Publications by authors named "Alexander Forryan"

The Galápagos archipelago, rising from the eastern equatorial Pacific Ocean some 900 km off the South American mainland, hosts an iconic and globally significant biological hotspot. The islands are renowned for their unique wealth of endemic species, which inspired Charles Darwin's theory of evolution and today underpins one of the largest UNESCO World Heritage Sites and Marine Reserves on Earth. The regional ecosystem is sustained by strongly seasonal oceanic upwelling events-upward surges of cool, nutrient-rich deep waters that fuel the growth of the phytoplankton upon which the entire ecosystem thrives.

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Article Synopsis
  • The global ocean's overturning circulation is significantly influenced by deep-ocean mixing, turning cold, dense waters into warm, shallower ones.
  • The mixing effectiveness is determined by turbulence intensity near underwater features and the exchange rate of mixed boundary waters with the deeper ocean.
  • Research in the Southern Ocean reveals a new mixing mechanism linked to deep-water flows along steep topographies, emphasizing the need for this process to be included in ocean circulation models.
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The instability and accelerated melting of the Antarctic Ice Sheet are among the foremost elements of contemporary global climate change. The increased freshwater output from Antarctica is important in determining sea level rise, the fate of Antarctic sea ice and its effect on the Earth's albedo, ongoing changes in global deep-ocean ventilation, and the evolution of Southern Ocean ecosystems and carbon cycling. A key uncertainty in assessing and predicting the impacts of Antarctic Ice Sheet melting concerns the vertical distribution of the exported meltwater.

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