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A conceptual model of an Arctic sea
Authors
Barber
D. G. Barber
+40 more
Déry
Déry
Déry
Emery
F. Straneo
Galbraith
Gill
Gosselin
Granskog
Hochheim
Hochheim
Hunke
Lammers
Lapoussière
Markham
Maxwell
Mesinger
Murty
Müller
Newton
Nof
P. St-Laurent
Pedlosky
Prinsenberg
Prinsenberg
Prinsenberg
Prinsenberg
Saucier
Spall
St-Laurent
Stouffer
Straneo
Straneo
Straneo
Tan
Tucker
Verdière
Wan
Wang
Wåhlin
Publication date
1 January 2012
Publisher
'American Geophysical Union (AGU)'
Doi
Abstract
Author Posting. © American Geophysical Union, 2012. This article is posted here by permission of American Geophysical Union for personal use, not for redistribution. The definitive version was published in Journal of Geophysical Research 117 (2012): C06010, doi:10.1029/2011JC007652.We propose a conceptual model for an Arctic sea that is driven by river runoff, atmospheric fluxes, sea ice melt/growth, and winds. The model domain is divided into two areas, the interior and boundary regions, that are coupled through Ekman and eddy fluxes of buoyancy. The model is applied to Hudson and James Bays (HJB, a large inland basin in northeastern Canada) for the period 1979–2007. Several yearlong records from instruments moored within HJB show that the model results are consistent with the real system. The model notably reproduces the seasonal migration of the halocline, the baroclinic boundary current, spatial variability of freshwater content, and the fall maximum in freshwater export. The simulations clarify the important differences in the freshwater balance of the western and eastern sides of HJB. The significant role played by the boundary current in the freshwater budget of the system, and its sensitivity to the wind-forcing, are also highlighted by the simulations and new data analyses. We conclude that the model proposed is useful for the interpretation of observed data from Arctic seas and model outputs from more complex coupled/climate models.We thank NSERC and the Canada Research Chairs program for funding. FS acknowledges support from NSF OCE–0927797 and ONR N00014-08-10490.2012-12-2
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