Origins of Earth's most powerful ocean current revealed
by Alfred Wegener InstituteGaby Clark
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It transports far more than 100 times as much water as all of the Earth's rivers combined: The Antarctic Circumpolar Current rushes around the southern continent unhindered by land masses and is therefore a fundamental component of the climate system. In a recent study published in the journal Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences, a research team led by the Alfred Wegener Institute describes how and when this mighty ring current developed in Earth's history.
Earth's climate underwent its last drastic change around 34 million years ago during the transition into the Oligocene—cooling from a largely ice sheet-free greenhouse climate to our current icehouse climate, in which large areas of the poles became increasingly glaciated with permanent ice. At this time, the ocean passages between Australia, Antarctica, and South America widened and deepened, the Antarctic Circumpolar Current (ACC) developed, and the formation of the Antarctic Ice Sheet began. The CO2 concentration in the atmosphere at that time was around 600 ppm—a value that has not been reached ever since, but could be exceeded again by the end of this century in some climate scenarios.
Looking to Earth's past for clues
"In order to predict the possible future climate, it is necessary to look into the past with simulations and data to understand our Earth in warmer and more CO2-rich climate states than today," says Hanna Knahl, climate modeler at the Alfred Wegener Institute, Helmholtz Centre for Polar and Marine Research (AWI) and lead author of the study. "But careful, the climate of the past can, of course, not be projected 1:1 onto the future. Our study shows that the circumpolar current in its 'infancy' influenced the climate very differently than today's fully developed ACC does."
For the current study, Hanna Knahl and her colleagues analyzed the formation of the ACC. To this end, climate simulations were created with the continental configuration from 33.5 million years ago, when Australia and South America were still much closer to Antarctica. For these simulations, the team coupled the Antarctic Ice Sheet from a 2024 Science study with the ocean, atmosphere, and land masses to analyze how the ocean currents around Antarctica developed. The simulated currents were then compared with data-based reconstructions from this period.
Revealing how the ACC first formed
Hanna Knahl explains, "There were already indications that the wind in the Tasman Gateway played an important role in the formation of the ACC. Our simulations can clearly confirm this: only when Australia had moved further away from Antarctica and the strong westerly winds blew directly through the Tasman Gateway could the current fully develop."
Surprisingly, at that time, the Southern Ocean may have been divided into two completely different parts. Although the ocean passages around Antarctica were already open, the model only simulates a strong current in the Atlantic and Indian sectors, while the Pacific sector remained much calmer.
Coupled models offer fresh insight
Simulations in which climate and ice sheets are coupled are still relatively new and particularly complex. In order to investigate the infancy of the Antarctic Circumpolar Current under particularly realistic conditions, the two AWI research divisions, Paleoclimate Dynamics and Marine Geology, have combined their skills and merged them with international expertise from the Australian Centre of Excellence in Antarctic Science and the Antarctic Research Centre Wellington.
"With this PNAS study, we are showing—for the first time—how helpful and important it is to carry out these coupled and relatively high-resolution model simulations for the climate of the deep past. Even though they are very demanding, they provide novel insights into the interaction of ice, atmosphere, land surface, and ocean," explains AWI paleoclimate modeler Prof Dr. Gerrit Lohmann, co-author of the study. With the recent analyses of ACC's formation, the team was able to show how a reorganization of the global ocean circulation took place in Earth's history.
AWI geoscientist Dr. Johann Klages, also a co-author of the study, concludes, "This understanding is crucial, as the formation of the ACC has strongly driven carbon uptake by the ocean. This reduction in the concentration of greenhouse gases in Earth's atmosphere thus had the potential to initiate the cooler climate of the so-called Cenozoic Ice Age, which continues to this day with permanently ice-covered polar ice caps, in which warm and cold periods alternate. This new knowledge will therefore help us to more reliably interpret recent changes in Southern Ocean circulation more reliably."
Publication details
Configuration of circum-Antarctic circulation at the last green- to icehouse climate transition, Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences (2026). DOI: 10.1073/pnas.2520064123
Journal information: Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences , Science
Key concepts
carbon fluxocean circulationcarbon cyclingIce Cover
Provided by Alfred Wegener Institute