Underwater mountains and their impact on ocean circulation

underwater mountains and their impact on ocean circulation

Credit: CC0 Public Domain

Colossal undersea mountains, towering up to thousands of meters high, stir up deep sea currents: impacting how our ocean stores heat and carbon.

An international team, led by the University of Cambridge, used numerical modeling to quantify how underwater turbulence around these mountains, called seamounts, influences ocean circulation; finding it is an important mechanism in ocean mixing and one that is missing from climate models used in policymaking.

"The intense turbulence around seamounts makes them a major contributor to ocean mixing at a global scale, but we don't have that process represented in climate models," said Dr. Ali Mashayek from Cambridge's Department of Earth Science, who led the study. The findings, which were published in the journal Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences, could be used to improve model forecasts of how the ocean will respond to global warming.

The ocean is in perpetual motion, as if a massive giant conveyor belt: warm water from the tropics slowly moves toward the poles, where it cools and sinks thousands of meters into the ocean's abyss, taking with it stored carbon, heat and nutrients.

This cold, heavy water must resurface, otherwise the ocean would fill with frigid water. But identifying where the power for this return flow comes from has been a major scientific challenge. The new study helps resolve this longstanding mystery, showing how seamounts aid ocean circulation.

Tens of thousands of undersea mountains, or seamounts, lie at the bottom of the ocean, but that figure is likely to be much larger because only a quarter of the seabed has been mapped.

Seamounts are obstacles for deep sea currents. Water roars over their steep slopes—creating spiraling wake vortices that carry water toward the surface. "The deep waters around a seamount are chaotic and turbulent," said Mashayek, "the turbulence churns up the ocean just like stirring milk into your coffee." That stirring helps pull deep and heavy water to the surface; completing a circuit that the keeps the ocean flowing.

Deep-sea turbulence has been measured around seamounts before, but scientists weren't previously sure how important this process was in ocean circulation once extrapolated to the entire ocean. According to Mashayek and the team, the stirring around seamounts contributes to about a third of ocean mixing globally. The contribution was greater, at around 40%, in the Pacific Ocean, where there are more seamounts.

The Pacific is the largest store of heat and carbon. It's generally thought that deep water in the Pacific Ocean takes several thousand years to resurface, "but if seamounts are enhancing mixing, particularly in large carbon stores like the Pacific, then the timescale of storage could be shorter and if carbon is released sooner that could speed climate change," said co-author Dr. Laura Cimoli from Cambridge's Department of Applied Mathematics and Theoretical Physics.

Mashayek and his colleagues aren't the first to suggest that seamounts could be critical to ocean circulation. Back in the 1960s the famed oceanographer Walter Munk theorized that seamounts might be "the stirring rods of the ocean." Since then, oceanographers have probed waters around seamounts and measured this turbulent flow directly.

"But what was missing from the picture was a measure of how much this mattered at a global scale," said co-author Professor Alberto Naveira Garabato, from the University of Southampton. "The only reason we've been able to put this to the test now is that we only recently had enough of the seafloor mapped. The number of seamounts is likely to be even larger, so our estimates of their importance in mixing are still conservative."

The team now plan to incorporate the physics of seamount-induced turbulence into climate models, helping improve forecasts of how climate change could impact the ocean's carbon and heat storage. "The bottom line is, to know how the ocean is adjusting to climate change, we need to have a realistic representation of deep ocean circulation. We're now a step closer toward that," said Mashayek.

More information: Ali Mashayek et al, On the role of seamounts in upwelling deep-ocean waters through turbulent mixing, Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences (2024). DOI: 10.1073/pnas.2322163121

Provided by University of Cambridge

This story was originally published on Phys.org. Subscribe to our newsletter for the latest sci-tech news updates.

