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1 June 2004 The Baltic Haline Conveyor Belt or The Overturning Circulation and Mixing in the Baltic
Kristofer Döös, H. E Markus Meier, Ralf Döscher
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Abstract

A study of the water-mass circulation of the Baltic has been undertaken by making use of a three dimensional Baltic Sea model simulation. The saline water from the North Atlantic is traced through the Danish Sounds into the Baltic where it upwells and mixes with the fresh water inflow from the rivers forming a Baltic haline conveyor belt. The mixing of the saline water from the Great Belt and Öresund with the fresh water is investigated making use of overturning stream functions and Lagrangian trajectories. The overturning stream function was calculated as a function of four different vertical coordinates (depth, salinity, temperature and density) in order to understand the path of the water and where it upwells and mixes. Evidence of a fictive depth overturning cell similar to the Deacon Cell in the Southern Ocean was found in the Baltic proper corresponding to the gyre circulation around Gotland, which vanishes when the overturning stream function is projected on density layers. A Lagrangian trajectory study was performed to obtain a better view of the circulation and mixing of the saline and fresh waters. The residence time of the water masses in the Baltic is calculated to be 26–29 years and the Lagrangian dispersion reaches basin saturation after 5 years.

Kristofer Döös, H. E Markus Meier, and Ralf Döscher "The Baltic Haline Conveyor Belt or The Overturning Circulation and Mixing in the Baltic," AMBIO: A Journal of the Human Environment 33(4), 261-266, (1 June 2004). https://doi.org/10.1579/0044-7447-33.4.261
Published: 1 June 2004
JOURNAL ARTICLE
6 PAGES

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