2015
DOI: 10.1002/2015jc011269
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Anatomizing one of the largest saltwater inflows into the Baltic Sea in December 2014

Abstract: In December 2014, an exceptional inflow event into the Baltic Sea was observed, a so‐called Major Baltic Inflow (MBI). Such inflow events are important for the deep water ventilation in the Baltic Sea and typically occur every 3–10 years. Based on first observational data sets, this inflow had been ranked as the third largest since 100 years. With the help of a multinested modeling system, reaching from the North Atlantic (8 km resolution) to the Western Baltic Sea (600 m resolution, which is baroclinic eddy r… Show more

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Cited by 58 publications
(38 citation statements)
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“…The dense bottom waters associated with the main inflow, which will be the main focus of our study, passed the Danish Straits in December 2014 Gräwe et al, 2015]. The inflow continued to propagate as a dense bottom current through the western Baltic Sea, the Bornholm Basin, and the Slupsk Furrow, reaching the central station TF271 near the deepest point of the Gotland Basin (Figure 1) in the second half of February 2015.…”
Section: Temporal Development Of the Inflow And Its Impact On Mixingmentioning
confidence: 89%
“…The dense bottom waters associated with the main inflow, which will be the main focus of our study, passed the Danish Straits in December 2014 Gräwe et al, 2015]. The inflow continued to propagate as a dense bottom current through the western Baltic Sea, the Bornholm Basin, and the Slupsk Furrow, reaching the central station TF271 near the deepest point of the Gotland Basin (Figure 1) in the second half of February 2015.…”
Section: Temporal Development Of the Inflow And Its Impact On Mixingmentioning
confidence: 89%
“…Small-and medium-size inflows occur relatively regularly but large inflows are intermittent and usually weather driven events (Matthäus et al 2008). Only the large saltwater inflows, so-called Major Baltic Inflows (MBIs), ventilate the Baltic deep water with high-saline and oxygen-rich water on time scales of one to ten years (Matthäus et al 2008;Eilola et al 2014;Mohrholz et al 2015;Gräwe et al 2015). MBIs occur mainly during winter but a few events have been observed in spring and autumn as well (Matthäus and Franck 1992;Fischer and Matthäus 1996).…”
Section: Introductionmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…It combined a 3D flow model, the General Estuarine Transport Model (GETM) (Burchard and Bolding 2002), with a 2D particle-tracking model. The entire western Baltic Sea was discretised horizontally with a dense grid of 600 m and with 50 vertical layers (flexible bottom surface-following layers) (Klingbeil et al 2014;Gräwe et al 2015a). The atmospheric forcing was derived from the operational model of the German Weather Service with a spatial resolution of 7 km and a temporal resolution of 3 h. Input parameters were air temperature, humidity, cloud cover, air pressure, precipitation and wind fields Tudor and Williams (2004) for the determination of the likelihood that macro-litter items come from one of the five considered potential pollution sources taken at 10 m above mean sea level.…”
Section: D-transport Modellingmentioning
confidence: 99%