4:00 PM - 4:15 PM
[MIS03-03] Upslope flow of mCDW across the continental shelf using a high-resolution model in the Cape Darnley Bottom Water formation region.
Keywords:Southern Ocean, Dense water production, Circumpolar Deep Water, Downslope vs. upslope flow, Ocean-ice modelling
Here, we develop a high-resolution model (500 m horizontal and 20 m vertical grid spacing) and compare it with Morrison et al. (2020)’s, whose resolution was (O)100 km. Our model domain is the Cape Darnley region in East Antarctica, where DSW is formed and flows down the continental slope -via several canyons- to form Cape Darnley Bottom Water. There, very-high resolution bathymetric data were recently acquired by Japanese icebreaker Shirase around the Wild Canyon system. The high-resolution bathymetric data and model offer a unique opportunity to further investigate the dynamics affecting the upslope flow as well as interaction with bottom water formation by analyzing data within individual canyons of the Wild Canyon system. Combining our model results with mooring observations of temperature and current velocity, we focus on the processes affecting the upslope flow near the top and bottom of the continental slope. Our results suggest that near the top of the slope, both mesoscale eddies and the in-canyon mechanism proposed by Morrison et al. (2020) affect the upslope flow with a ~2-day dominant period. At depths > 2000 m, the variability is dominated by a ~5-day periodic phenomenon which is likely a topographic wave. We discuss the possibility that interactions between the processes affecting the bottom and top of the slope are responsible for bringing mCDW from far offshore to the near-shore.