Arctic Ocean Anomalies
‘Atlantification’ of Arctic sea tipping it towards new climate regime – The research, published in Nature Climate Change, finds that warming conditions and decreasing sea ice volume “may soon” see the Barents Sea complete a transition from cold, fresh Arctic waters to a warm, salty Atlantic regime.
If current trends continue, the transition could occur “around 2040”, the lead author tells Carbon Brief. This would have “unknown consequences” for the wider ecosystem and commercial fishing, the study warns. https://www.carbonbrief.org/atlantification-arctic-sea-tipping-towards-new-climate-regime
Scientists are keeping a close eye on the Beaufort Gyre https://www.pri.org/stories/2018-01-06/scientists-are-keeping-close-eye-beaufort-gyre
In a Spin: New Insights into the Beaufort Gyre https://eos.org/editors-vox/in-a-spin-new-insights-into-the-beaufort-gyre
Supplemental
North Atlantic Ocean Sea Surface Salinity Anomaly Maps
North Atlantic Ocean Sea Surface Height Anomaly Maps
North Atlantic Ocean Sea Surface Temperature Anomaly Maps
North Atlantic Ocean Salinity Anomalies versus Depth and Latitude
FESOM frontier simulation, Arctic Ocean circulation at 100 m
CEN Climate Visualization Laboratory, Salinity on a North Atlantic and Arctic Oceans’ dense isopycnal layer
About the Author: CLIMATE STATE
POPULAR
COMMENTS
- Robert Schreib on Electricity generation prices may increase by as much as 50% if only based on coal and gas
- Robert Schreib on China made a historic commitment to reduce its emissions of greenhouse gases
- Lee Nikki on COP30: Climate Summit 2025 – Intro Climate Action Event
- Hollie Bailey on Leaders doubled down on fossil fuels after promising to reduce climate pollution
- Malcolm R Forster on Mythbusters tests global warming theory – does CO2 warm air?