England, M.H., and V.C. Garcon
Annales Geophysicae, Special edition on the South
Atlantic Ocean, 12, 812-825, 1994.
KeyWords
Abstract
Antarctic circumpolar current. Brazil-malvinas confluence.
Intermediate
water. Numerical-model. Agulhas current. Flow patterns. Transport.
Thermocline. Resolution. Climate.
The circulation in the South Atlantic Ocean has been simulated within a
global ocean general circulation model. Preliminary analysis of the
modelled
ocean circulation in the region indicates a rather close agreement of
the
simulated upper ocean flows with conventional notions of the
large-scale
geostrophic currents in the region. The modelled South Atlantic Ocean
witnesses the return flow and export of North Atlantic Deep Water
(NADW) at
its northern boundary, the inflow of a rather barotropic Antarctic
Circumpolar Current (ACC) through the Drake Passage, and the inflow of
warm
saline Agulhas water around the Cape of Good Hope. The Agulhas
leakage
amounts to 8.7 Sv, within recent estimates of the mass transport shed
westward at the Agulhas retroflection. Topographic steering of the ACC
dominates the structure of flow in the circumpolar ocean. The Benguela
Current is seen to be fed by a mixture of saline Indian Ocean water
(originating from the Agulhas Current) and fresher Subantarctic
surface water
(originating in the ACC). The Benguela Current is seen to modify its
flow
and fate with depth; near the surface it flows north-westwards
bifurcating
most of its transport northward into the North Atlantic Ocean (for
ultimate
replacement of North Atlantic surface waters lost to the NADW
conveyor).
Deeper in the water column, more of the Benguela Current is destined
to
return with the Brazil Current, though northward flows are still
generated
where the Benguela Current extension encounters the coast of South
America.
At intermediate levels, these northward currents trace the flow of
Antarctic
Intermediate Water (AAIW) equatorward, though even more AAIW is seen
to
recirculate poleward in the subtropical gyre. In spite of the model's
rather
coarse resolution, some subtle features of the Brazil-Malvinas
Confluence are
simulated rather well, including the latitude at which the two
currents meet.
Conceptual diagrams of the recirculation and interocean exchange of
thermocline, intermediate and deep waters are constructed from an
analysis of
flows bound between isothermal and isobaric surfaces. This analysis
shows
how the return path of NADW is partitioned between a cold water route
through
the Drake Passage (6.5 Sv), a warm water route involving the Agulhas
Current
shedding thermocline water westward (2.5 Sv), and a recirculation of
intermediate water originating in the Indian Ocean (1.6 Sv).