea, the waves became MC Escher fish, heads to tails all moving in ...
Carla Carlisle on the slow lane
Country Life, UK - Jul 31, 2008
It?s as stately as the Queen Mary, and the barley disappears in front of its prow like the curl of an ocean wave. The beginning of harvest is a prayerful ...
Battered islands, battered fish
SunHerald.com, MS - Aug 2, 2008
Also on the trip were Doug and DJ Borries of Ocean Springs, Jody Schilling of Denham Springs, La., and Cabby Caballero of Gulfport. ...
Southern Ocean County fishing zones
Asbury Park Press, NJ - Jul 11, 2008
The fluke bite in the ocean is slow due to the low water temperatures while wrecks and reefs are still producing some decent sea bass action. ...
Source: Google News

… oceanic teleconnections linking the Antarctic Circumpolar Wave with the tropical El Nino-Southern -
RG Peterson, WB White - Journal 95JA00000 - earth.agu.org
... This constitutes a slow, oceanic teleconnection that is unique in climate dynamics,
made possible by the continuity of Earth's oceans via the Southern Ocean. ...

An overview of coupled ocean-atmosphere models of El Nino and the Southern Oscillation -
J MCCREARY - Journal of Geophysical Research, 1991 - agu.org
... of El Ni?o and the Southern Oscillation (ENSO ... three potentially important mechanisms
of ocean-atmospheric interaction in the tropics: the slow propagation of ...

Strong hemispheric coupling of glacial climate through freshwater discharge and ocean circulation -
R Knutti, J Fl?ckiger, TF Stocker, A Timmermann - Nature, 2004 - nature.com
... two distinct, but intimately related, ocean circulation feedbacks ... DO and Heinrich
events, the slow timescale associated ... of sea level to southern temperature and ...

Slow El Ni?o-Southern Oscillation boundary waves -
WB White - Journal of Geophysical Research, 1994 - adsabs.harvard.edu
... filtered to reveal El Ni?o-Southern Oscillation (ENSO ... These time-distance diagrams
display slow poleward propagation ... In the North Pacific Ocean, ENSO signals ...

Tropical Ocean-Atmosphere Interaction, the Pacific Cold Tongue, and the El Ni?o-Southern Oscillation -
FF Jin - Atmospheric Science, 1996 - sciencemag.org
... is dominated by the well-known El Ni?o-Southern Oscillation (ENSO ... and discharge of
the equatorial heat content associated with slow ocean dynamic adjustment ...

Southern Ocean Iron Enrichment Experiment: Carbon Cycling in High-and Low-Si Waters -
KH Coale, KS Johnson, FP Chavez, KO Buesseler, RT … - Science, 2004 - sciencemag.org
... This would indicate that conditions in the Southern Ocean rarely exist ... a result of
self-shading may slow production ... 2 from the atmosphere into the ocean by four ...

Nanotube Molecular Wires as Chemical Sensors -
J Kong, NR Franklin, C Zhou, MG Chapline, S Peng, … - Science, 2000 - sciencemag.org
... Res. Lett. 25, 1003 (1998). Our simulations tend to have slow and shallow North
Atlantic Deep Water, but they represent the Southern Ocean relatively well. 11. ...

… of the Coupled Tropical Pacific Ocean?Atmosphere System Associated with the El Ni?o?Southern -
RH Zhang, S Levitus - Journal of Climate, 1997 - ams.allenpress.com
... ENSO cycle, characterized by a slow phase propagation ... anomalies in the western Pacific
Ocean, which propagate ... terminating one phase of the Southern Oscillation ...

Dissolved iron at subnanomolar levels in the Southern Ocean as determined by ship-board analysis -
JTM de Jong, J den Das, U Bathmann, MHC Stoll, G … - Analytica Chimica Acta, 1998 - Elsevier
... The differences could be caused by slow dissolution of some refractory iron ... The Southern
Ocean is dominated by the Antarctic Circumpolar Current (ACC) flowing ...

Geologic implications of seawater circulation through peridotite exposed at slow-spreading mid-ocean -
T Schroeder, B John, BR Frost - Geology, 2002 - Geological Soc America
... Slow-spreading mid-ocean ridges accommodate ... is poorly to moderately indurated over
the main body of the massif and well indurated near the southern wall (Fig ...

Source: Google Scholar
 

Southern Ocean could slow global warming

The Southern Ocean may slow the rate of global warming by absorbing significantly more heat and carbon dioxide than previously thought, according to new research.

The Southern Hemisphere westerly winds have moved southward in the last 30 years. A new climate model predicts that as the winds shift south, they can do a better job of transferring heat and carbon dioxide from the surface waters surrounding Antarctica into the deeper, colder waters.

The new finding surprised the scientists, said lead researcher Joellen L. Russell. "We think it will slow global warming. It won't reverse or stop it, but it will slow the rate of increase."

