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Atlantification: Facing the Atlantic from the Arctic – a provocation
Summary
This essay explores the concept of Atlantification, the strengthening inflow of warmer, saltier Atlantic waters into the Arctic Ocean, and its implications for Atlantic studies as a field. The study reflects on how ecological changes driven by ocean warming and pollution, including plastic contamination, are reshaping our understanding of ocean connectivity and the cultural, political, and environmental dimensions of marine systems.
Atlantic Studies now enters its third decade, and the ecological consequences of human entanglement with (or whelmedness by) the ocean will only intensify environmentally, politically, and culturally.How does the "Atlantic" in Atlantic Studies figure in this expansion and acceleration?This provocation meditates on the scientific term "Atlantification."The Arctic Ocean has seen a significant strengthening of the inflow of Atlantic waters into the Arctic, which leads to the "Atlantification" of circumpolar seas.Atlantic water is warmer and saltier than Arctic water (icebergs, glaciers, and multiyear sea ice are freshwater, not salt), and Atlantification drives sea ice loss and profoundly disrupts the marine ecosystem.As Atlantic Studies looks to the future, the journal might respond to a charge of intellectual Atlantification: an ongoing, systemic study of the intermingling and deliquescence of boundaries between the human and the nonhuman, the past and the future, the Atlantic and the world.
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