The Mediterranean Outflow is a current flowing from the Mediterranean Sea towards the Atlantic Ocean through the Strait of Gibraltar. Once it has reached the western side of the Strait of Gibraltar, it divides into two branches, one flowing westward following the Iberian continental slope, and another returning to the Strait of Gibraltar circulating cyclonically. In the Strait of Gibraltar and in the Gulf of Cádiz, the Mediterranean Outflow core has a width of a few tens of km. [1] Through its nonlinear interactions with tides and topography, as it flows out of the Mediterranean basin it undergoes such strong mixing that the water masses composing this current become indistinguishable upon reaching the western side of the strait. [2]
Light Atlantic water enters the Mediterranean Sea as a surface flow and spreads out through the Western and Eastern Mediterranean basins (separated by the Strait of Sicily), while being gradually modified by mixing with underlying waters. The density of these surface waters increases due to evaporation and warming, forming the saline and warm intermediate and deep Mediterranean Waters, which in turn flow into the Atlantic Ocean as an undercurrent through the Strait of Gibraltar at a rate of approximately 1 Sv (106 m3/s) and at 120 m depth approximately, [1] forming the Mediterranean Outflow.
Once in the western side of the Strait of Gibraltar, the Mediterranean Outflow divides into two branches (see Figure 1). Most of the outflow travels westward along the Iberian continental slope (between St. Vincent Canyon and Gorringe Bank [3] ), and then moves northward as a poleward eastern boundary undercurrent reaching as far as north Porcupine Bank (50°N). [4] While advancing westward, the Mediterranean Outflow becomes less saline due to mixing and entrainment with ambient waters and sinks gradually to its equilibrium depth of 1100 m approximately. The other branch of the Mediterranean Outflow recirculates cyclonically in the Gulf of Cádiz. [5] The result is the formation of the Mediterranean Water that finally spreads into the interior of the North Atlantic forming the most prominent basin-scale thermohaline anomaly at mid-depths, the Mediterranean Salt Tongue, recognizable as a basin-scale salinity anomaly at 1000–1200 m depth through the North Atlantic (see Figure 2). Small scale processes and local scale nonlinear interaction with tides and topography have an impact on the Mediterranean Outflow Water properties and its further spreading pattern in the North Atlantic. [6]
The Mediterranean Outflow is initially composed of different water masses. However, once it has gone through the Strait of Gibraltar these components are not distinguishable anymore. [2] The different water masses composing the Mediterranean Outflow are:
These water masses are no longer distinguishable from each other upon exiting the Strait of Gibraltar. Instead, they are mixed thoroughly into a single, relatively homogenous water mass called the Mediterranean Water. The mixing is caused by important tidal dynamics over the Camarinal Sill. The barotropic tidal currents interact with its bathymetry to produce a remarkable internal tide that in turn gives rise to dissipation rates that are amongst the highest found in the world oceans. [2]
Tidal amplitudes change substantially from the western to the eastern side of the Strait of Gibraltar, going from 1.1 m to 0.2 m, respectively. In contrast, the lines of constant phase (cotidal lines) are mostly zonally oriented along the channel. Thus, the Gulf of Cádiz is strongly influenced by the different tidal regimes of the North Atlantic and the Strait of Gibraltar. [10]
Tides interact with the system in two different ways. First, they are responsible for the strong mixing that causes different water masses to be indistinguishable from one another once they have gone through the Strait of Gibraltar. This is due to the tidal oscillatory flow interacting with the Camarinal Sill, creating an internal bore of high amplitude, which disintegrates into a train of internal solitary waves, which provide the sufficient energy for mixing. [11]
Furthermore, studies [1] show that if it were not for tides, the Mediterranean Salt Tongue would be much more intense and it would be shifted to the south. This behavior is obtained because without tides there would be a gradual increase in the salinity of the Gulf of Cádiz at Mediterranean Outflow water depths. This salinity surplus would propagate southwestward, as a mid-depth salinity front, suppressing the supply of fresher Antarctic Intermediate Water. This would produce a positive feedback that would further enhance the salinity increase and the southwestward spreading of the Mediterranean Outflow Water. This is because tidal residual currents contribute to the advection of Mediterranean Outflow Water west from the Gulf of Cádiz, allowing them to pass through the gap between St. Vincent Canyon and Gorringe Bank. [1]
Meddies are long-lived eddies (mainly anticyclonic) found in the North Atlantic Ocean containing water from the Mediterranean Sea, as they are formed due to the outflow Mediterranean currents. They are coherent vortices characterized by large salt and heat anomalies relative to their environment, typically these anomalies are of 0.4 - 1.1 g/kg and 2 - 4 °C, respectively. [12] Meddies usually have radii from 10 to 50 km, are 500 – 1000 m thick, [13] and are found at depths of 1100 m. Most meddy observations come from the area of the Mediterranean Salt Tongue, as they are mainly created in two sites near the Strait of Gibraltar: Cape St. Vincent and Estremadura Promontory (see Figure 1). [4] Every year, between 15 and 20 meddies are formed at these two sites, and there is a higher probability for meddy formation when the undercurrent speed is high. [4] Meddies can survive for many years and can move through thousands of kilometers, thus they constitute a principal means by which ocean tracers are transported. [12] Their open ocean decay is very slow, while topographic interactions appear to be the main decaying cause of meddies. These interactions are significant to the maintenance of the Mediterranean Salt Tongue, indeed studies estimate that meddies inject 25 - 50% of the salt anomaly necessary to sustain the Mediterranean Salt Tongue. [12]
