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-Signs, Portents, and the Weather-
Newly discovered Gore Stream underwater current may hold a key to climate .
2007-08-16
SYDNEY: Australian scientists have discovered a giant underwater current that is one of the last missing links of a system that connects the world's oceans and helps govern global climate.

New research shows that a current sweeping past Australia 's southern island of Tasmania toward the South Atlantic is a previously undetected part of the world climate system's engine-room, said scientist Ken Ridgway. The Southern Ocean, which swirls around Antarctica , has been identified in recent years as the main lung of global climate, absorbing a third of all carbon dioxide taken in by the world's oceans.

Referring to deep ocean pathway currents, Ridgway, of the Commonwealth Scientific and Industrial Research Organization, said: "We knew that they could move from the Pacific to the Indian Ocean through Indonesia . Now we can see that they move south of Tasmania as well, another important link."

In each ocean, water flows around counterclockwise pathways, or gyres, the size of ocean basins. The newly discovered Tasman Outflow, which sweeps past Tasmania at an average depth of 800 to 1,000 meters, or 2,600 to 3,300 feet, is classed as a "supergyre" that links the Southern Hemisphere ocean basins of the Indian, Pacific and Atlantic , the government-backed CSIRO said in a statement on Wednesday.

The CSIRO team analyzed thousands of temperature and salinity data samples collected between 1950 and 2002 by research ships, robotic ocean monitors and satellites just north of the Antarctic Circle and the Equator. "They identified linkages between these gyres to form a global-scale 'supergyre' that transfers water to all three ocean basins," CSIRO said.

Ridgway and his co-author, Jeff Dunn, said identification of the supergyre improves the ability of researchers to explain more accurately how the ocean governs global climate. "Recognizing the scales and patterns of these subsurface water masses means they can be incorporated into the powerful models used by scientists to project how climate may change," Ridgway said in a statement.

The best known of the global ocean currents is the North Atlantic loop of the Great Ocean Conveyer, which brings warm water from the Equator to waters off northern Europe , ensuring relatively mild weather there. Scientists say if the conveyor collapsed, northern Europe would be plunged into an ice age.

Earlier this year, another CSIRO scientist said global warming was already having an impact on the vast Southern Ocean, posing a threat to ocean currents that distribute heat around the world. Melting ice sheets and glaciers in Antarctica are releasing fresh water, interfering with the formation of dense "bottom water," which sinks to the ocean floor and helps drive the world's ocean circulation system.

A slowdown in the system known as "overturning circulation" would affect the way the ocean, which absorbs 85 percent of atmospheric heat, carries heat around the globe, Steve Rintoul, a senior scientist at CSIRO, said in March.
Posted by:Besoeker

#14  it's an old one 2x4!
Posted by: Red Dawg   2007-08-16 23:53  

#13  2x4

At a party, you impress the goils by standing straight up but slightly turned away from the group.. next "un-zip"... then with your right hand in the proper position down at your fly, flip out about 1/2 dozen ice cubes on the floor!

~:-)
Posted by: Red Dawg   2007-08-16 23:49  

#12  What's the difference, Red Dawg? ;-)
Posted by: twobyfour   2007-08-16 22:54  

#11  OTOH, SPACE WAR > SPACE DAILY > IRRIGATION MAY NOT COOL THE GLOBE. No matter how good, widespread, or perfect the system. Time to force the SUN to surrender to the OWG Nuremburg Global Environ Court by sending a Sun/Star-destroying missle up its disc [Star Trek:Next Generation movie]??? All together now, SAVE THE EARTH/PLANET - DESTROY THE SUN, D *** NG IT!
Posted by: JosephMendiola   2007-08-16 22:54  

#10   Have you folks ever seen an Eskimo take a piss?
Posted by: Red Dawg   2007-08-16 22:51  

#9  Have you folks ever seen an Eskimo pee?
Posted by: Red Dawg   2007-08-16 22:42  

#8  I think Congress needs to pass legislation taxing regulating this underwater current.
Posted by: bigjim-ky   2007-08-16 10:43  

#7  Don't be silly, DarthVader. By the very act of acquiring the information and printing it in a paper newspaper (we won't even mention the cost of maintaining a web page), this contributes to the increase of all sorts of dreadful things that harm the delicate Gaia who shelters us all. ;-)
Posted by: trailing wife   2007-08-16 10:33  

#6  So...
Is this adding to global warming, or is it gonna be ignored by AlGoracle?
Posted by: DarthVader   2007-08-16 10:26  

#5  Google IT!
Posted by: Fat Rosie   2007-08-16 10:00  

#4  Gary, your Samoyed friends have mislead you. Everyone knows it is impossible for fire to melt steel.
Posted by: Excalibur   2007-08-16 09:40  

#3  Ah, Crosspatch, but what happens when the icebergs drift farther north? They melt. So the article is completely correct. [wag]
Posted by: Gary and the Samoyeds   2007-08-16 09:01  

#2  Darn. I was hoping to see what was under the Antarctic ice in my lifetime.
Posted by: eLarson   2007-08-16 07:24  

#1  "Melting ice sheets and glaciers in Antarctica are releasing fresh water,"

BOGUS! Antarctica is GAINING ice, not losing it. Sure, some of the ice shelves have broken up a bit, but they always do once they extend out too far into open water. They break off and it starts again. Overall, Antarctica and Greenland are gaining ice thickness, not losing it.
Posted by: crosspatch   2007-08-16 04:08  

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