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  • 1
    Publication Date: 2010-04-25
    Description: The primary paths for the transport of Antarctic Bottom Water from the Southern Ocean into the global ocean are the deep western boundary currents east of the Antarctic Peninsula and the Kerguelen plateau. Previous ship-based observations documented distinct water properties and velocities associated with a deep western boundary current in the Kerguelen region, but the mean flow is as yet unconstrained. Here we report measurements from a coherent array of eight current-meter moorings that reveal a narrow and intense equatorward flow extending throughout the water column just east of the Kerguelen plateau. Velocities averaged over two years exceed 20 cm s 1 at depths of about 3,500 m, the strongest mean deep western boundary current flow yet observed at similar depths. We estimate the mean equatorward transport of water colder than 0 C at 12.31.2×10 6 m 3 s 1, partially compensated by poleward flow. We also estimate the net equatorward flow of water colder than 0.2 C at about 8×10 6 m 3 s 1, substantially higher than the 1.9×10 6 m 3 s 1 reported from the boundary current that carries dense water from the Weddell Sea into the Atlantic Ocean north of the Falkland plateau. We conclude that the Kerguelen deep western boundary current is a significant pathway of the global oceans deep overturning circulation. © 2010 Macmillan Publishers Limited.
    Print ISSN: 1752-0894
    Electronic ISSN: 1752-0908
    Topics: Geosciences
    Published by Springer Nature
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