“…Cross-tropopause convection provides a means of rapidly transporting boundary layer air into the lower stratosphere, thus bypassing the dominant global-scale troposphere-to-stratosphere transport mechanism associated with the Brewer-Dobson circulation in which air ascends slowly across the tropical tropopause and then moves poleward and descends. Observational and modeling studies indicate that convective overshooting moistens the lower stratosphere through the lofting of ice crystals into the stratosphere, which then subsequently sublimate (Corti et al, 2008;de Reus et al, 2009;Hanisco et al, 2007;Hassim & Lane, 2010;Hegglin et al, 2004;Homeyer, 2014;Homeyer et al, 2017;Iwasaki et al, 2010;Iwasaki et al, 2012;Khaykin et al, 2009;Khaykin et al, 2016;Phoenix et al, 2017;Poulida et al, 1996;Randel et al, 2012;Ray et al, 2004;Sang et al, 2018;Sargent et al, 2014;Sayres et al, 2010;Smith et al, 2017;Wang et al, 2011;Weinstock et al, 2007). Analysis of water and its heavy isotopologue, HDO, indicates that up to 45% of water vapor in the NAMA may be attributed to convective transport of water-predominantly as ice-into the UTLS, though the convective source may not be entirely local (Hanisco et al, 2007;Randel et al, 2012).…”