Deep Ocean Current Collapse Threatens Climate and Nutrient Supply

TL;DR Summary
Antarctic currents that provide oxygen and nutrients to 40% of Earth's deep ocean have slowed dangerously in recent decades and could collapse by mid-century due to climate change, according to a study published in the journal Nature Climate Change. The slowdown in deep water currents around Antarctica could lead to the collapse of the Southern Ocean overturning circulation, which connects various water basins in a global circulation system. The collapse of this vital deep ocean current could have severe consequences for marine life, climate, and sea level.
- 'Very Bad News Indeed': Study Sounds Alarm on Threat of Deep Ocean Current Collapse Common Dreams
- Slowing ocean current caused by melting Antarctic ice could have drastic climate impact, study says The Guardian
- Antarctic currents supplying 40% of world's deep ocean with nutrients and oxygen slowing dramatically Livescience.com
- Antarctic alarm bells: observations reveal deep ocean currents are slowing earlier than predicted The Conversation
- Dangerous slowing of Antarctic ocean circulation sooner than expected news.com.au
- View Full Coverage on Google News
Reading Insights
Total Reads
0
Unique Readers
0
Time Saved
3 min
vs 4 min read
Condensed
86%
629 → 87 words
Want the full story? Read the original article
Read on Common Dreams