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What is significant about Antarctic ocean?

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It has no distinct boundary with the Pacific, Atlantic and Indian ocean. Extreme cold water and huge icebergs are characteristic features of this ocean.

Although isolated from other continents, Antarctica is connected to the rest of the world through oceanic and atmospheric circulations. Antarctica and the surrounding Southern Ocean are key drivers of Earth’s oceanic and atmospheric systems. A critically important feature is that about 90 per cent of Earth’s ice (approximately 26.9 million cubic kilometres) (Fretwell et al. 2013) is found here, and 70 per cent of all available fresh water is locked up in the Antarctic ice sheet. If melted, this would raise sea levels by 58 metres (Fretwell et al. 2013, Vaughan et al. 2013).

Equally important is the Southern Ocean that surrounds the Antarctic continent. The International Hydrographic Organization considers the parallel of 60°S to be the northern limit of the Southern Ocean (IHO 2002); however, Australia reserves the right to extend the Southern Ocean limits to the southern shores of Australia from Cape Leeuwin in the west and South East Cape in Tasmania (IHO 2002). South of 60°S, the Southern Ocean extends across some 22 million km2, averages about 3300 metres depth and reaches depths of 7000 metres; it encompasses about 6 per cent of the world’s ocean volume (Eakins & Sharman 2010). The Southern Ocean is the only ocean that encircles the globe uninhibited by land masses. The Southern Ocean connects the 3 main ocean basins (Atlantic, Pacific and Indian) and creates a global circulation system that is largely driven by the Antarctic Circumpolar Current (ACC)—the world’s largest current. The ACC flows from west to east around Antarctica and generates an overturning circulation that transports vast amounts of heat. The ACC also takes up a significant amount of carbon dioxide (CO2) from the atmosphere (Rintoul et al. 2001).

In winter, surface waters near Antarctica freeze to form sea ice. When sea ice forms, salt is forced out of the forming ice (brine rejection), making the water below the ice more saline and therefore denser. In a few places around Antarctica, the resulting cold and salty waters are sufficiently dense to sink to the deep ocean and form Antarctic bottom water. This dense bottom water sinks and spreads northwards to supply oxygen to the deep layers of the ocean, and warmer waters flow south to replace it. The southwards flow at mid-depth also compensates for the northwards flow of lighter waters. The formation and circulation of Southern Ocean water masses provide a key link in the global ‘conveyor belt’ of ocean currents that controls climate by transporting heat and other properties.

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