Water transport among the world ocean basins within the water cycle
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Published:2020-12-07
Issue:4
Volume:11
Page:1089-1106
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ISSN:2190-4987
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Container-title:Earth System Dynamics
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language:en
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Short-container-title:Earth Syst. Dynam.
Author:
García-García DavidORCID, Vigo IsabelORCID, Trottini MarioORCID
Abstract
Abstract. The global water cycle involves water-mass transport on land, in the atmosphere, in the ocean, and among them. Quantification of such transport, especially its time evolution, is essential to identify the footprints of climate change, and it also helps to constrain and improve climatic models. In the ocean, net water-mass transport among the ocean basins is a key process, but it is currently a poorly estimated parameter. We propose a new methodology that incorporates the time-variable gravity observations from the Gravity Recovery and Climate Experiment (GRACE) satellite (2003–2016) to estimate the change in water content; this new approach also overcomes some fundamental limitations of existing methods. We show that the Pacific and Arctic oceans receive an average of 1916 (95 % confidence interval of [1812, 2021]) Gt per month (∼0.72±0.02 Sv) of excess freshwater from the atmosphere and the continents that is discharged into the Atlantic and Indian oceans, where net evaporation minus precipitation
returns the water to complete the cycle. This is in contrast to previous
GRACE-based studies, where the notion of a see-saw mass exchange between the
Pacific and the Atlantic and Indian oceans has been reported. Seasonal climatology
as well as the interannual variability of water-mass transport are also
reported.
Publisher
Copernicus GmbH
Subject
General Earth and Planetary Sciences
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