www.ocean-sci-discuss.net/7/51/2010/ doi:10.5194/osd-7-51-2010 © Author(s) 2010. This work is distributed under the Creative Commons Attribution 3.0 License. Importance of the variability of hydrographic preconditioning for deep convection in the Gulf of Lion, NW Mediterranean 1National Oceanography Centre, Southampton, UK 2CNR-ISMAR, Sede di La Spezia, La Spezia, Italy Abstract. We study the variability of hydrographic preconditioning defined as the heat and salt contents in the Ligurian Sea before convection. The stratification is found to reach a maximum in the intermediate layer in December, whose causes and consequences for the interannual variability of convection are investigated. Further study of the interannual variability and correlation tests between the properties of the deep water formed and the winter surface fluxes support the description of convection as a process that transfers the heat and salt contents from the top and intermediate layers to the deep layer. A proxy for the rate of transfer is given by the final convective mixed layer depth, that is shown to depend equally on the surface fluxes and on the preconditioning. In particular, it was found that deep convection in winter 2004–2005 would have happened even with normal winter conditions, due to low pre-winter stratification. Discussion Paper (PDF, 1423 KB) Interactive Discussion (Closed, 4 Comments) Final Revised Paper (OS) Citation: Grignon, L., Smeed, D. A., Bryden, H. L., and Schroeder, K.: Importance of the variability of hydrographic preconditioning for deep convection in the Gulf of Lion, NW Mediterranean, Ocean Sci. Discuss., 7, 51-90, doi:10.5194/osd-7-51-2010, 2010. Bibtex EndNote Reference Manager XML |
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