The Atlantic Meridional Overturning Circulation (AMOC), is a circulation system characterized by a northward flowing warm, saline water in the upper layers of the Atlantic, a cooling and freshening of the water at higher northern latitudes of the Atlantic in the Nordic and Labrador Seas, and by a southward flowing colder water at depth (Kuhlbrodt et al. 2007). The AMOC is defined as the total, basin-wide, circulation in the latitude depth plane, as typically quantified by a meridional transport stream-function (Clark et al. 2002). There are discussions about the AMOC slowing down because of global warming. The major effect of an AMOC slowing down would be cooler winters and summers around the North Atlantic, and increased sea level rise along the Atlantic coast of North American coast. Some scientists have linked disruptions to the AMOC with almost every possible change in weather patterns and explained the onset of the last ice age with a weakened AMOC. The disaster movie
The RAPID project (2019) has monitored the AMOC at 26.5°N latitude since 2004 (Hirschi et al. 2003, Cunningham et al. 2007, Johns et al. 2011). The total transport time series are obtained by composing the transport through the Florida Straits, the Ekman transport, and the density driven transport obtained from the mooring data. A reduced pattern has been shown since 2004.
Other measurements have been proposed to represent the strength of the AMOC. Willis and Fu (2008), Willis (2010), Hobbs and Willis (2012) proposed satellite observations of sea surface height (SSH) along with temperature, salinity and velocity from profiling floats to estimate changes in the north-ward flowing, upper limb, of the AMOC at latitudes around 41°N. This overturning had somewhat smaller seasonal and inter-annual variability than at lower latitudes. Since 1993, there has been no reduction of the AMOC, and since 2002, the reduction has been minimal and easing. The 26.5°N latitude RAPID results, like the 41°N latitude SSH + ARGO results by Willis and Fu (2008), Willis (2010), Hobbs and Willis (2012), do not span a time window of enough length to assess the influence of natural variability. Multi-decadal natural variability (Lozier et al. 2010, Parker 2016, Parker, Ollier 2016,) weighs negatively on these estimations made with just few years of data.
Iyengar (2009) and Schlesinger and Ramankutty (1994) demonstrated that multi-decadal oscillations in rainfall and temperature of quasi-60 years. Chambers et al. (2012) showed a similar quasi-60-year oscillation in global mean sea level. Hence, many proxies have been proposed, and it is very likely that the AMOC also exhibits a multi-decadal variability. Based on a proxy, Caesar et al. (2018), claimed the AMOC has been weakening by around 15% since the mid-twentieth century. They say this weakening is revealed by a characteristic spatial and seasonal sea-surface temperature
The sea levels measured by a tide gauge are relative to the instrument. The instrument may be subjected to an even larger vertical motion of subsidence or uplift. If
The relative sea level acceleration
If
The absolute rate of rise of the sea levels is then:
The relative sea level rates of rise and accelerations are computed first. In the tide gauge of The Battery, New York, Latitude 40.7°N, Longitude 74.013°W, with date range January 1856 to December 2017, the relative sea levels (data from PSMSL 2019) have been rising at a rate of
In the analysis by NGL (2019, Blewitt et al. 2016) IGS08 reference frame (NGL 2018), the Global Navigation Satellite Systems (GNSS) antenna close to the tide gauge of The Battery, New York (NYBP, 49 m) shows a recent subsidence rate of
Figure 1.a presents the absolute MSL of The Battery, New York, while figure 1.b presents the absolute MSL of Brest, over the time window January 1856 to present. The gaps in the MSL records are filled by interpolating nearby years. Where gaps extend more than one year, a 60 years periodicity of the oscillations about the linear trend is enforced. The filling of the gaps is needed to produce a continuous time series, but it introduces uncertainties. With the gaps filled, the relative rates of rise of the sea levels are now
Estimations of the AMOC at 41°N latitude based on satellite sea surface height (SSH) show no critical slow-down since 1993 (Willis, Fu 2008, Willis 2010, Hobbs, Willis 2012). This AMOC SSH correlated very well with a more sophisticated AMOC, AMOC SSH+ARGO, based on this parameter plus the results of the ocean measurements from the ARGO profiling floats available since 2002 (Willis, Fu 2008, Willis 2010, Hobbs, Willis 2012). Both AMOC SSH and AMOC SSH+ARGO show relative stability since 2002 and 1993 (Parker 2016, Parker and Ollier 2016).
Figure 2 presents the latest 41°N latitude AMOC SSH+ARGO and AMOC results. This is an update of the results proposed in Willis and Fu (2008), Willis (2010), Hobbs and Willis (2012), Parker (2016), Parker and Ollier (2016). The overturning is defined as the sum of 0–1130 m Geostrophic and Ekman transports. The time series represents three-month running averages. The AMOC sea surface height and ARGO (AMOC SSH+ARGO) is now updated to August 2018, courtesy of Josh Willis. The AMOC sea surface height (AMOC SSH) is now updated to October 2017, also courtesy of Josh Willis.
While there is certainly a diminishing trend, especially when starting from a peak, of the short-term peaks and valleys oscillations, since 2005, the diminishing trend reduces over the 16 years-time-window, since 2002, to only −0.0572 Sv Sv – the transport units are Sverdrups, 1Sv = 106 m3 s−1.
