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13.1: Defining the Deep Circulation

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    Many terms have been used to describe the deep circulation. They include: 1) abyssal circulation, 2) thermohaline circulation, 3) meridional overturning circulation, and 4) global conveyor. The term thermohaline circulation was once widely used, but it has almost entirely disappeared from the oceanographic literature (Toggweiler and Russell, 2008). It is no longer used because it is now clear that the flow is not density-driven, and because the concept has not been clearly defined (Wunsch, 2002b).

    The meridional overturning circulation is better defined. It is the zonal average of the flow plotted as a function of depth and latitude. Plots of the circulation show where vertical flow is important, but they show no information about how circulation in the gyres influences the flow.

    Following Wunsch (2002b), I define the deep circulation as the circulation of mass. Of course, the mass circulation also carries heat, salt, oxygen, and other properties. But the circulation of the other properties is not the same as the mass transport. For example, Wunsch points out that the North Atlantic imports heat but exports oxygen.


    This page titled 13.1: Defining the Deep Circulation is shared under a CC BY-NC-SA 4.0 license and was authored, remixed, and/or curated by Robert H. Stewart via source content that was edited to the style and standards of the LibreTexts platform.