Terpene

Autores
Nathaniel L Bindoff, Jürgen Willebrand, Vincenzo Artale, Anny Cazenave, Jonathan M Gregory, Sergey Gulev, Kimio Hanawa, Corinne Le Quere, Sydney Levitus, Yukihiro Nojiri, CK Shum, Lynne D Talley, Alakkat S Unnikrishnan, SA Josey, M Tamisiea, M Tsimplis, P Woodworth
Data de publicação
2007
Páginas
385-428
Editora
Cambridge University Press
Descrição
• The oceans are warming. Over the period 1961 to 2003, global ocean temperature has risen by 0.10 C from the surface to a depth of 700 m. Consistent with the Third Assessment Report (TAR), global ocean heat content (0–3,000 m) has increased during the same period, equivalent to absorbing energy at a rate of 0.21±0.04 W m–2 globally averaged over the Earth’s surface. Two-thirds of this energy is absorbed between the surface and a depth of 700 m. Global ocean heat content observations show considerable interannual and inter-decadal variability superimposed on the longer-term trend. Relative to 1961 to 2003, the period 1993 to 2003 has high rates of warming but since 2003 there has been some cooling.
• Large-scale, coherent trends of salinity are observed for 1955 to 1998, and are characterised by a global freshening in subpolar latitudes and a salinification of shallower parts of the tropical and subtropical oceans. Freshening is pronounced in the Pacific while increasing salinities prevail over most of Atlantic and Indian Oceans. These trends are consistent with changes in precipitation and inferred larger water transport in the atmosphere from low latitudes to high latitudes and from the Atlantic to the Pacific. Observations do not allow for a reliable estimate of the global average change in salinity in the oceans.
Total de citações
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Artigos do Google Acadêmico
NL Bindoff, J Willebrand, V Artale, A Cazenave…

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