Javascript must be enabled to continue!
Export of newly oxygenated Labrador Sea Water at 53N
View through CrossRef
<div>
<p>Most of the life-sustaining oxygen found in the global deep ocean is supplied in one of only a handful of key regions around the globe, such as the Labrador Sea in the subpolar North Atlantic. Here, oxygen is supplied directly to the deep ocean during the formation of Labrador Sea Water (LSW), when convective mixing continuously brings low-oxygen deep water towards the surface and into contact with the atmosphere. The continuous exchange between the surface and deep ocean during convection can bring newly oxygenated waters as deep as 2000m. Although the associated oxygen uptake has been observed and quantified, and the resulting oxygen-rich water mass in the deep ocean is readily detected throughout the Atlantic Ocean, relatively little is known about the exact mechanisms and timing of its export out of the basin.</p>
</div><div>
<p>In this talk, we will present a novel dataset of oxygen sensors deployed within the boundary current at the exit of the Labrador Sea to investigate oxygen variability in the deep ocean. This is the first time that a continuous time series of oxygen has been collected in the boundary current of the Labrador Sea, with a total of 10 sensors deployed on 4 moorings from 2016 to 2020. The sensors at 600m depth show a sudden change in oxygen, temperature, and salinity in the spring, which we discuss in relation to deep convection in the interior. We also use data from Argo floats to analyse export pathways from the convection region to the location of the moorings. Our results give new insights into how the oxygen taken up in the central Labrador Sea subsequently spreads into the global deep ocean, and lay the basis for future work on quantifying variability of oxygen transport at the exit of the Labrador Sea.</p>
</div>
Title: Export of newly oxygenated Labrador Sea Water at 53N
Description:
<div>
<p>Most of the life-sustaining oxygen found in the global deep ocean is supplied in one of only a handful of key regions around the globe, such as the Labrador Sea in the subpolar North Atlantic.
Here, oxygen is supplied directly to the deep ocean during the formation of Labrador Sea Water (LSW), when convective mixing continuously brings low-oxygen deep water towards the surface and into contact with the atmosphere.
The continuous exchange between the surface and deep ocean during convection can bring newly oxygenated waters as deep as 2000m.
Although the associated oxygen uptake has been observed and quantified, and the resulting oxygen-rich water mass in the deep ocean is readily detected throughout the Atlantic Ocean, relatively little is known about the exact mechanisms and timing of its export out of the basin.
</p>
</div><div>
<p>In this talk, we will present a novel dataset of oxygen sensors deployed within the boundary current at the exit of the Labrador Sea to investigate oxygen variability in the deep ocean.
This is the first time that a continuous time series of oxygen has been collected in the boundary current of the Labrador Sea, with a total of 10 sensors deployed on 4 moorings from 2016 to 2020.
The sensors at 600m depth show a sudden change in oxygen, temperature, and salinity in the spring, which we discuss in relation to deep convection in the interior.
We also use data from Argo floats to analyse export pathways from the convection region to the location of the moorings.
Our results give new insights into how the oxygen taken up in the central Labrador Sea subsequently spreads into the global deep ocean, and lay the basis for future work on quantifying variability of oxygen transport at the exit of the Labrador Sea.
</p>
</div>.
Related Results
Increased life expectancy of heart failure patients in a rural center by a multidisciplinary program
Increased life expectancy of heart failure patients in a rural center by a multidisciplinary program
Abstract
Funding Acknowledgements
Type of funding sources: None.
INTRODUCTION Patients with heart failure (HF)...
Export concentration and diversification impact on economic growth in the developed and developing countries of the world
Export concentration and diversification impact on economic growth in the developed and developing countries of the world
There is much evidence that export diversity has a positive effect on economic growth, but there is some evidence that the concentration of exports may be also related to economic ...
Ventilation and oxygen export in the Labrador Sea
Ventilation and oxygen export in the Labrador Sea
<p>The Labrador Sea is one of the few regions where ventilation can replenish oxygen to the deep ocean, owing to wintertime deep convection that occurs primarily in t...
Geology of the Labrador Shelf
Geology of the Labrador Shelf
The Cretaceous-Tertiary sequences penetrated by drilling operations on the Labrador Shelf have been divided into four formations for which formal names are proposed in this paper. ...
Seasonal Arctic sea ice predictability and prediction
Seasonal Arctic sea ice predictability and prediction
Arctic sea ice plays a central role in the Earth’s climate. Changes in the sea ice on seasonal-to-interannual timescales impact ecosystems, populations and a growing number of stak...
Spreading dynamics of central Labrador and Irminger Sea Waters
Spreading dynamics of central Labrador and Irminger Sea Waters
<p>Water mass formation in the Subpolar North Atlantic and successive southward export, connects high latitudes with lower latitudes, as a part of the lower Atlantic ...
Unpacking the relationship between export coopetition activities and export sales performance
Unpacking the relationship between export coopetition activities and export sales performance
PurposeWhile coopetition (cooperation among competitors) has been widely researched in domestic settings, relatively less work has evaluated how small exporters engage in these bus...
Exploratory Drilling on the Canadian Continental Shelf, Labrador Sea
Exploratory Drilling on the Canadian Continental Shelf, Labrador Sea
The ice pack, icebergs, and meteorology are among the factors making exploratory drilling in the Labrador Sea difficult. After an unsuccessful attempt at operations with a conventi...

