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Global Comparison of Benthic Nepheloid Layers Based on 52 years of Nephelometer and Transmissometer Measurements
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  • Wilford Gardner,
  • Mary Jo Richardson,
  • Alexey Mishonov,
  • Pierre Biscaye
Wilford Gardner
Texas A&M University College Station

Corresponding Author:wgardner@ocean.tamu.edu

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Mary Jo Richardson
Texas A & M Univ
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Alexey Mishonov
Cooperative Institute for Climate and Satellites University of Maryland
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Pierre Biscaye
Lamont -Doherty Earth Observatory
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Abstract

Global maps of maximum bottom particle concentration, benthic nepheloid layer thickness, and integrated particle mass in benthic nepheloid layers (BNL) based on 2412 global profiles collected using the Lamont Thorndike nephelometer from 1964-1984 are compared with maps of those same properties compiled from 6,392 global profiles measured by transmissometers from 1979 to 2016. Outputs from both instruments were converted to particulate matter concentration (PM). We present here a visual global comparison of the location and intensity of BNLs measured with these two independent instruments over slightly overlapping decadal time periods and combine the data sets in order to expand the time scale of global in situ measurements of BNLs, and to gain insight about the factors creating/sustaining BNLs. The similarity between general locations of high and low particle concentration BNLs during the two time periods indicates that the driving forces of erosion and resuspension of bottom sediments are spatially persistent during recent decadal time spans, though in areas of strong BNLs, intensity is highly episodic. Topography and well-developed current systems play a role. These maps can be used to better understand deep ocean sediment dynamics, linkage with upper ocean dynamics, the potential for scavenging of adsorption-prone elements near the seafloor, and provide a comprehensive comparison of these data sets on a global scale. During both time periods, BNLs are weak or absent in most of the Pacific, Indian, and Atlantic basins away from continental margins. High surface eddy kinetic energy is associated with the Kuroshio Current east of Japan. Both data sets show weak BNLs south of the Kuroshio, but no transmissometer data have been collected beneath the Kuroshio itself. Sparse nephelometer data show moderate BNLs just north of the Kuroshio Extension, but with much lower concentrations than beneath the Gulf Stream. Strong BNLs are found in areas where eddy kinetic energy in overlying waters, mean kinetic energy near bottom, and energy dissipation within the bottom boundary layer are high. Areas of strongest BNLs include the Western North Atlantic, Argentine Basin, areas around South Africa tied to the Agulhas Current region, and somewhat random locations in the Antarctic Circumpolar Current of the Southern Ocean.
Nov 2018Published in Progress in Oceanography volume 168 on pages 100-111. 10.1016/j.pocean.2018.09.008