Frontiers in Marine Science (Oct 2024)

Observed water-mass characteristics and circulation off Prydz Bay, East Antarctica

  • Annie Foppert,
  • Annie Foppert,
  • Sophie Bestley,
  • Sophie Bestley,
  • Elizabeth H. Shadwick,
  • Elizabeth H. Shadwick,
  • Andreas Klocker,
  • Andreas Klocker,
  • Clara R. Vives,
  • Clara R. Vives,
  • Clara R. Vives,
  • Clara R. Vives,
  • Guillaume Liniger,
  • Guillaume Liniger,
  • Guillaume Liniger,
  • Karen J. Westwood,
  • Karen J. Westwood

DOI
https://doi.org/10.3389/fmars.2024.1456207
Journal volume & issue
Vol. 11

Abstract

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Circulation and water masses in the greater Prydz Bay region were surveyed in the austral summer 2021 (January-March) during the ‘Trends in Euphausiids off Mawson, Predators and Oceanography’ (TEMPO) experiment, and are described in this paper. The Southern Antarctic Circumpolar Current Front is found in the northern part of the survey area, generally near 63-64°S, whereas the Southern Boundary Front is located between 64 and 65.5°S. The westward flowing Antarctic Slope Front (ASF) is found in the southern part of the survey area near the continental slope on most transects. Highest concentrations of oxygen (> 300 µmol kg−1) are found in shelf waters at stations in Prydz Bay, south of 67°S along 75°E, whereas the lowest oxygen values are found in the Circumpolar Deep Water layer, with an average of roughly 215 µmol kg−1. North of the northern extension of the ASF, surface mixed layers are between 20 and 60 m deep. Mixed layers tend to deepen slightly in the northern part of the survey, generally increasing north of 64°S where the ocean has been ice-free the longest. We find evidence of upwelling of waters into the surface layers, based on temperature anomaly, particularly strong along 80°E. Enhanced variability of biogeochemical properties - nutrients, DIC, DO - in the AASW layer is driven by a combination of sea-ice and biological processes. Antarctic Bottom Water, defined as water with neutral density > 28.3 kg m-3, was sampled at all the offshore full-depth stations, with a colder/fresher variety along western transects and a warmer/saltier variety in the east. Newly formed Antarctic Bottom Water – the coldest, freshest, and most recently ventilated – is mostly found in the deep ocean along 65°E, in the base of the Daly Canyon.

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