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WATER WORLD
Scientists find early warning signs of changing ocean circulation
by Brooks Hays
Exeter, England (UPI) Dec 9, 2014


disclaimer: image is for illustration purposes only

The Atlantic Meridional Overturning Circulation, or AMOC for short, is the large-scale flow of water -- driven by temperature and salinity gradients -- specific to the Atlantic Ocean. Researchers say they've located signs that it and other portions of Earth's oceanic conveyor belt are slowing.

The global conveyor belt doesn't just move water, it moves heat too -- delivering it (in the case of the AMOC) from the tropics and the Southern Hemisphere to the North Atlantic. It is a vital component of climate as we know it. Should it continue to slow and become disrupted, it could spell drastic and abrupt climate change.

New climate models developed by scientists at the University of Exeter, in England, suggest a major disruption of the AOMC could present warning signs as many as 250 year prior; and now researchers say they're seeing those warning signs in real life.

"We found that natural fluctuations in the circulation were getting longer-lived as the collapse was approached, a phenomenon known as critical slowing down," lead author Chris Boulton, a geography professor at Exeter, said in a press release.

Boulton and his colleagues say the continued influx of freshwater, driven by global warming and the melting polar ice caps, could be enough to slow AMOC to a halt. A collapse of the ocean conveyor belt would mean drastic cooling in northern climes, rising sea levels, and prolonged drought conditions in some areas.

"We don't know how close we are to a collapse of the circulation, but a real world early warning could help us prevent it, or at least prepare for the consequences," co-author Professor Tim Lenton said.

The research was published this week in the journal Nature Communications.


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Antarctic seawater temperatures rising
Norwich, UK (SPX) Dec 09, 2014
The temperature of the seawater around Antarctica is rising according to new research from the University of East Anglia. New research published in the journal Science shows how shallow shelf seas of West Antarctica have warmed over the last 50 years. The international research team say that this has accelerated the melting and sliding of glaciers in the area, and that there is no indicati ... read more


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