The Eastern Mediterranean in the 80s and in the 90s: the big transition in the intermediate and deep circulations

1999-07-01
Malanotte-Rizzoli, P
Manca, BB
d'Alcala, MR
Theocharis, A
Brenner, S
Budillon, G
Ozsoy, E
We present definitive observational evidence that the startling change of the Eastern Mediterranean deep circulation observed in winter 1995 and documented by [Roether, W., Manca, B.B., Klein. B., Bregant, D., Georgopoulos, D., Beitzel, V., Kovacevich, V., Luchetta, A., 1996. Recent changes in the Eastern Mediterranean deep water. Science 271, 333-335.] actually started before October 1991. This change involved not only the deep water mass pathways but also the origin and pathways of the water mass spreading in the intermediate layer. We carry out the first unified analysis of the POEMBC-O91 data set, which shows that, differently from the previous decade of the 80s, the Cretan/Aegean Sea was in 1991 the 'driving' engine of the intermediate, transitional and deep layer circulations, with Cretan Intermediate Water (CIW), transitional water and Cretan Deep Water (CDW) spreading out from the Cretan Sea into the basin interior. The most important new results are. (a) the Levantine Intermediate Water (LIW) formed inside or at the periphery of the Rhodes gyre is blocked in its traditional westbound route on its density horizons sigma(theta) = 29.05 and 29.10 kg/m(3) by a three-lobe strong anticyclonic structure in the Southern Levantine, which induces a substantial LIW recirculation in the Levantine basin itself; (b) the CIW exiting from the Western Cretan Are Straits spreads into the Ionian interior on the sigma(theta) = 29.05-29.10 kg/m(3) isopycnal surfaces, thus replacing the LIW confined in the Levantine basin. A branch of CIW flows eastward in the Cretan passage and is entrained by the Ierapetra anticyclone to flow again into the Cretan Sea through the Eastern Cretan Are Straits; (c) on the horizons sigma(theta) = 29.15 and 29.18 kg/m(3) a transitional water mass of Cretan origin, denser than CIW, and CDW are observed to spread out massively from the Cretan Are Straits both into the Ionian and Levantine interiors. These isopycnal surfaces rise to much shallower depths in 1991 than in 1987, increasing the salt content of the intermediate, transitional and deep layers. This leads to a massive salt increase in the Ionian below 1200 m, clearly related to lateral advection of the new denser waters of Cretan/Aegean origin, thus contradicting the hypothesis of a vertical salt redistribution proposed by Roether et al.
DYNAMICS OF ATMOSPHERES AND OCEANS

Suggestions

A REVIEW OF THE LEVANTINE BASIN CIRCULATION AND ITS VARIABILITY DURING 1985-1988
OZSOY, E; HECHT, A; UNLUATA, U; BRENNER, S; OGUZ, T; BISHOP, J; LATIF, MA; ROZENTRAUB, Z (Elsevier BV, 1991-04-01)
The variability of the Levantine Basin circulation and hydrography is reviewed based on a collection of recent data sets. The major emphasis is placed on the complexity of the associated dynamics. The region is shown to be populated with synoptic and mesoscale dynamic features. In addition to the complexity arising due to the heterogeneity of water masses and the variability of the atmospheric and thermohaline forcing, the confines of the relatively small basin causes the sub-basin-scale gyres to be in c...
CIRCULATION AND HYDROGRAPHY OF THE LEVANTINE BASIN - RESULTS OF POEM COORDINATED EXPERIMENTS 1985-1986
OZSOY, E; HECHT, A; UNLUATA, U (Elsevier BV, 1989-01-01)
A brief review of the meteorological setting, hydrography and the circulation in the Levantine Basin of the Eastern Mediterranean is given. The recent high resolution data obtained in POEM coordinated experiments of 1985–1986 are then used to optimally estimate the circulation in the basin in two different seasons and to describe the water mass distributions. Some of the features observed during the experiments support the historical knowledge on the locations of sub-basin scale gyres and the general circul...
THE UPPER LAYER CIRCULATION OF THE BLACK-SEA - ITS VARIABILITY AS INFERRED FROM HYDROGRAPHIC AND SATELLITE-OBSERVATIONS
OGUZ, T; LAVIOLETTE, PE; UNLUATA, U (American Geophysical Union (AGU), 1992-08-15)
Quasi-synoptic hydrographic data and satellite imagery are used to describe the circulation and the structural variability of the Black Sea with particular emphasis on the Turkish coast. The circulation is indicated to involve a variable cyclonic circulation with no apparent central locus and a well-defined cyclonic "Rim Current" containing meanders and interacting eddy fields confined to the shelf slope. Interspersed between the coastal eddies are filaments and intense jets, often with dipole eddies at the...
Subaerially exposed Late-Quaternary basinal shelf of the inner Mersin Bay, eastern Mediterranean: Paleoenvironmental evidence
Ergin, M (Springer Science and Business Media LLC, 1996-05-01)
High-resolution seismic profiles and petrographic data from surface and subsurface sediment samples from Mersin Bay, together with lithologic data from boreholes, were used to determine the origin and distribution of the pre- or early-Holocene unconformities in Mersin Bay (eastern Mediterranean). Reflectors corresponding to unconformities separate the younger, unconsolidated, marine transgressive sediments (Holocene) from the underlying, relatively coarser, consolidated sediments (Plio-Pleistocene). These u...
A hemispheric dust storm affecting the Atlantic and Mediterranean in April 1994: Analyses, modeling, ground-based measurements and satellite observations
Ozsoy, E; Kubilay, N; Nickovic, S; Moulin, C (American Geophysical Union (AGU), 2001-08-27)
One of the largest recorded dust tranpsort events originating from the great Sahara desert during April 1994 affected the entire region extending from the Caribbean to the Eurasian continent. This hemispherical transport of airborne dust took place during a series of storms that developed during the first three weeks of April in a background of low-index circulation. These repeated events are studied through the combined analyses and interpretation of atmospheric data, ground-based aerosol measurements, vis...
Citation Formats
P. Malanotte-Rizzoli et al., “The Eastern Mediterranean in the 80s and in the 90s: the big transition in the intermediate and deep circulations,” DYNAMICS OF ATMOSPHERES AND OCEANS, pp. 365–395, 1999, Accessed: 00, 2020. [Online]. Available: https://hdl.handle.net/11511/68389.