
Schematic of the world's ocean currents.
The 'North Atlantic Current' ('North Atlantic Drift' and the 'North Atlantic Sea Movement') is a powerful warm
ocean current that continues the
Gulf Stream northeast. West of
Ireland it splits in two. One branch (the
Canary Current) goes south while the other continues north along the coast of northwestern
Europe where it has a considerable warming influence on the
climate. Other branches include the
Irminger Current and the
Norwegian Current. Driven by the global
thermohaline circulation (THC), the North Atlantic Current is also often considered part of the wind-driven
Gulf Stream which goes further east and north from the North American coast, across the Atlantic and into the
Arctic Ocean.
Climate change, especially
global warming, may have a significant
effect on the current.
See also
★
Thermohaline circulation
References
★
The North Atlantic Current. Elizabeth Rowe, Arthur J. Mariano, Edward H. Ryan,
The Cooperative Institute for Marine and Atmospheric Studies