Selamat Datang Kepada Pelajar Baru TROPIMUNDO 2016 ke INOS UMT

BackDrop Tropimundo 2016

No. First/given name Last/surname Gender Nationality
1 Anais BONNEFOND Female France
2 Mirna Ines FERNÁNDEZ PRADEL Female Bolivia
3 Catherine Elizabeth Elliott TURNER Female Canada
4 Thiguedhrets RAHMOUN Female France
5 Suneha JAGANNATHAN Female India
6 Fikadu Erenso JEBESSA Male Ethiopia
7 Damien Rodrigo N VANDERHOEVEN Male Belgium
8 Rosa Isabel AGUIRRE ALCOLEA Female Cuba
9 Zinat Jahan CHOWDHURY Female Bangladesh
10 Nadia BALDUCCIO Female Italy
11 Martina LIBRIO Female Italy
12 Columba MARTINEZ ESPINOSA Female Mexico
13 Viet Anh NGUYEN Male Vietnam
14 Mohammad Mosarof HOSSAIN Male Bangladesh
15 Berhanu Gebrekidan INJIGU Male Ethiopia
16 Tiruha Habte KARSSA Male Ethiopia

 

 

[youtube height=”315″ width=”560″]https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=OK_LILOIbHg[/youtube]

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

 

 

 

 

 

 

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