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Abstract
In this research communication, we report the results of a field survey conducted in a part of the plume of the Amazon River between 0° and 5°N and offshore of the 28 m isobaths in November of 2022, during the low river discharge season. By comparing the observed vertical salinity profiles ‘disturbed’ by continental discharges within the plume with the virtually ‘undisturbed’ ones outside the plume, we estimated the total content of fresh water in the area covered by the measurements as 203 ± 22 km3, which equals to less than 3% of the average annual Amazon River discharge. Furthermore, we argue that the river-borne continental water was not confined to the upper mixed layer and show that about 37%, or 76 km3, of its volume was entrained into the plume-underlying layer between the mixed layer and the salinity maximum. This point is additionally supported by analysis of chromophoric dissolved organic matter (CDOM) fluorescence in water samples, demonstrating significant concentrations of terrigenous CDOM to depths up to 140 m. We also observed that there was a significant direct correlation between the volume of freshwater accumulated in the affected layer and background stratification (expressed as buoyancy frequency) in the unaffected layer below it.
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1 Shirshov Institute of Oceanology, Russian Academy of Sciences , Moscow, Russia
2 Instituto de Oceanografia, Universidade Federal do Rio Grande (FURG) , Rio Grande, RS, Brazil
3 Department of Chemistry, Lomonosov Moscow State University , Moscow, Russia
4 Department of Earth and Environmental Physics, Physics Institute, Federal University of Bahia , Salvador, Brazil