Two main topographic features block open ocean meddy migration: the Horseshoe Seamount and the Great Meteor Seamount (see Figure 1). The former is a curved grouping of seamounts almost reaching the surface (600 m depth) located southwest of Cape St. Vincent and is the primary topographic obstacle facing many newly formed meddies. The Great Meteor Seamount constitutes a significant topographic anomaly of the Mid-Atlantic Ridge with which many meddies also interact. Seamounts catalyze significant exchange between meddies and the background water of the North Atlantic, because meddy-seamount interaction can lead to meddy destruction, thus releasing their warmer saline water. For this reason, seamount-meddy interactions are considered to be potentially significant (and maybe dominant) in the maintenance of the Mediterranean Salt Tongue. Nevertheless, 60 – 70% of the meddies survive the seamount encounters, remaining intact as coherent vortices, so other mechanisms are needed to maintain the Salt Tongue. The reason for meddies being able to survive at such a large rate from seamount encounters is that they are strong potential vorticity anomalies, thus they are difficult to destroy. Hence, vortex survival is a limiting influence on the Mediterranean Salt Tongue, i.e., vortices emerging from the seamount impact export the bulk of the meddy salinity anomaly to the rest of the North Atlantic, rather than depositing it locally, being able to travel for thousands of kilometers. [12]
Apart from the formation of meddies and the salt tongue, the Mediterranean Outflow has some other effects on the North Atlantic Ocean, or the world oceans in general. Even if the Mediterranean Outflow is of only 1 Sv, which is relatively small compared with other outflows found in the North Atlantic, its salinity and temperature are extremely high compared with any other waters in that depth range, 38 g/kg and 13 °C, respectively. [14] These large contrasts in water mass properties help identify the northward flow along the eastern boundary to the Greenland-Scotland sill, but also a westward flow across the Atlantic that turns southward along the western boundary, reaching the Antarctic Circumpolar Current and the Weddell Sea. These added heat and salt from the Mediterranean outflow are spread southward along the western boundary into the South Atlantic Ocean, where its contribution makes the southward flow warmer and more saline than the incoming circumpolar waters to the east. [15]
Furthermore, even in distant regions such as near Iceland or the Weddell Sea, this water retains salinities high enough to form, when cooled enough, the densest waters of the northern North Atlantic and the Weddell Sea. [15]
The Mediterranean Sea is a sea connected to the Atlantic Ocean, surrounded by the Mediterranean Basin and almost completely enclosed by land: on the north by Southern Europe and Anatolia, on the south by North Africa, on the east by the Levant in West Asia, and on the west almost by the Morocco–Spain border. The Mediterranean has played a central role in the history of Western civilization. Geological evidence indicates that around 5.9 million years ago, the Mediterranean was cut off from the Atlantic and was partly or completely desiccated over a period of some 600,000 years during the Messinian salinity crisis before being refilled by the Zanclean flood about 5.3 million years ago.
North Atlantic Deep Water (NADW) is a deep water mass formed in the North Atlantic Ocean. Thermohaline circulation of the world's oceans involves the flow of warm surface waters from the southern hemisphere into the North Atlantic. Water flowing northward becomes modified through evaporation and mixing with other water masses, leading to increased salinity. When this water reaches the North Atlantic, it cools and sinks through convection, due to its decreased temperature and increased salinity resulting in increased density. NADW is the outflow of this thick deep layer, which can be detected by its high salinity, high oxygen content, nutrient minima, high 14C/12C, and chlorofluorocarbons (CFCs).
The Strait of Gibraltar is a narrow strait that connects the Atlantic Ocean to the Mediterranean Sea and separates Europe from Africa. The two continents are separated by 7.7 nautical miles at its narrowest point. Ferries cross between the two continents every day in as little as 35 minutes. The Strait's depth ranges between 300 and 900 metres.
Tides are the rise and fall of sea levels caused by the combined effects of the gravitational forces exerted by the Moon and are also caused by the Earth and Moon orbiting one another.
In oceanography, a mediterranean sea is a mostly enclosed sea that has limited exchange of water with outer oceans and whose water circulation is dominated by salinity and temperature differences rather than by winds or tides. The eponymous Mediterranean Sea, for example, is almost completely enclosed by Asia, Europe, and Africa.
Physical oceanography is the study of physical conditions and physical processes within the ocean, especially the motions and physical properties of ocean waters.
