Record Details

Northern Monterey Bay upwelling shadow front : observations of a coastally and surface-trapped bouyant plume

ScholarsArchive at Oregon State University

Field Value
Title Northern Monterey Bay upwelling shadow front : observations of a coastally and surface-trapped bouyant plume
Names Woodson, C. B. (creator)
Washburn, L. (creator)
Barth, John A. (creator)
Hoover, D. J. (creator)
Kirinicich, A. R. (creator)
McManus, M. A. (creator)
Ryan, J. P. (creator)
Tyburczy, J. (creator)
Date Issued 2009 (iso8601)
Note copyrighted by American Geophysical Union
Abstract During the upwelling season in central California, northwesterly winds along the
coast produce a strong upwelling jet that originates at Point Año Nuevo and flows
southward across the mouth of Monterey Bay. A convergent front with a mean
temperature change of 3.77 ± 0.29°C develops between the warm interior waters and the
cold offshore upwelling jet. To examine the forcing mechanisms driving the location and
movement of the upwelling shadow front and its effects on biological communities in
northern Monterey Bay, oceanographic conditions were monitored using cross-shelf
mooring arrays, drifters, and hydrographic surveys along a 20 km stretch of coast
extending northwestward from Santa Cruz, California, during the upwelling season of
2007 (May–September). The alongshore location of the upwelling shadow front at the
northern edge of the bay was driven by: regional wind forcing, through an alongshore
pressure gradient; buoyancy forces due to the temperature change across the front; and
local wind forcing (the diurnal sea breeze). The upwelling shadow front behaved as a
surface-trapped buoyant current, which is superimposed on a poleward barotropic current,
moving up and down the coast up to several kilometers each day. We surmise that the front
is advected poleward by a preexisting northward barotropic current of 0.10 m s¯¹ that arises due to an alongshore pressure gradient caused by focused upwelling at Point Año
Nuevo. The frontal circulation (onshore surface currents) breaks the typical
two-dimensional wind-driven, cross-shelf circulation (offshore surface currents) and
introduces another way for water, and the material it contains (e.g., pollutants, larvae), to
go across the shelf toward shore.
Genre Article
Identifier Woodson, C. B., L. Washburn, J. A. Barth, D. J. Hoover, A. R. Kirincich, M. A. McManus, J. P. Ryan, and J. Tyburczy (2009), Northern Monterey Bay upwelling shadow front: Observations of a coastally and surface-trapped buoyant plume, J. Geophys. Res., 114, C12013.

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