Data di Pubblicazione:
2016
Abstract:
In February 2012, a severe cold spell in the European region triggered a massive production of very dense water
on the northern Mediterranean Sea shelves. The spreading phase of the newly formed dense water was exten-
sively studied in the Adriatic Sea by means of 2 ship surveys and 5 moorings fully equipped to monitor the
flow of the bottom layer. For the Adriatic Sea, opposite to the Gulf of Lions, the area of cascading is far from the
source area and this implies substantial modifications, adjustments and dilution of the source water mass
along its path, with a spreading phase lasting several months. Indeed all the moorings detected events, although
weaker than in the preceding months, until June 2012. The surveys detected 2 branches of NAdDW on the shelf,
the first branch not denser than 29.7 kg/m
3
and the second branch not denser than 29.5 kg/m
3
. Despite the ex-
tremely dense water generated in the Northern Adriatic, during events of dense-water flow, moorings recorded
temperatures generally between 12.5 and 13 °C, seldom less. Temperatures along the shelf break also did not fall
below 13 °C at depths greater than 400 m. Turbulent mixing, therefore, heavily modified the cascading plumes,
which left the shelf with thicknesses between 10 and 30 m. Mooring data in the lowermost 100 mab suggest that
the thickness of the cascading layer increased by several tens of meters downslope, as a consequence of entrain-
ment. Detraining frictional layers as well as locations of active cascading were identified mostly by isolated casts,
highlighting the submesoscale domain of the downsloping plumes. The use of LADCP data allowed identification
of very energetic bottom flow (40-50 cm/s in many locations), with otherwise little signature in tracers, not pre-
viously observed. The Bari Canyon System (BCS) was so far recognized as a hot spot for cascading in the Southern
Adriatic. However, during the 2012 event, this is not the only preferred site for cascading. Significant dense flow
was detected in other locations. The northernmost mooring site, closer to the inception of the cascading process,
in particular showed active cascading and several dynamical differences from the BCS: denser water with thinner
boundary layer, events organized in multiple pulses with sub-inertial periodicity and with very short duration
(12 h to 1 day) that is generally not seen in other locations.
Tipologia CRIS:
01.01 Articolo in rivista
Keywords:
Dense water cascading; Northern Adriatic Dense Water; Water masses
Elenco autori:
Falcieri, Francesco; Miserocchi, Stefano; Bergamasco, Andrea; Chiggiato, Jacopo; Langone, Leonardo; Schroeder, Katrin; Borghini, Mireno
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