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| North Atlantic Ocean cooling scenario following collapse of Atlantic Meridional Overturning Circulation. |
Now a new paper based on analysis done at a group of
research centers including Scripps Institution of Oceanography at the
University of California San Diego shows that climate models may be drastically
underestimating that possibility.
A bias in most climate models exaggerates the stability of
the pattern, called the Atlantic Meridional Overturning Circulation (AMOC),
relative to modern climate observations.
When researchers removed the bias and re-ran simulations,
the result prompted them to predict a collapse of the circulation at some point
in the future, setting off large-scale cooling in the North Atlantic.
The collapse would stop the AMOC, which delivers warm
surface water toward Greenland then sinks as it cools and flows back toward the
equator closer to the seafloor.
Read the report by Scripps
Institution of Oceanography - “Climate Model Suggests Collapse of Atlantic Circulation is Possible.”

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