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Significance of diapycnal mixing within the Atlantic Meridional Overturning Circulation
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  • Laura Cimoli,
  • Ali Mashayek,
  • Helen Louise Johnson,
  • David P Marshall,
  • Alberto C. Naveira Garabato,
  • Caitlin Whalen,
  • Clement Vic,
  • Casimir de Lavergne,
  • Matthew H Alford,
  • Jennifer A MacKinnon,
  • Lynne D. Talley
Laura Cimoli
University of Oxford

Corresponding Author:[email protected]

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Ali Mashayek
Imperial College London
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Helen Louise Johnson
University of Oxford
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David P Marshall
University of Oxford
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Alberto C. Naveira Garabato
University of Southampton
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Caitlin Whalen
University of Washington
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Clement Vic
Laboratoire d'Oceanographie Physique et Spatiale
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Casimir de Lavergne
Sorbonne University
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Matthew H Alford
Scripps Institution of Oceanography
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Jennifer A MacKinnon
Scripps Institution of Oceanography
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Lynne D. Talley
UCSD
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Abstract

Diapycnal mixing shapes the distribution of climatically-important tracers, such as heat and carbon, as these are carried by dense water masses in the ocean interior. Here, we analyze a suite of observation-based estimates of diapycnal mixing to assess its role within the Atlantic Meridional Overturning Circulation. The rate of water mass transformation in the Atlantic Ocean’s interior shows that there is a robust buoyancy increase in the North Atlantic Deep Water (NADW), with a diapycnal circulation of up to 4 Sv between 24N and 32S in the Atlantic Ocean. Moreover, tracers within the southward-flowing NADW may undergo a substantial diapycnal transfer, equivalent to hundreds of metres in the vertical. This result is confirmed with a zonally-averaged numerical model of the AMOC and indicates that tracer mixing can lead to divergent global pathways and ventilation timescales following the upwelling of tracers in the Southern Ocean. These results point to the need for a realistic mixing representation in climate models in order to understand and credibly project the ongoing climate change.