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A subtropical fate awaited freshwater discharged from glacial Lake Agassiz
Author(s) -
Condron Alan,
Winsor Peter
Publication year - 2011
Publication title -
geophysical research letters
Language(s) - English
Resource type - Journals
SCImago Journal Rank - 2.007
H-Index - 273
eISSN - 1944-8007
pISSN - 0094-8276
DOI - 10.1029/2010gl046011
Subject(s) - oceanography , north atlantic deep water , geology , polar front , thermohaline circulation , glacial period , ocean current , bay , shutdown of thermohaline circulation , subtropics , gulf stream , climatology , paleontology , fishery , biology
The 8.2 kyr event is the largest abrupt climatic change recorded in the last 10,000 years, and is widely hypothesized to have been triggered by the release of thousands of kilometers cubed of freshwater into the North Atlantic Ocean. Using a high‐resolution (1/6°) global, ocean‐ice circulation model we present an alternative view that freshwater discharged from glacial Lake Agassiz would have remained on the continental shelf as a narrow, buoyant, coastal current, and would have been transported south into the subtropical North Atlantic. The pathway we describe is in contrast to the conceptual idea that freshwater from this lake outburst spread over most of the sub‐polar North Atlantic, and covered the deep, open‐ocean, convection regions. This coastally confined freshwater pathway is consistent with the present‐day routing of freshwater from Hudson Bay, as well as paleoceanographic evidence of this event. Using a coarse‐resolution (2.6°) version of the same model, we demonstrate that the previously reported spreading of freshwater across the sub‐polar North Atlantic results from the inability of numerical models of this resolution to accurately resolve narrow coastal flows, producing instead a diffuse circulation that advects freshwater away from the boundaries. To understand the climatic impact of freshwater released in the past or future (e.g. Greenland and Antarctica), the ocean needs to be modeled at a resolution sufficient to resolve the dynamics of narrow, coastal buoyant flows.