AI Article Synopsis

  • Anthropogenic radionuclides from European nuclear reprocessing plants are released into high-latitude waters and flow into the Arctic Ocean and deep North Atlantic, serving as important markers for studying water circulation and mixing.
  • Initial studies using cesium (Cs) provided early insights into Arctic ocean currents, while newer research employed advanced techniques to measure long-lived radionuclides like iodine (I) and uranium (U).
  • Recent findings, enhanced by simulations and improved mixing models, have significantly advanced our understanding of circulation patterns in these regions, which are crucial for global climate and thermohaline circulation.

Article Abstract

Releases of anthropogenic radionuclides from European nuclear fuel reprocessing plants enter the surface circulation of the high-latitude North Atlantic and are transported northward into the Arctic Ocean and southward from the Nordic Seas into the deep North Atlantic, thereby providing tracers of water circulation, mixing, ventilation, and deep-water formation. Early tracer studies focused on Cs, which revealed some of the first significant insights into the Arctic Ocean circulation, while more recent work has benefited from advances in accelerator mass spectrometry to enable the measurement of the conservative, long-lived radionuclide tracers I and U. The latest studies of these tracers, supported by simulations using the North Atlantic-Arctic Ocean-Sea Ice Model (NAOSIM) and enhanced by the use of transit time distributions to more precisely accommodate mixing, have provided a rich inventory of transport data for circulation in the Arctic and North Atlantic Oceans that are of great importance to global thermohaline circulation and climate.

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Source
http://dx.doi.org/10.1146/annurev-marine-032122-112413DOI Listing

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