Windspeed wrote:It was, however, from Byden's own presentation. That's what alarmed me. The idea here is that the original hypothesis which came out several years ago alluded to a shut down of the THC as being a precursor to a cooler Europe and the explanation was fresh water ocean melt from the poles (Greenland in patricular) was responsible. But salinity in the Tropical Atlantic has increased since the 1970s according to Knight. And Grey was basing his research on Knight's work. Now if I may offer some of my own observations:
A couple of things about this:
I've long been skeptical of the notion that Greenland and polar ice melt could shut down the THC. Mostly, my opinion on that derives from discussions with my dad (who incidentally was the one who initially proposed the draining of Lake Agassiz as the cause of the Younger Dryas episode.)
Second, an increase in salinity in the
tropical Atlantic is exactly what one would expect if the THC slowed.
Third, Dr. Gray's hypothesis long predates Knight's work. He's been discussing this hypothesis for decades, at least since the mid-80's.
It seems to me that if the THC was increasing, then poleward heat transfer through currents would increase, decreasing mean OHC in the tropical Atlantic.
Actually, that may be true overall but in the
Northern Hemisphere tropics you get a net warming because of the cross-equatorial flow. That's the reason Dr. Gray's hypothesis makes intuitive sense.
It also seems to me that if THC was decreasing, salinity would increase in the tropical Atlantic but decrease at higher latitudes, all the way up into the poles, if you consider that the Caribbean and Gulf of Mexico has the highest concentration of salinity in the Atlantic basin, it also is the source of the Gulf Stream Current. The problem here is that the THC is not necessarily the same current that originates in the Gulf of Mexico and Caribbean.
Yes. And indeed it does appear that the North Atlantic is freshening. See:
Dickson et al. Rapid freshening of the deep North Atlantic Ocean over the past four decades, Nature, 416, 832-836. 2002
In fact, here is an image:

The main upper "warm" current of the THC goes through the eastern Atlantic and middle, and is only joined by the Gulf Stream well north of 25ºN. The warmer and initial salinity based drive is also near near to but several tens of meters below the surface, and moves through the main MDR of the Atlantic.
Well, yes, it's definitely a misnomer to refer to the THC as the "Gulf Stream."
BTW, as long as you posted this, I have a real issue with this representation of the THC. A substantial part (possibly a majority) of the upwelling occurs not in the North Pacific and Indian basins as depicted here, but in the Southern Ocean in the vicinity of the Drake Passage.
Ironically at the same time this report came out in 2005, some of our highest temperatures ever recorded were observed in the MDR. The 26º isotherm was near 100 meters in depth at places in the month of July then drastically cooled in August and September. Maybe it was a coincidence that Dennis and Emily formed right over it so early in the season.
My opinion (only maginally backed up by data) is that the extreme warmth in 2005 in the MDR was largely due to reduced trade winds that year, resulting in less evaporative cooling.