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Seasonal climatology of hydrographic conditions in the upwelling region off northern Chile

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Title Seasonal climatology of hydrographic conditions in the upwelling region off northern Chile
Names Blanco, J.L. (creator)
Thomas, A.C. (creator)
Carr, M.-E. (creator)
Strub, P. Ted (creator)
Date Issued 2001-06-15 (iso8601)
Note Copyright 2001 by the American Geophysical Union
Abstract Over 30 years of hydrographic data from the northern Chile (18°S-24°S) upwelling
region are used to calculate the surface and subsurface seasonal climatology extending 400 km
offshore. The data are interpolated to a grid with sufficient spatial resolution to preserve crossshelf
gradients and then presented as means within four seasons: austral winter (July-
September), spring (October-December), summer (January-March), and fall (April-June).
Climatological monthly wind forcing, surface temperature, and sea level from three coastal
stations indicate equatorward (upwelling favorable) winds throughout the year, weakest in the
north. Seasonal maximum alongshore wind stress is in late spring and summer (December-
March). Major water masses of the region are identified in climatological T-S plots and their
sources and implied circulation discussed. Surface fields and vertical transects of temperature
and salinity confirm that upwelling occurs year-round, strongest in summer and weakest in
winter, bringing relatively fresh water to the surface nearshore. Surface geostrophic flow
nearshore is equatorward throughout the year. During summer, an anticyclonic circulation
feature in the north which extends to at least 200 m depth is evident in geopotential anomaly
and in both temperature and geopotential variance fields. Subsurface fields indicate generally
poleward flow throughout the year, strongest in an undercurrent near the coast. This
undercurrent is strongest in summer and most persistent and organized in the south (south of
21°S). A subsurface oxygen minimum, centered at ∼250 m, is strongest at lower latitudes.
Low-salinity subsurface water intrudes into the study area near 100 m, predominantly in
offshore regions, strongest during summer and fall and in the southernmost portion of the
region. The climatological fields are compared to features off Baja within the somewhat
analogous California Current and to measurements from higher latitudes within the Chile-Peru
Current system.
Genre Article
Identifier Blanco, J. L., A. C. Thomas, M.-E. Carr, and P. Ted Strub. "Seasonal climatology of hydrographic conditions in the upwelling region off northern Chile." Journal of Geophysical Research 106.C6 (2001): 11,451-11,467. Print.

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