Description
There is some funny behaviour in the near-zero thickness cells at the bottom of the ocean in particularly shallow regions. The following plot shows hourly bottom-cell concentrations for tracers exhibiting the funny behaviour (@ 1902-11-30 23:30:00, created using this configuration).

The funny behaviour (high no3, adic, dic, alk and fe; negative o2) is seen in particularly shallow regions where the cell thickness of the bottom-cell (and indeed a number of overlying cells) is near-zero (order 1mm). The lowest non-near-zero cell looks okay. The following plot is the same as above, but for the deepest cell with a thickness > 2cm

This issue is related to the bottom fluxes from sediment remineralisation (applied here when using MOM6) and does not occur if bottom flux terms (btf
) are set to zero. However, there’s nothing obviously going wrong with the bottom fluxes or the bottom layer thicknesses. The following plots show bottom-cell o2 concentration, o2 bottom flux (= 172. / 16. * det_sed_remin
) and bottom-cell layer thickness at a location where the oxygen concentrations go negative when bottom fluxes (btf) are included (xh=32.5, yh=75.3).

I’m considering this low priority given that the issue is limited to very thin cells at the bottom of the ocean, but would value any comments or suggestions anyone may have.