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Peer-reviewed

Enhancement of the North Atlantic CO <sub>2</sub> sink by Arctic Waters

Jón Ólafsson, Sólveig Rósa Ólafsdóttir, Taro Takahashi, Magnús Danielsen, Thórarinn S. Arnarson

Biogeosciences · 2021

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Summary

Abstract. The North Atlantic north of 50∘ N is one of the most intense ocean sink areas for atmospheric CO2 considering the flux per unit area, 0.27 Pg-C yr−1, equivalent to −2.5 mol C m−2 yr−1. The northwest Atlantic Ocean is a region with high anthropogenic carbon inventories. This is on account of processes which sustain CO2 air–sea fluxes, in particular strong seasonal winds, ocean heat loss, deep convective mixing, and CO2 drawdown by primary production. The region is in the northern limb of the global thermohaline circulation, a path for the long-term deep-sea sequestration of carbon dioxide. The surface water masses in the North Atlantic are of contrasting origins and character, with the northward-flowing North Atlantic Drift, a Gulf Stream offspring, on the one hand and on the othe

Source type
Peer-reviewed study
DOI
10.5194/bg-18-1689-2021
Catalogue ID
BFmoakvhu2-5dfk84
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