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Currents in the Southern Ocean

The main current in the Southern Ocean is the Antarctic Circumpolar Current (ACC), which flows from west to east, all the way around Antarctica. The ACC is the biggest current in the world and transports 150 billion litres per second of water at up one kilometre per second. This is equivalent to 150 times the water contained in all the rivers in the world, or the same as the water contained in 75,000 Olympic swimming pools going past every second! The volume of water that is transported by the ACC is so large, not because it flows fast, but because it reaches from the ocean surface down 4,000 metres to the sea floor, and stretches from just south of New Zealand to most of the way to Antarctica.

Closer to the coast of Antarctica, the ocean currents are more complex. Within the Ross Sea, where this voyage is going, the currents form two gyres. Each gyre forms a loop of current which connects back on itself. These currents do not transport as much water as the ACC, because they are neither as broad nor as deep.

The Southern Ocean is in one of the windiest parts of the planet and its currents are driven mainly by the wind. The wind that blows over the surface of the ocean passes its energy to the water molecules in the ocean giving the water more kinetic energy. Friction between the sea water and the bottom of the ocean cause the movement of the water or current to slow down. It is the balance between these two forces that stop the currents from getting faster and faster.

NIWA Publication - 'Squeezing information from an elusive ocean: surface currents from satellite imagery'.
http://www.niwa.cri.nz/pubs/wa/ma/12-4/currents

IPY Blogs week 6

Wind and ocean currents
Of particular interest to the Mariner (seafarer) is the surface current which is caused by the reaction of the wind and the friction created with the surface of the sea, which moves the sea in the same direction as the wind. Around some of the seamounts we observed that the entire ice mass was drifting at approximately 0.5 knots.

It is of great importance for the officer manoeuvring the ship to understand the surface currents, as they control the direction of drift of the ship when it is stationary. Seafarers have mastered the use of surface currents for generations, transporting their ships from port to port in the shortest available time by using the most favourable winds and currents.

Written by Brent Whyte

See Video Ocean currents and iceberg movements

Where should we look for Antarctic toothfish larvae?
Of the relatively large population of Antarctic toothfish in the Ross Sea region, no Antarctic toothfish eggs or larvae have ever been collected. To find out where the eggs and larvae may be found, NIWA scientists Drs Graham Rickard and Mike Williams have developed a mathematical model that simulates the likely movement of toothfish eggs and larvae by releasing ‘floats’ into areas 88.1C and 88.1G on the map (where we believe the toothfish spawn). The model suggested that most eggs and larvae would be moved by the currents to the east and then south down towards the Antarctic continent. We are currently surveying this complex seamount area and hope that we are able to find some of the elusive toothfish larvae there.

Written by Stu Hanchet

See video Ross Sea currents

Currents and icebergs
The Antarctic coastal counter current travels east to west across the face of the Ross Ice Shelf and then northwards along the western coast of mainland Antarctica where it then moves west along the coastline. This current moves huge icebergs slowly northwards like B-15 which broke off during 2000 and was approximately 150 km by 50 km which equates to around 1 trillion tonnes of ice. When this iceberg got stuck around McMurdo Sound it caused havoc blocking off access to open water for the penguin colonies. Over the next few years this berg broke into smaller pieces, the last small piece named B-15J, which we have seen during our voyage is being moved slowly north by the coastal current.

Written by John Mitchell

Ocean currents, ice berg scars
In water depths down to 400 meters the multibeam echosounder shows numerous linear features criss-crossing the ocean floor. These scars are varied in size, some are straight, others bent and ‘wiggly’. Scattered amongst these scars are small depressions or holes. All of these are the traces of icebergs. After breaking off the icebergs are driven northwards by wind and ocean currents. At shallow depths they touch the seafloor leaving scars and if they become grounded, they can also leave depressions where their huge weight presses onto the seafloor. As sea levels has risen by approximately 120 meters since the last ice age some of these old scars now are too deep for ice bergs to reach and are preserved on the seafloor.

Written by Arne Pallentin

Currents and seamounts
When large scale currents, such as the Antarctic Circumpolar Current travelling at around 0.5 knots, meet obstacles such as a seamount or ridge on the ocean floor the water must go around, over or through gaps between obstacles. When moving water passes through gaps it has to accelerate, just like a river speeds up when it is constricted by a gorge. In the case of seamounts speeds can increase of up to two knots along the edges. On the Scott seamount chain we have seen ripples in the seabed sediment and the winnowing away of the finer sediments leaving behind a coarse pavement of rock or shell both of which indicate higher current speeds on the edges of the seamounts.

Written by John Mitchell

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