Tuesday, October 10, 2023

Data Shows Gulf Stream Has Warmed and Shifted Closer to American Coastline

Gulf Stream Has Warmed

The warm Gulf Stream current that flows from the Caribbean to Scandinavia has long been a focus for some climatologists, who argue that global warming could ironically cause its collapse and bring icy winters to north-western Europe.

Oceanographers have said that there are signs the Gulf Stream is warming and shifting its path closer to the North American coast, and that this is proof of climate change.

 A new paper published in the popular science journal Nature Climate Change, collated some 25,000 temperature and salinity readings over 22 years from the ocean current, which flows from the Gulf of Mexico and Caribbean northeast past the US, Canada and Greenland to the Norwegian ea.
The study was led by physical oceanographers Robert Todd and Alice Ren from the Woods Hole Oceanographic Institution (WHOI).

"The warming we see near the Gulf Stream is due to two combined effects," Todd argued. "One is that the ocean is absorbing excess heat from the atmosphere as the climate warms. The second is that the Gulf Stream itself is gradually shifting towards the coast."
The scientist noted that the greatest temperature increase was seen in the ocean layer nearest the surface, which warmed by around 1° centigrade over the past two decades.
"One of the triumphs of this paper is that it provides observational confirmation of something that numerical simulations have predicted in a warming climate," Todd stressed.

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