The East Greenland Current (EGC) is a cold, low-salinity current that extends from Fram Strait (~80N) to Cape Farewell (~60N). The current is located off the eastern coast of Greenland along the Greenland continental margin. The current cuts through the Nordic Seas and through the Denmark Strait. The current is of major importance because it directly connects the Arctic to the Northern Atlantic, it is a major contributor to sea ice export out of the Arctic, and it is a major freshwater sink for the Arctic.
The Strait of Sicily is the strait between Sicily and Tunisia. The strait is about 145 kilometres (90 mi) wide and divides the Tyrrhenian Sea and the western Mediterranean Sea, from the eastern Mediterranean Sea. The maximum depth is 316 meters (1,037 ft). The island of Pantelleria lies in the middle of the strait.
The Alboran Sea is the westernmost portion of the Mediterranean Sea, lying between the Iberian Peninsula and the north of Africa. The Strait of Gibraltar, which lies at the west end of the Alboran Sea, connects the Mediterranean with the Atlantic Ocean.
The Messinian salinity crisis was a geological event during which the Mediterranean Sea went into a cycle of partial or nearly complete desiccation (drying-up) throughout the latter part of the Messinian age of the Miocene epoch, from 5.96 to 5.33 Ma. It ended with the Zanclean flood, when the Atlantic reclaimed the basin.
An inland sea is a continental body of water which is very large in area and is either completely surrounded by dry land or connected to an ocean by a river, strait or "arm of the sea". An inland sea will generally be brackish, with higher salinity than a freshwater lake but usually lower salinity than seawater. As with other seas, inland seas experience tides governed by the orbits of the Moon and Sun.
The following outline is provided as an overview of and introduction to Oceanography.
Chatham Sound is a sound on the North Coast of British Columbia, Canada, bordering on Alaska, United States. It is located between the Dundas and Stephens Islands and the Tsimpsean Peninsula, it is part of the Inside Passage and extends from Portland Inlet in the north to Porcher Island in the south.
The West Spitsbergen Current (WSC) is a warm, salty current that runs poleward just west of Spitsbergen,, in the Arctic Ocean. The WSC branches off the Norwegian Atlantic Current in the Norwegian Sea. The WSC is of importance because it drives warm and salty Atlantic Water into the interior Arctic. The warm and salty WSC flows north through the eastern side of Fram Strait, while the East Greenland Current (EGC) flows south through the western side of Fram Strait. The EGC is characterized by being very cold and low in salinity, but above all else it is a major exporter of Arctic sea ice. Thus, the EGC combined with the warm WSC makes the Fram Strait the northernmost ocean area having ice-free conditions throughout the year in all of the global ocean.
Estuarine water circulation is controlled by the inflow of rivers, the tides, rainfall and evaporation, the wind, and other oceanic events such as an upwelling, an eddy, and storms. Estuarine water circulation patterns are influenced by vertical mixing and stratification, and can affect residence time and exposure time.
The Great Salinity Anomaly (GSA) originally referred to an event in the late 1960s to early 1970s where a large influx of freshwater from the Arctic Ocean led to a salinity anomaly in the northern North Atlantic Ocean, which affected the Atlantic meridional overturning circulation. Since then, the term "Great Salinity Anomaly" has been applied to successive occurrences of the same phenomenon, including the Great Salinity Anomaly of the 1980s and the Great Salinity Anomaly of the 1990s. The Great Salinity Anomalies were advective events, propagating to different sea basins and areas of the North Atlantic, and is on the decadal-scale for the anomalies in the 1970s, 1980s, and 1990s.
In oceanography, a front is a boundary between two distinct water masses. The formation of fronts depends on multiple physical processes and small differences in these lead to a wide range of front types. They can be as narrow as a few hundreds of metres and as wide as several tens of kilometres. While most fronts form and dissipate relatively quickly, some can persist for long periods of time.
An aquatic sill is a sea floor barrier of relatively shallow depth that restricts water movement between benthic zones of an oceanic basin or lake bottom. There are roughly 400 sills in the Earth's oceans, covering 0.01% of the seafloor. A classic example is the Strait of Gibraltar Gateway between the Mediterranean sea and the Atlantic Ocean.
The Zanclean flood or Zanclean deluge is theorized to have refilled the Mediterranean Sea 5.33 million years ago. This flooding ended the Messinian salinity crisis and reconnected the Mediterranean Sea to the Atlantic Ocean, although it is possible that even before the flood there were partial connections to the Atlantic Ocean. The re-connection marks the beginning of the Zanclean age which is the name given to the earliest age on the geologic time scale of the Pliocene.
Cold and dense water from the Nordic Seas is transported southwards as Faroe-Bank Channel overflow. This water flows from the Arctic Ocean into the North Atlantic through the Faroe-Bank Channel between the Faroe Islands and Scotland. The overflow transport is estimated to contribute to one-third of the total overflow over the Greenland-Scotland Ridge. The remaining two-third of overflow water passes through Denmark Strait, the Wyville Thomson Ridge (0.3 Sv), and the Iceland-Faroe Ridge (1.1 Sv).