Christian Schäfer-Neth
University of Bremen
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Featured researches published by Christian Schäfer-Neth.
Paleoceanography | 2003
André Paul; Christian Schäfer-Neth
We produced gridded monthly sea-surface boundary conditions for the Atlantic Ocean at the Last Glacial Maximum (LGM) based on the sea-surface temperature reconstruction of the GLAMAP project. We used an ocean general circulation model (OGCM), subject to these sea-surface boundary conditions and a corresponding wind stress field from an atmospheric general circulation model, to study the differences in the distribution of the main water masses between the LGM and the present. Our global OGCM is characterized by high vertical resolution, low vertical diffusion, and isopycnal mixing and hence allows for a realistic representation of the hydrology and circulation of the modern Atlantic Ocean. According to a series of LGM experiments with an increasing sea-surface salinity anomaly in the Weddell Sea, the ventilated thermocline was colder than today by 2�3°C in the North Atlantic Ocean and, in the experiment with the largest anomaly (1.0 beyond the global anomaly), by 4�5°C in the South Atlantic Ocean. Its depth was reduced by 50 m on average, most notably in the tropics. In the North Atlantic Ocean the outcrop locations of the thermocline isopycnal surfaces migrated southward by 5°�10°, and the ventilation increased. In the South Atlantic Ocean the mixed layer and thermocline water masses were dominated by cold water originating from Drake Passage, and the import of warm water from the Indian Ocean was reduced to about 4 Sv or 40% of its modern value. Antarctic Intermediate Water was colder by 3�4°C and could be traced as far as 10°N. The meridional overturning rates of North Atlantic Deep Water (NADW) and Antarctic Bottom Water (AABW) in the Atlantic Ocean were similar to those of the present-day experiment (9�10 Sv and 4 Sv, respectively). However, NADW cooled by 2.5°C and AABW by 1°C. AABW was near the freezing point of seawater at the surface and the saltiest water mass in the Atlantic Ocean, even saltier than NADW. We show that the differences between the LGM and the present-day experiments can be traced back to the changes in the subpolar and interhemispheric sea-surface density gradients.
EPIC3In: Wefer G., Mulitza S., and Ratmeyer V. (eds) The South Atlantic in the Late Quaternary: Material Budget and Current Systems, Springer, Berlin, pp. 531-548 | 2003
Christian Schäfer-Neth; André Paul
Recent efforts of the German paleoceanographic community have resulted in a unique data set of reconstructed sea-surface temperature for the Atlantic Ocean during the Last Glacial Maximum, plus estimates for the extents of glacial sea ice. Unlike prior attempts, the contributing research groups based their data on a common definition of the Last Glacial Maximum chronozone and used the same modern reference data for calibrating the different transfer techniques. Furthermore, the number of processed sediment cores was vastly increased. Thus the new data is a significant advance not only with respect to quality, but also to quantity. We integrate these new data and provide monthly data sets of global sea-surface temperature and ice cover, objectively interpolated onto a regular 1°×1° grid, suitable for forcing or validating numerical ocean and atmosphere models. This set is compared to an existing subjective interpolation of the same base data, in part by employing an ocean circulation model. For the latter purpose, we reconstruct sea surface salinity from the new temperature data and the available oxygen isotope measurements.
EPIC3In: Wefer G., Mulitza S., and Ratmeyer V. (eds) The South Atlantic in the Late Quaternary: Material Budget and Current Systems, Springer, Berlin, pp. 549-583 | 2003
André Paul; Christian Schäfer-Neth
We use a global ocean general circulation model (OGCM) with low vertical diffusion and isopycnal mixing to simulate the circulation in the Atlantic Ocean at present-day and the Last Glacial Maximum (LGM). The OGCM includes δ18O as a passive tracer. Regarding the LGM sea-surface boundary conditions, the temperature is based on the GLAMAP reconstruction, the salinity is estimated from the available δ18O data, and the wind-stress is derived from the output of an atmospheric general circulation model. Our focus is on changes in the upper-ocean hydrology, the large-scale horizontal circulation and the δ18O distribution. In a series of LGM experiments with a step-wise increase of the sea-surface salinity anomaly in the Weddell Sea, the ventilated thermocline was colder than today by 2–3°C in the North Atlantic Ocean and, in the experiment with the largest anomaly (1.0 beyond the global anomaly), by 4–5°C in the South Atlantic Ocean; furthermore it was generally shallower. As the meridional density gradient grew, the Antarctic Circumpolar Current strengthened and its northern boundary approached Cape of Good Hope. At the same time the southward penetration of the Agulhas Current was reduced, and less thermocline-to-intermediate water slipped from the Indian Ocean along the southern rim of the African continent into the South Atlantic Ocean; the ‘Agulhas leakage’ was diminished by up to 60% with respect to its modern value, such that the cold water route became the dominant path for North Atlantic Deep Water (NADW) renewal. It can be speculated that the simulated intensification of the Benguela Current and the enhancement of NADW upwelling in the Southern Ocean might reduce the import of silicate into the Benguela System, which could possibly resolve the ‘Walvis Opal Paradox’. Although δ18Ow was restored to the same surface values and could only reflect changes in advection and diffusion, the resulting δ18Oc distribution came close to reconstructions based on fossil shells of benthic foraminifera.
Nature Geoscience | 2009
Claire Waelbroeck; André Paul; Michal Kucera; Antoni Rosell-Melé; Mara Weinelt; Ralph R. Schneider; Alan C. Mix; Andrea Abelmann; Leanne K. Armand; Edouard Bard; Stephen Barker; Timothy T. Barrows; Heather M Benway; Isabel Cacho; Min-Te Chen; Elsa Cortijo; Xavier Crosta; A. de Vernal; Trond Dokken; Josette Duprat; Henry Elderfield; Frédérique Eynaud; Rainer Gersonde; A. Hayes; Maryse Henry; C. Hillaire-Marcel; C.-C. Huang; Eystein Jansen; Steve Juggins; Nejib Kallel
Marine Ecology Progress Series | 2002
Rory P. Wilson; David Grémillet; Jon Syder; Mandy Kierspel; Stefan Garthe; Henri Weimerskirch; Christian Schäfer-Neth; J. Alejandro Scolaro; Charles-André Bost; Joachim Plötz; Deon. C. Nel
Quaternary Science Reviews | 2005
Christian Schäfer-Neth; André Paul; Stefan Mulitza
Quaternary Science Reviews | 2005
André Paul; Christian Schäfer-Neth
Journal of Marine Systems | 2010
Wolfgang Barkmann; Christian Schäfer-Neth; Wolfgang Balzer
Archive | 2002
Stefan Mulitza; André Paul; Christian Schäfer-Neth; Sven Rathmann; Gerold Wefer
EPIC3EGS-AGU-EUG Joint Assembly, Nice, France.-11.04.2003., 06 | 2003
F. Kösters; R. Käse; Maximilian Schulz; Christian Schäfer-Neth; K. Fleming; D. Wolf