A significant change in properties of the thermocline is observed across the whole Indian Ocean 32°S section between 1987 and 2002. This change represents a reversal of the pre-1987 freshening and decreasing oxygen concentrations of the upper thermocline that had been interpreted as a fingerprint of anthropogenic climate change. The thermocline at the western end of the section (40°-70°E) is occupied by a single variety of mode water with a potential temperature of around 13°C. The thermocline at the eastern end of the 32°S section is occupied by mode waters with a range of properties cooling from ∼11°C at 80°E to ∼9°C near the Australian coast. The change in θ-S properties between 1987 and 2002 is zonally coherent east cif 80°E, with a maximum change on isopycnals at 11.6°C. Ages derived from helium-tritium data imply that the mode waters at all longitudes take about the same time to reach 32°S from their respective ventilatian sites. Dissolved oxygen concentration changes imply that all of the mode water reached the section ∼20% faster in 2002 than in 1987. © 2005 American Meteorological Society.
CITATION STYLE
McDonagh, E. L., Bryden, H. L., King, B. A., Sanders, R. J., Cunningham, S. A., & Marsh, R. (2005). Decadal changes in the south Indian Ocean thermocline. Journal of Climate, 18(10), 1575–1590. https://doi.org/10.1175/JCLI3350.1
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