The acceleration is positive over the time window, +0.0134 Sv yr−2, demonstrating the small reduction of this AMOC is going to disappear. Since 1993, the 41°N latitude AMOC based on sea surface height (SSH) only measurements has been not reducing, but increasing, at a rate of +0.0104 Sv yr−1. The acceleration is now negative over this time window, -0.0144 Sv yr−2 demonstrating the small increase of this AMOC is also going to disappear. Trend and acceleration results are only marginally different from those proposed by Parker (2016) and Parker and Ollier (2016) based on a shorter time window, but also slightly different data sets.
It must be mentioned, that the latest AMOC SSH+ARGO of 2018 and AMOC SSH of 2017 differ from the AMOC SSH+ARGO and SSH of 2015 used in Parker (2016) and Parker and Ollier (2016). The differences between the two results reflect changes in the data sets the computations are based on (Appendix 2).
All the climate data sets are unfortunately somewhat unreliable because past values have often been subjected to administrative corrections. This includes the satellite altimeter sea level height, the sea surface temperature, the temperature and the velocity and salinity of the oceans at different depths.
If we accept the idea that a change of strength of the AMOC would translate into an acceleration of the sea levels along the East Coast of North America (strength reduction) or in an acceleration along the West Coast of Europe (strength increment), then, as the relative sea level acceleration has been small in both locations and very close, and the absolute rate of the sea levels have similarly been about the same in both locations from 1856 to the present, then we should immediately conclude that there has been no change in the AMOC. There has been no sign of sea levels accelerating or rising at differential rates across the Atlantic, demonstrating once more the stability of the sea levels. Therefore, very likely also the AMOC has been only oscillating since the year 1986, the same as the sea levels. Of all the possible AMOC proxies, the sea level is the most reliable. Parker (2016) and Parker and Ollier (2016) proposed a novel proxy AMOC, AMOC MSL, correlated to the difference between the absolute monthly average mean sea levels measured by the tide gauges of The Battery, New York and Brest. This AMOC MSL was linearly related to the AMOC SSH of Willis and Fu (2008), Willis (2010)Hobbs and Willis (2012). Parker (2016) and Parker and Ollier (2016) showed that the trend of this AMOC may be diminishing in a small extent over the short time window, since the early 2000s, but it has been stable since the early 1990s, or even the mid-1800s.
Here we linearly correlate the AMOC MSL to the AMOC SSH+ARGO. Figure 3.a presents the AMOC based on the difference in between the absolute MSL of The Battery, New York and Brest, AMOC MSL, and the AMOC SSH-ARGO since 2002. There is a good correlation between the two AMOCs, both suggesting stability. The AMOC SSH-ARGO is minimally reducing but with a positive acceleration. The AMOC MSL is minimally increasing but with a negative acceleration. Since 2005, there is an increase of +0.0152 Sv yr−1. The acceleration is negative over the time window, -0.0464 Sv yr−2, demonstrating the small increment of this AMOC is going to disappear. Figure 3.b presents the AMOC MSL over the longer time window 1856 to present. The trend is negligible, and the acceleration is also negligible. This proxy AMOC, has been incredibly stable since 1856. It is reducing at a negligible rate of only −0.0004 Sv yr−1. subjected to an even more negligible positive acceleration of +0.0000008 Sv yr−2. Figure 3.c finally show the result of spectral analysis of the oscillations, the periodogram of this AMOC MSL. The periodogram shows three important decadal and multi-decadal periodicities, of 18 years, 27 years and about 60 years. Hence, very likely the AMOC oscillates with up to a quasi-60 years periodicity like temperatures and sea levels, and apart from natural variability, has not been subjected to any change over the last 150 years.
Since 2002, the 41°N latitude AMOC based on SSH and ARGO ocean temperature, salinity and velocity measurements has been reducing at a rate of only -0.0572 Sv yr−1. The acceleration is positive over this time window, +0.0134 Sv yr−2, demonstrating the small reduction of this AMOC is going to disappear. Since 1993, the 41°N latitude AMOC based on SSH measurements has been not reducing but increasing, at a rate of 0.0332 Sv yr−1. The acceleration is now negative over this time window, −0.0234 Sv yr−2, demonstrating the small increase of this AMOC is also going to disappear.
Since 1856, the absolute mean sea levels in The Battery, New York and Brest have been rising at about same small rate subjected to about the same small acceleration. The relative sea level accelerations in The Battery, New York and Brest, 1856 to present, have been about the same +0.00851 mm yr−2 and +0.00994 mm yr−2, respectively. Their difference is smaller than the accuracy of the estimation. The absolute rate of rises of the sea level in The Battery, New York and Brest, from 1856 to the present, have also been about the same, +0.684 to +0.698 mm yr−1 and +0.695 to +0.704 mm yr−1, respectively. Their difference is smaller than the accuracy of the estimation.
If we accept that the difference between the absolute mean sea levels in The Battery, New York and Brest, that correlates well with the 41° N latitude AMOC SSH and AMOC SSH-ARGO, is representative of the AMOC strength, then, this difference has been stable since 1854. The proposed AMOC mean sea level has not been reducing or increasing, nor accelerating or decelerating, since 1856, but only oscillating with multidecadal periodicities of 18 years, 27 years and about 60 years. Since 1856, the AMOC MSL is reducing at a negligible rate of only −0.0004 Sv yr−1 subjected to an even more negligible positive acceleration of +0.0000008 Sv yr−2.