The 2nd LRGS Scientific Cruise to Malacca Strait

Scientist

4

Stations

44

Research Topic

Chemical Oceanography – Assoc. Prof. Dr. Poh Seng Chee
Physical Oceanography – Dr. Nur Hidayah Roseli
Biological Oceanography – Dr. Hii Kieng Soon
Geological Oceanography – Dr. Fatin Izzati Minhat

Duration

09 – 19 March 2022
(10 days)

Cost

Almost RM200,000 spent

Distance

The longest distance from shoreline to station
= 159.00 km

Sampling Point

The deepest sampling point:
Malacca Strait = 90m (near Langkawi)
South China Sea = 63m (near Terengganu)

Abstract

While the sinking formation of Antarctic Bottom Water (AABW) is well understood, how this bottom water "returns home" through upwelling within ocean basins, particularly the Indo-Pacific, remains shrouded in uncertainty. In the 1960s, Munk’s classic "Abyssal Recipes" theory sought to explain these abyssal flows, yet later observations exposed two significant conflicts with real-world data. In 2016, Ferrari, McDougall, and colleagues proposed the "Towards a New Abyssal Recipe" framework, introducing bottom boundary layer (BBL) upwelling to address Munk’s inconsistencies. Drawing on recent evidence of a potential cooling trend in the deep ocean, this talk revisits these debates, offering a fresh interpretation of Munk’s discrepancies and proposing a new mechanism for abyssal upwelling in the Indo-Pacific. It contributes to the ongoing quest to unravel how bottom waters complete their global journey.

Presented by: Prof. Dr. HAN Lei
Affiliation: China-ASEAN College of Marine Science, Xiamen University, Malaysia
Address: Sepang, Selangor, Malaysia

 

 

 

 

 

 

This will close in 0 seconds