A River of Salt

Terrestrial rivers are a well-known part of the global water cycle, and there has been recent discussion of “atmospheric rivers” that transport vast quantities of moisture from the tropical ocean to mid-latitudes in transient weather systems. Complementary “salt rivers” within the ocean are an equal...

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Main Author: Raymond Schmitt
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: The Oceanography Society 2015-03-01
Series:Oceanography
Subjects:
Online Access:http://tos.org/oceanography/archive/28-1_schmitt1.pdf
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spelling doaj-ed050b04123a4320abc3822465a6e1bc2020-11-25T01:54:29ZengThe Oceanography SocietyOceanography1042-82752015-03-01281404510.5670/oceanog.2015.04A River of SaltRaymond Schmitt0Woods Hole Oceanographic InstitutionTerrestrial rivers are a well-known part of the global water cycle, and there has been recent discussion of “atmospheric rivers” that transport vast quantities of moisture from the tropical ocean to mid-latitudes in transient weather systems. Complementary “salt rivers” within the ocean are an equally important part of the global water cycle. They help define the ocean’s methods of returning water to where it is needed to maintain sea level and the global water cycle. One part of the Salinity Processes in the Upper-ocean Regional Study (SPURS) focused on the North Atlantic surface salinity maximum, where high evaporation rates remove freshwater from the ocean surface and leave dissolved salts behind. Much of the effort is devoted to understanding how that salty water disperses through lateral and vertical mixing processes. One important exit path is simple advection within the general circulation, which in the central Atlantic means the wind-driven “Sverdrup” circulation. Evaporation results in high salinity within the flow, marking a subsurface salt river within the ocean. Here, we examine the river’s structure as revealed in the average salinity field of the North Atlantic. Mid-ocean salinity maxima provide a unique opportunity to use an isohaline control volume approach for analyzing the mixing processes that disperse the high-salinity plume.http://tos.org/oceanography/archive/28-1_schmitt1.pdfglobal water cycleatmospheric riversSPURSocean salinityvertical mixingsalinity maximahigh-salinity plume
collection DOAJ
language English
format Article
sources DOAJ
author Raymond Schmitt
spellingShingle Raymond Schmitt
A River of Salt
Oceanography
global water cycle
atmospheric rivers
SPURS
ocean salinity
vertical mixing
salinity maxima
high-salinity plume
author_facet Raymond Schmitt
author_sort Raymond Schmitt
title A River of Salt
title_short A River of Salt
title_full A River of Salt
title_fullStr A River of Salt
title_full_unstemmed A River of Salt
title_sort river of salt
publisher The Oceanography Society
series Oceanography
issn 1042-8275
publishDate 2015-03-01
description Terrestrial rivers are a well-known part of the global water cycle, and there has been recent discussion of “atmospheric rivers” that transport vast quantities of moisture from the tropical ocean to mid-latitudes in transient weather systems. Complementary “salt rivers” within the ocean are an equally important part of the global water cycle. They help define the ocean’s methods of returning water to where it is needed to maintain sea level and the global water cycle. One part of the Salinity Processes in the Upper-ocean Regional Study (SPURS) focused on the North Atlantic surface salinity maximum, where high evaporation rates remove freshwater from the ocean surface and leave dissolved salts behind. Much of the effort is devoted to understanding how that salty water disperses through lateral and vertical mixing processes. One important exit path is simple advection within the general circulation, which in the central Atlantic means the wind-driven “Sverdrup” circulation. Evaporation results in high salinity within the flow, marking a subsurface salt river within the ocean. Here, we examine the river’s structure as revealed in the average salinity field of the North Atlantic. Mid-ocean salinity maxima provide a unique opportunity to use an isohaline control volume approach for analyzing the mixing processes that disperse the high-salinity plume.
topic global water cycle
atmospheric rivers
SPURS
ocean salinity
vertical mixing
salinity maxima
high-salinity plume
url http://tos.org/oceanography/archive/28-1_schmitt1.pdf
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