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10.4: Polar Ocean Currents

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    The polar oceans occupy unique positions in the world ocean circulation. Both contribute mightily to the deep circulation, but their role in the surface circulation has gained increased attention as the linkages between the surface and deep circulation become better understood.

    Central to the surface and deep circulation is the Antarctic Circumpolar Current, or ACC. The Antarctic Circumpolar Current occupies the southernmost limb of all three subtropical gyres in the Southern Hemisphere. From this vantage point, it controls flows of surface and deep water into the major ocean basins and influences their properties (as we shall see in Chapter 18). In this way, the Antarctic Circumpolar Current acts as the Grand Mix Master of the world ocean. Like a DJ, it samples, blends, and invents unique combinations of water masses that it distributes throughout the ocean. (Cue DJ Spooky, who actually visited Antarctica and composed a musical work in tribute to this extraordinary continent.)

    The Arctic Ocean basin—first observed by Norwegian oceanographer Fridtjof Nansen (1861–1930)—hosts two wind- and buoyancy-driven current systems that deserve our attention for their role in sea ice dynamics, climate change, and the general circulation of the Atlantic Ocean. Along the eastern (southward-flowing) extension of the Beaufort Gyre, we find the Transpolar Drift Stream (TPD). This current flows off the Siberian Shelf and transports water and sea ice into the Norwegian, Greenland, and Iceland Seas. Dramatic warming and changes in sea ice and freshwater flows in this region have generated concern among polar oceanographers for disruptions to Arctic ecosystems, Arctic peoples, and global climate (e.g., Proshutinsky et al. 2015; Timmermans and Marshall 2020). An ice-free, summertime Arctic has major implications for maritime, political, and military interests. The Transpolar Sea Route, a hypothesized shipping lane from the Atlantic to the Pacific across the Arctic Ocean, may become a reality by the 2040s (e.g., Bennett et al. 2020; Crawford et al. 2021).


    This page titled 10.4: Polar Ocean Currents is shared under a CC BY 4.0 license and was authored, remixed, and/or curated by W. Sean Chamberlin, Nicki Shaw, and Martha Rich (Blue Planet Publishing) via source content that was edited to the style and standards of the LibreTexts platform.