Monday, 13 November 2017

What is the Pacific shadow ­zone?

The shadow zone is an area of almost stagnant water sitting between rising currents caused by the rough topography and geothermal heat sources below 2.5 kilometers and shallower wind driven currents closer to the surface in the North Pacific. 

This is the oldest water in the ocean in the North Pacific and has remained trapped in a shadow zone around 2 kilometers below the sea surface for over 1,000 years. 

Until recently, models of deep ocean circulation did not accurately account for the constraint of the ocean floor on bottom waters. 

Once the international team of researchers precisely factored it they found the bottom water cannot rise above 2.5 km below the surface, leaving the region directly above isolated. “Carbon 14 dating had already told us the most ancient water lay in the deep North Pacific.

 But until now we had struggled to understand why the very oldest waters huddle around the depth of 2 km,” said lead author from the University of New South Wales, Dr. Casimir de Lavergne. “What we have found is that at around 2 km below the surface of the Indian and Pacificc Oceans there is a ‘shadow zone’ with barely any vertical movement that suspends ocean water in an area for centuries.” The article, “Abyssal ocean overturning shaped by sea floor distribution”, has been published in the journal, Nature.

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