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  • 1
    Publication Date: 2020-06-04
    Description: To date, observations on a single location indicate that cryogenic gypsum (Ca[SO4]⚫2H2O) may constitute an efficient but hitherto overlooked ballasting mineral enhancing the efficiency of the biological carbon pump in the Arctic Ocean. In June–July 2017 we sampled cryogenic gypsum under pack ice in the Nansen Basin north of Svalbard using a plankton net mounted on a remotely operated vehicle (ROVnet). Cryogenic gypsum crystals were present at all sampled stations, which suggested a persisting cryogenic gypsum release from melting sea ice throughout the investigated area. This was supported by a sea ice backtracking model, indicating that gypsum release was not related to a specific region of sea ice formation. The observed cryogenic gypsum crystals exhibited a large variability in morphology and size, with the largest crystals exceeding a length of 1 cm. Preservation, temperature and pressure laboratory studies revealed that gypsum dissolution rates accelerated with increasing temperature and pressure, ranging from 6 % d−1 by mass in polar surface water (−0.5 ∘C) to 81 % d−1 by mass in Atlantic Water (2.5 ∘C at 65 bar). When testing the preservation of gypsum in formaldehyde-fixed samples, we observed immediate dissolution. Dissolution at warmer temperatures and through inappropriate preservation media may thus explain why cryogenic gypsum was not observed in scientific samples previously. Direct measurements of gypsum crystal sinking velocities ranged between 200 and 7000 m d−1, suggesting that gypsum-loaded marine aggregates could rapidly sink from the surface to abyssal depths, supporting the hypothesized potential of gypsum as a ballasting mineral in the Arctic Ocean.
    Print ISSN: 1994-0416
    Electronic ISSN: 1994-0424
    Topics: Geography , Geosciences
    Published by Copernicus on behalf of European Geosciences Union.
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  • 2
    Publication Date: 2023-06-12
    Description: Many state-of-the-art coupled sea ice-ocean models use atmospheric and oceanic drag coefficients that are at best a function of the atmospheric stability but otherwise constant in time and space. Constant drag coefficients might lead to an incorrect representation of the ice-air and ice-ocean momentum exchange, since observations of turbulent fluxes imply high variability of drag coefficients. We compare three model runs, two with constant drag coefficients and one with drag coefficients varying as function of sea-ice characteristics. The computed drag coefficients range between 0.88 ×10−3 and 4.68 ×10−3 for the atmosphere, and between 1.28 ×10−3 and 13.68 ×10−3 for the ocean. They fall in the range of observed drag coefficients and illustrate the interplay of ice deformation and ice concentration in different seasons and regions. The introduction of variable drag coefficients improves the realism of the model simulation. In addition, using the average values of the variable drag coefficients improves simulations with constant drag coefficients. When drag coefficients depend on sea-ice characteristics, the average sea-ice drift speed in the Arctic basin increases from 6.22 cm s−1 to 6.64 cm s−1. This leads to a reduction of ice thickness in the entire Arctic and particularly in the Lincoln Sea with a mean value decreasing from 7.86 m to 6.62 m. Variable drag coefficients lead also to a deeper mixed layer in summer and to changes in surface salinity. Surface temperatures in the ocean are also affected by variable drag coefficients with differences of up to 0.06 °C in the East Siberian Sea. Small effects are visible in the ocean interior
    Repository Name: EPIC Alfred Wegener Institut
    Type: Article , peerRev
    Format: application/pdf
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