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A numerical study of the Southwestern Atlantic Shelf circulation : stratified ocean response to local and offshore forcing

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Title A numerical study of the Southwestern Atlantic Shelf circulation : stratified ocean response to local and offshore forcing
Names Palma, Elbio D. (creator)
Matano, Ricardo P. (creator)
Piola, Alberto R. (creator)
Date Issued 2008 (iso8601)
Note copyrighted by American Geophysical Union
Abstract This article discusses the results of a suite of numerical simulations of the oceanic
circulation in the Southwestern Atlantic Shelf region that are aimed to characterize its
mean circulation and seasonal variability and to determine the dynamical mechanisms
controlling them. Our experiments indicate that south of 40°S the mean circulation is
dominated by a general northeastward flow in the southern portion of the shelf, which is
controlled by the discharges from the Magellan Straits, tidal mixing, wind forcing, and the
offshore influence of the Malvinas Current farther north. The region from 40°S to
33°S presents the highest seasonal variability, with intrusions of cold sub-Antarctic waters
and the northward expansion of mixtures of the Río de la Plata waters in late fall and a
slower retraction of the plume during spring-summer. Wind stress variability seems to be
the primarily forcing mechanism for the plume dynamics. These model results are in
reasonable agreement with observations and previous model results. The present solutions
also reveal important additional features of the shelf response. The along-shelf circulation,
for example, is largely driven by the western boundary currents in the middle and outer
shelf, with induced transports that are 3 times larger than in experiments forced by
winds and tides. The analysis also indicates that the upstream influence of the Malvinas
Current is felt well beyond its retroflection point in the form of a northward middle-shelf
current and that the interaction of the Brazil Current with the Brazilian shelf topography
is primarily responsible for inducing steady shelf break upwelling.
Genre Article
Identifier Palma, E. D., Piola, A. R., Matano, R. P., A numerical study of the Southwestern Atlantic Shelf circulation : stratified ocean response to local and offshore forcing, J. Geophys. Res., 113, C11010, doi:10.1029/2007JC004720.

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