Article continues below and (thank you)

 

Southern Hemisphere Winds and Currents

Caption: This image shows the oceans and continents that surround Antarctica . The tip of South America is on the upper left, the tip of Africa is at the upper right and Australia is at the bottom right. The ocean colors indicate temperature, with the darkest blue indicating the coldest water. The black arrows show the direction the Southern Hemisphere westerly winds and the Antarctic Circumpolar Current take as they swirl around the southernmost continent. Copyright 2006 Paul J. Goodman, The University of Arizona .

Credit: Copyright 2006 Paul J. Goodman, The University of Arizona .

Usage Restrictions: Image must be used only in connection with a story about the research described in this release. Credit must be given as: Copyright 2006 Paul J. Goodman, The University of Arizona.

 

The new model Russell and her colleagues developed provides a realistic simulation of the Southern Hemisphere westerlies and Southern Ocean circulation.

Previous climate models did not have the winds properly located. In simulations of present-day climate, those models distorted the ocean's response to future increases in greenhouse gases.

"Because these winds have moved poleward, the Southern Ocean around Antarctica is likely to take up 20 percent more carbon dioxide than in a model where the winds are poorly located," said Russell, an assistant professor of geosciences at The University of Arizona in Tucson.

“More heat stored in the ocean means less heat stored in the atmosphere. That's also true for carbon dioxide, the major greenhouse gas."

"But there are consequences," Russell said. "This isn't an unqualified good, even if more carbon dioxide and heat goes into the ocean."

As the atmosphere warms, storing more heat in the ocean will cause sea levels to rise even faster as the warmed water expands, she said. Adding more CO2 to the oceans will change their chemistry, making the water more acidic and less habitable for some marine organisms.

Russell and her colleagues conducted the study while she was a researcher at Princeton University and the National Oceanic and Atmospheric Administration's Geophysical Fluid Dynamics Laboratory in Princeton, N.J.

Her co-authors on the article, "The Southern Hemisphere Westerlies in a Warming World: Propping open the Door to the Deep Ocean,” are GFDL researchers Keith W. Dixon, Anand Gnanadesikan, Ronald J. Stouffer and J.R. Toggweiler. The article will be published in the December 15 issue of the Journal of Climate. NOAA funded the work.

The researchers characterize the Southern Ocean as "the crossroads of the global ocean's water masses, connecting the Atlantic, Pacific and Indian Oceans as well as connecting the deep ocean to the surface."

The current set of computer models that scientists use to predict future climate differ in the degree to which heat is sequestered by the Southern Ocean. The models vary in how they represent the behavior of the Southern Hemisphere Westerlies and the Antarctic Circumpolar Current, the largest current on the planet.

The team's model does a better job of depicting the location and observed southward shift of the Southern Hemisphere atmospheric winds than do previous global climate circulation models. The new model developed at GFDL shows that the poleward shift of the westerlies intensifies the strength of the winds as they whip past the tip of South America and circumnavigate Antarctica.

"It's like a huge blender," Russell said as she held up a globe and demonstrated how the winds whirl around the southernmost continent. Those winds, she said, propel the Antarctic Circumpolar Current. The current drives the upwelling of cold water from more than two miles deep. The heavy, cold water comes to the surface and then sinks back down, carrying the carbon dioxide and heat with it.

The new model forecasts this shift in the winds will continue into the future as greenhouse gases increase.

Stouffer said, “The poleward intensification of the westerlies will allow the ocean to remove additional heat and anthropogenic carbon dioxide from the atmosphere. Thus, the deep ocean has the potential to slow the atmospheric warming through the increased storage of heat and carbon.”

The team's next step will be figuring out how warming, ice-melt and ongoing shifts in the Southern Hemisphere westerlies will affect the biogeochemistry of the Southern Ocean and the global budgets for heat and carbon dioxide.

###

Editor and reporters note: Image available from media contacts or the researchers.

UA media contact: Mari N. Jensen, 520-626-9635, mnjensen@email.arizona.edu

NOAA media contact: Jana Goldman, 1-301-713-2483, ext. 181, Jana.Goldman@noaa.gov

Related websites: Joellen Russell, http://www.geo.arizona.edu/BGDL

Ronald Stouffer, http://www.gfdl.noaa.gov

National Oceanic and Atmospheric Administration, http://www.noaa.gov

 
Google
Web www.iconocast.com
 
 
Continue News With: News3 ; News4 ; News5 ; News6 ; News7 ; News8 ; News9 ; News9A


ADVERTISEMENT

Iconocast is about learning and teaching without borders; we offer eMarketing, Internet Advertising, Internet Marketing, Search Engine Optimization, Search Engine Marketing, Online Branding, and eMarketing News Services.

 

Iconocast Home Page

 © 2002-2006

Keywords:

Contact Iconocast