HOST: Greetings, caring viewers, to today’s episode of Planet Earth: Our
Loving Home, the first of a two-part series, focusing on the deep
interconnection between our oceans and the world’s climate.
The
experts featured today are Dr. Steve Rintoul, an oceanographer from
Australia’s national scientific research body, the Commonwealth
Scientific and Industrial Research Organisation and Professor Anders
Levermann, a senior researcher at the Potsdam Institute of Climate
Impact Research in Germany and the lead author of the Sea Level Change
chapter for the coming 5th Assessment Report of the United Nations
Intergovernmental Panel on Climate Change.
Oceans cover 71% of
the Earth’s surface, contain approximately 97 % of the world’s water,
sustain a diverse array of sea life and play a vital role in regulating
our planet’s climate in a multitude of ways – including through
thermohaline circulation, also known as the Great Ocean Conveyor.
Dr Rintoul (m):
If you think about the globe and what this overturning circulation
really looks like, it’s probably easiest to start in the northern part
of the Atlantic (Ocean) up near Greenland and Iceland.
Water
sinks at the surface there and flows southward through the whole
Atlantic basin, until it reaches the Southern Ocean. And then very
strong currents in the Southern Ocean redistribute that water, (and)
carry it around the globe, spinning around Antarctica.
That
water then passes through the Indian and Pacific Oceans, ultimately
returns to the Southern Ocean and gradually warms and becomes lighter
again. And then (it) flows back in, northward through the Atlantic Basin
in the upper part of the ocean, and that closes the loop.
For more details on the scientists featured on today’s program,
please visit the following websites:
Professor Anders Levermann
www.PIK-Potsdam.deDr. Steven Rintoul
www.CSIRO.au