Author/Authors :
Woodgate، نويسنده , , Rebecca A and Fahrbach، نويسنده , , Eberhard، نويسنده ,
Abstract :
We present observations of strong, episodic, bottom-intensified currents from two current meter moorings, each of a yearʹs duration, placed in the central Greenland Sea at 75°N, 8°W, in a water depth of circa 3340 m. The events, recorded by the current meters placed some 50 m above the sea floor, occur about 4 times a year and last about a week. They show currents of up to 43 cm/s, turning in direction, occasionally modulated by a signal of the frequency of the Coriolis parameter or the semi-diurnal tide. The temperature record at the current meter however remains constant to 0.01°C. The current direction measured at overlying meters correlates well with that of the deepest meter – the current speed does not. Independent, geological data also show evidence of strong bottom flows in the area.
cuss possible mechanisms for these `benthic stormsʹ, including the hypothesis of a sediment driven plume descending from the East Greenland continental slope. These high energy events have implications for sedimentation, shelf-basin exchange and boundary mixing processes. Normal mode theory is used to justify the dynamical response of the system to such a bottom-trapped impulse.