Spatial and temporal variability of Atlantic Water in the Arctic from
observations
Abstract
Atlantic Water (AW) is the largest reservoir of heat in the Arctic
Ocean, isolated from the surface and sea-ice by a strong halocline. In
recent years AW shoaling and warming are thought to have had an
increased influence on sea-ice in the Eurasian Basin. In this study we
analyse 59000 profiles from across the Arctic from the 1970s to 2018 to
obtain an observationally-based pan-Arctic picture of the AW layer, and
to quantify temporal and spatial changes. The potential temperature
maximum of the AW (the AW core) is found to be an easily detectable, and
generally effective metric for assessments of AW properties, although
temporal trends in AW core properties do not always reflect those of the
entire AW layer. The AW core cools and freshens along the AW advection
pathway as the AW loses heat and salt through vertical mixing at its
upper bound, as well as via likely interaction with cascading shelf
flows. In contrast to the Eurasian Basin, where the AW warms (by
approximately 0.7°C between 2002 and 2018) in a pulse-like fashion and
has an increased influence on upper ocean heat content, AW in the
Canadian Basin cools (by approximately 0.1°C between 2008 and 2018) and
becomes more isolated from the surface due to the intensification of the
Beaufort Gyre. These opposing AW trends in the Eurasian and Canadian
Basins of the Arctic over the last 40 years suggest that AW in these two
regions may evolve differently over the coming decades.