Global
Ocean Circulation: AMOC runs Amok
Paul Beckwith
What happens if the
Atlantic Meridional Overturning (AMOC) slows down, or even stops? The
former has happened, and if the latter occurs there will be global
chaos. How close are we to reaching the threshold for a “rewriting”
of global ocean circulation? If it occurs, will it be permanent, for
at least hundreds of years? How much will already extreme weather
change, and how much will global food supply be impacted?
Ocean
Currents Disruption: Slower and Wavier
What If the Ocean's Climate-Controlling 'Conveyor Belt' Came to a Halt?
12 April, 2018
Freak
floods drown buildings, bone-chilling air flash-freezes pedestrians
and ice encases the Statue of Liberty. It sounds like a disaster
movie, and well, it is: In 2004's "The Day After Tomorrow,"
the collapse of an ocean current in the North Atlantic sends the
world into a whirlwind climate doomsday.
And
while that ocean current has not actually collapsed, scientists
reporting in two new studies have found that it's weakening, by a
lot. In fact, the current hasn't been this sluggish in 1,500 years —
a finding that could carry serious (although not disaster-movie
serious) repercussions for weather and sea-level rise in locations
around the world.
In
the Atlantic Ocean, the current known as the Atlantic Meridional
Overturning Circulation (AMOC) ferries warm surface waters northward
— where the heat is released into the atmosphere — and carries
cold water south in the deeper ocean layers, according to the
National Oceanic and Atmospheric Administration. Its circulation
transports heat around the globe like a conveyor belt, and if its
movement were to stop, that heat would not get distributed, and
weather havoc could ensue. [Doomsday: 9 Real Ways Earth Could End]
But
the AMOC has been getting weaker, and cold, freshwater infusions by
the runaway melting of glaciers, sea ice and permafrost are to blame,
and the AMOC may weaken even further if temperatures on Earth
continue to rise and ice reserves continue to melt, scientists
reported in the two studies.
Written
in sand
In
one study, published yesterday (April 11) in the journal Nature,
researchers analyzed ocean sediments in a core sampled off the
eastern coast of the U.S., from depths where most of the water
originated in the North Atlantic's Labrador Sea. They examined
positions of different-size sand grains in the geologic record, to
reconstruct how the flow of the currents that carried the grains may
have changed over time, said study co-author Delia Oppo, a senior
scientist in the geology and geophysics department at the Woods Hole
Oceanographic Institution.
The
researchers traced the start of the current's weakening to the
mid-19th century at the end of the Little Ice Age, a centuries-long
period of extreme cold that froze northern Europe. When temperatures
began warming up, freshwater from melting ice that flowed into the
Nordic Seas would have diluted salty seawater near the surface. This
weakened the current and prevented it from carrying bigger grains of
sand as far as it used to, which told the scientists about
differences in the current's strength, Oppo told Live Science.
The
Atlantic Meridional Overturning Circulation, also known as the Gulf
Stream System, brings warm waters from the South to the North, where
it sinks into the deep and transports cold water from the North to
the South. A weakening of this major ocean circulation can have
widespread and potentially disruptive effects.
Then, beginning in the
1950s, another stage of warming and ice melt began in the Northern
Hemisphere — this time, likely driven by human-induced climate
change — infusing the sea with more chilly fresh water and further
weakening the ocean circulation system, study lead author David
Thornalley, a senior lecturer at University College London, told Live
Science in an email.
"Theory and models
show the AMOC weakens when there is warming and increased input of
freshwater, and these are both things being observed as part of
global warming," Thornalley said. The research team estimated
that, since the current began to lose strength in the mid-1800s, it
has weakened by about 15 to 20 percent.
Finding the "fingerprint"
Another study, also
published today in Nature, arrived at the same conclusions about a
weakened AMOC — this time, by reviewing sea-surface temperature
data going back to the late 19th century. In this study, the
researchers' temperature analysis confirmed computer models'
predictions of AMOC behavior and suggested a decline of about 15
percent in current circulation strength, beginning in the 1950s.
"The evidence we're
now able to provide is the most robust to date," study co-author
and oceanographer Stefan Rahmstorf, a professor of physics of the
oceans at the Potsdam Institute for Climate Impact Research in
Germany, said in a statement.
The researchers detected
an ocean temperature pattern that was a "fingerprint" for
an AMOC slowdown: anomalous warming in the Gulf Stream and cooler
waters near Greenland, suggesting that warm water was not being
transported north as effectively as it once was, according to the
study.
"The specific trend
pattern we found in measurements looks exactly like what is predicted
by computer simulations as a result of a slowdown in the Gulf Stream
system," Rahmstorf said. "And I see no other plausible
explanation for it."
Though these two research
teams used different methods, they arrived at a similar conclusion:
that a crucial part of the climate system on our dynamic planet is
not performing as it once did.
"What's happening
now is that the evidence is converging from different sources,"
Oppo told Live Science. "So, we're becoming more and more
confident, as we see several studies starting to show similar things
using different approaches." [7 Ways the Earth Changes in the
Blink of an Eye]
An uncertain future
While the complete
disintegration of the AMOC is extremely unlikely, the ocean
circulation system will probably continue to weaken, and that
prospect is far from reassuring, Oppo told Live Science. Prior
research has suggested that a feeble AMOC brings more dryness to the
Sahel, a region of Africa bordering the Sahara Desert; spurs
sea-level rise in U.S. coastal cities; encourages patterns of
increasingly cold winters in Europe and the northeastern U.S.; and
prompts warmer summers across Europe. However, more research is
needed to confirm a persistent connection, Oppo said.
But a weakened AMOC does
make the ocean less effective at absorbing atmospheric carbon
dioxide, Oppo noted. If the ocean current continues to weaken, it
will likely take up even less CO2, leading to higher quantities of
the greenhouse gas in the atmosphere and potentially worsening the
effects of global warming, she said.
"More research into
the potential weather impacts of an AMOC slowdown and the associate
sea surface temperature pattern is needed, given the results of the
two new studies suggesting a weak AMOC that is likely to weaken
further," Thornalley told Live Science.
Editor's Note: This
article was updated to clarify some statements from Delia Oppo.
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