A seasonal climatology of the upper ocean pycnocline
Guillaume S\'erazin, Anne Marie Tr\'eguier, Cl\'ement de Boyer, Mont\'egut

TL;DR
This study provides a comprehensive seasonal climatology of the upper ocean pycnocline, revealing its spatial and seasonal variations, and its relationship with ocean stratification and mixed layer dynamics.
Contribution
It introduces the first near-global seasonal climatology of the upper ocean pycnocline properties, including intensity, depth, and thickness, based on hydrographic profile data.
Findings
Largest stratification in the intertropical band with minimal seasonal variation.
Deepest and least stratified UOPs occur in winter along the Antarctic Circumpolar Current and North Atlantic.
UOP thickness median is 23 m with limited seasonal and regional variation.
Abstract
Climatologies of the mixed layer depth (MLD) have been provided using several definitions based on temperature/density thresholds or hybrid approaches. The upper ocean pycnocline (UOP) that sits below the mixed layer base remains poorly characterised, though this transition layer is an ubiquitous feature of the ocean surface layer. Available hydrographic profiles provide near-global coverage of the world's ocean and are used to build a seasonal climatology of UOP properties -- intensity, depth, thickness -- to characterise the spatial and seasonal variations of upper ocean stratification. The largest stratification values are found in the intertropical band, where seasonal variations of the UOP are also very small. The deepest ( 200 m) and least stratified UOPs are found in winter along the Antarctic Circumpolar Current…
Peer Reviews
No public reviews on file for this paper yet. If you reviewed it on a platform where reviews are public (OpenReview, ICLR, NeurIPS, ICML), you can paste yours below so the community can read it here.
Videos
No videos yet. Explain this paper in a talk, walkthrough, or lecture? Add one.
Taxonomy
TopicsMarine and coastal ecosystems · Oceanographic and Atmospheric Processes · Ocean Acidification Effects and Responses