OTHER NEWS

36 minutes ago

Huge thunderstorm sees Euro 2024 clash between Germany and Denmark temporarily suspended

36 minutes ago

Donna Nelson’s young granddaughter allowed Japanese prison visit

39 minutes ago

Tributes paid after legendary Cumbrian fell-runner Joss Naylor dies aged 88

39 minutes ago

Kitchen waste item makes windows 'sparkling clean'

39 minutes ago

Italy's title defense limps away at Euro 2024 after another embarrassment

39 minutes ago

Man Utd looking to beat Newcastle in race to sign Premier League wonderkid

39 minutes ago

Dr Bakama awarded Africa’s first PhD in Quality Engineering from UJ

39 minutes ago

How M&S has finally fixed its fashion - for every age group: RUTH SUNDERLAND visits HQ to find out what's changed behind the scenes and what it means for investors

39 minutes ago

HOROSCOPES: Which star sign needs to reconsider their career?

39 minutes ago

Coronation Street actress Thelma Barlow, 95, comes out of retirement to star in a 20-minute comedy film

39 minutes ago

Trapped in a certain mindset and the only man not in on the secret: RIATH AL-SAMARRAI looks into life on 'Planet Cristiano Ronaldo'... so is there a big enough dummy for his ego?

39 minutes ago

Transport chiefs warn tourists away from West Ham tube stop after Beatles fans mistook it for iconic Abbey Road zebra crossing

39 minutes ago

Inside Jude Bellingham's wild world: From the army of female fans who've found an unlikely target for their X-rated messages... to the truth about his 'girlfriend' and the woman he calls 'The Queen'

39 minutes ago

PETER HITCHENS: Vote in Labour and you will have 20 dispiriting years in which to rue the mistake

39 minutes ago

Falklands war veteran joins Mail on Sunday campaign to give free passports to Armed Forces heroes

39 minutes ago

Will the MP for the 18th-century be consigned to history or can Sir Jacob Rees-Mogg hang on?

39 minutes ago

Prison officer who 'nearly died' after being attacked by killer Carl Langdell awarded £600k

39 minutes ago

How Britain's No 1 Wimbledon hopeful went from frail boy to muscle-bound 'monster' - with a mentality to match: The inside story on Jack Draper - British tennis's next big thing

39 minutes ago

How M&S has finally fixed its fashion - for every age group: RUTH SUNDERLAND visits HQ to find out what's changed behind the scenes and what it means for investors

41 minutes ago

Girls join the St Paul’s Cathedral Choir for the first time

41 minutes ago

Mzansi reacts: Five men caught poaching R2.7 million endangered plant

41 minutes ago

‘Frightening and frustrating’ move to eVisas risks repeat of Windrush scandal, experts warn

41 minutes ago

The Best NBA Shooting Guards In 2023-24 By Tiers

41 minutes ago

Gordon, Chisholm lead Marlins past Phillies

41 minutes ago

2 Steelers defenders named to All-Breakout team

41 minutes ago

As Sukhbir Badal-led Akali faction faces heat, eyes on editor of an influential Punjabi daily

41 minutes ago

What's Next for Mavs Following Dejounte Murray Trade?

41 minutes ago

Toronto area to see cooler temperatures before heat returns

41 minutes ago

Three Landing Spots Emerge for Klay Thompson After NBA Free Agency Decision

42 minutes ago

Broadcaster Derryn Hinch has revealed a new health battle

43 minutes ago

County Councils spend €390,000 on foreign trips for St Patrick’s Day

43 minutes ago

Keir Starmer mentions again how his dad 'was a toolmaker'

43 minutes ago

Matty Cash embraces fans after Euro 2024 snub and holiday sessions

43 minutes ago

Three observations from Germany’s exhausting 2-0 win against Denmark at EURO 2024

49 minutes ago

Celtics decline team option on NBA champ Neemias Queta

49 minutes ago

Stanley Cup Champion looking forward to playing with Rangers center

49 minutes ago

The 14th Amendment has been used to dismantle race-based programs. Historians say there are clashing interpretations

49 minutes ago

A Water Bottle Almost Cost John Hunter Nemechek a Win in Scorching Nashville Race

49 minutes ago

0630 Today in History

49 minutes ago

Sha'Carri Richardson finishes 4th, won't have spot in 200 meters at Olympics