Record Details

Seasonal cycles of currents, temperatures, winds, and sea level over the northeast pacific continental shelf: 35°N to 48°N

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Field Value
Title Seasonal cycles of currents, temperatures, winds, and sea level over the northeast pacific continental shelf: 35°N to 48°N
Names Strub, P. Ted (creator)
Allen, John S. (creator)
Huyer, Adriana, 1945- (creator)
Smith, Robert L. (Robert Lloyd), 1935- (creator)
Beardsley, R. C. (creator)
Date Issued 1987-02-15 (iso8601)
Note Copyrighted by American Geophysical Union.
Abstract Seasonal cycles of coastal wind stress, adjusted sea level (ASL), shelf currents, and water
temperatures off the west coast of North America (35°N to 48°N) are estimated by fitting annual and
semiannual harmonics to data from 1981-1983. Longer records (9-34 years) of monthly ASL indicate
that these two harmonics adequately represent the long-term monthly average seasonal cycle and that
the current measurement period is long enough to estimate the seasonal cycles. We characterize the
differences between fall/winter and spring/summer as follows: For fall/winter, monthly mean winds
north of 35°N are northward for 3-6 months (longer in the north than in the south); south of 35°N, the
mean winds are near zero or weakly southward; monthly mean alongshore currents are northward
over midshelf and shelf break at all locations sampled at depths of 35 m and deeper and are associated
with high coastal sea levels and relatively warm water temperatures. For spring/summer, monthly
mean wind stresses are southward at all latitudes for 3-6 months (longer in the south than in the north),
sea levels are low, and water temperatures are relatively cool; monthly mean currents at 35 m depth
over the shelf are southward for 1-6 months (longer at the shelf break than over midshelf and longer
in the north than in the south), while the deeper currents are less southward or northward. The
magnitudes of the seasonal cycles of all variables are maximum between approximately 38°N and
43°N, generally decreasing slightly to the north and greatly to the south. At each location the seasonal
cycle of the alongshore current from 35 m depth at midshelf leads the sea level slightly and both lead
the wind stress and temperatures by 1-2 months. The seasonal cycles of all variables show a
south-to-north progression (south leads north by 1-2 months). At 48°N, annual mean currents at 50 m
depth over the shelf break oppose the annual mean wind (northward wind and southward current).
Similarly, at 35°N, annual mean currents at 35 m depth over both midshelf and shelf break are opposed
to the annual mean wind (southward wind and northward current). From 35°N to 43°N, both summer
and winter regimes are dominated by strongly fluctuating currents.
Genre Article
Identifier Strub, P., J. Allen, A. Huyer, R. Smith, and R. Beardsley (1987), Seasonal Cycles of Currents, Temperatures, Winds, and Sea Level Over the Northeast Pacific Continental Shelf: 35°N to 48°N, J. Geophys. Res., 92(C2), 1507-1526.

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