Water Masses of the Arctic from 40 Years of Hydrographic Observations
Kate Oglethorpe, Joshua Lanham, Rafael S. Reiss, Emma J. D. Boland, Alberto C. Naveira Garabato, Colm-Cille P. Caulfield, Ali Mashayek

TL;DR
This paper presents a dataset classifying Arctic water masses using 40 years of observations to better understand Arctic Ocean dynamics and climate impacts.
Contribution
The novel contribution is the WMA dataset and classification tool for Arctic water masses, enabling broader climate studies.
Findings
The WMA dataset captures key spatial and temporal features of Arctic water masses.
The dataset includes Atlantic and Pacific Water pathways in the Arctic Ocean.
Abstract
The Arctic Ocean has been changing rapidly in a warming climate. To monitor these changes, it is useful to classify the Arctic Ocean into water masses-bodies of water with similar origin and physical and biogeochemical properties. However, there are significant barriers to Arctic water mass classification: observations of seawater properties are sparse, and traditional classification relies on extensive knowledge of water mass characteristics and circulation. To address these challenges, we compile existing hydrographic observations of the upper 1000 m of the Arctic Ocean and classify these observations into water masses. We present the classification tool and accompanying dataset, Water Masses of the Arctic (WMA), to support basin-wide investigations of Arctic Ocean circulation, its variability, drivers and impacts on wider Arctic climate. Our dataset reproduces key spatial and…
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Taxonomy
TopicsArctic and Antarctic ice dynamics · Climate change and permafrost · Indigenous Studies and Ecology
