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Another density current that attains a neutrally buoyant level occurs in the waters of the Denmark Strait and Faroe Bank Channel overflows. These waters descend along Europe’s continental slope and veer to the right to reach the southern tip of Greenland to form the North Atlantic Deep Water (NADW). This current, however, does not appear to spread horizontally; it hugs the continental slope on the western side of the North Atlantic.

Entrainment of surrounding water

One fundamental variable that determines the final location and depth of dense waters is the amount of ambient water that mixes with them during their descent along the continental shelf and slope. At a sill or other point of topographic constriction, the velocity of these currents is typically high compared with that of the surrounding water, and this velocity difference can generate small-scale eddies. These eddies draw less-dense ambient water into the current, which increases its transport (or volume flux: the velocity of a volume of water per unit of time) and dilutes its density. Historically, intense entrainment has been associated with the location of a sill and constriction point where the maximum velocities of the current have been observed. For example, the Mediterranean overflow has been shown to entrain most of the NACW within 50 km (30 miles) from the current exiting the Strait of Gibraltar, where the velocity of the density current reaches its maximum. After drawing in the NACW, the overflow water’s temperature drops from 13.4 °C at the sill to 12.45 °C (54.4 °F) in the open ocean, and it is freshened from 38.4 psu at the sill to 36.45 psu in the open ocean. These final overflow values of water temperature and salinity determine the neutrally buoyant depth the current will reach. In the case of the Mediterranean overflow, this depth is about 800 to 1,300 metres.

Researchers have found that entrainment also occurs in regions where the current’s velocity is much lower. For example, the entrainment experienced by the Denmark Strait overflow in the first 100 km (about 60 miles) after exiting the Denmark Strait leads to an increase in volume transport equivalent to the entrainment that occurs in the subsequent 1,000 km (about 600 miles) between the Denmark Strait and Cape Farewell in Greenland. The researchers concluded that the entrainment occurring not only near the sill but also along the slope must be correctly represented in order to correctly predict the location, depth, density, and tracer characteristics of the NADW originating from the Denmark Strait overflow.

Dense overflows and climate models

In the first decade of the 21st century, dense overflows emerged as important components of climate models, since it has been shown that climate models that include overflows produce different outcomes from those that do not. This result underscores the importance of the correct representation of the dynamics of overflows in climate and general circulation models. Since the resolution of most climate models is not fine enough to represent small-scale processes, such as an overflow or the entrainment of the surrounding water, they are either simplified or left out of the model altogether. Modern oceanographers are working to mathematically represent the processes associated with the density currents in large climate and oceanic models, and such advances would allow the inclusion of the important effects of the density currents in climate prediction for the future.

Turbidity currents

Some density currents occur because they contain higher amounts of suspended sediments than the surrounding water. Such density currents, called turbidity currents, are believed to form when the accumulation of sediments on continental shelves becomes unstable as a result of an underwater landslide or earthquake. Once set into motion, the mixture of water and sediment falls down the continental slope and eventually settles as a layer in the deep ocean. Repeated deposition results in the formation of submarine fans, structures that closely resemble the alluvial fans that occur at the mouth of many rivers. The dynamics of turbidity currents are similar to those of overflows; they are affected by bottom drag, they can entrain ambient waters, and larger turbidity currents can be influenced by the Coriolis force.

A complicating factor in the study of these currents is that the sediments tend to settle out onto the seafloor as the dense water flows along. This process causes the turbidity current to lose some of the density difference that drives its flow. As the velocity of the current decreases, additional sediments fall out of suspension and settle on the seafloor. The current is often made up of sediment of various types and sizes that possess different settling velocities. Larger particles will often fall out of suspension first and settle on the bottom of the ocean, whereas smaller ones will remain in suspension for longer distances. Faster turbidity currents, however, will generally have higher internal turbulent eddy velocities. As a result, a faster current will tend to keep sediments with higher settling velocities—such as larger, heavier pieces of debris—in suspension for longer periods than slower currents.

Claudia Cenedese