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Dynamics of mean and subtidal flow on the New England shelf

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Title Dynamics of mean and subtidal flow on the New England shelf
Names Shearman, R. Kipp (creator)
Lentz, Steven J. (creator)
Date Issued 2003-08-29 (iso8601)
Note Copyrighted by American Geophysical Union.
Abstract Current and hydrographic observations from the Coastal Mixing and Optics
experiment moored array, deployed from August 1996 through June 1997, are used to
describe the velocity variability and evaluate the dynamics of circulation over the New
England shelf on timescales ranging from a few days to several months. Subtidal (days to
weeks) current variability was polarized along-isobath and dominated by episodic bursts
of westward flow. The along-isobath subtidal flow was primarily geostrophic and
barotropic, and was correlated with large-scale along-coast wind stress fluctuations
oriented 45°T (65° counterclockwise from the local isobath orientation). Subtidal near-surface
ageostrophic transport matched estimates of wind-driven Ekman transport;
however, near-bottom ageostrophic transport was much larger than estimates of Ekman
transport from bottom stress. Low-frequency (monthly and longer timescales) flow was
generally westward and off-shelf at all sites and depths, with the strongest westward
flow during the fall. Low-frequency along-isobath currents were primarily geostrophic
with baroclinic and barotropic components of similar magnitude. Depth-averaged
ageostrophic transport was quantitatively consistent with Ekman transport from wind and
bottom stress. Measured bottom stress at both subtidal and low-frequency timescales was
weak, nearly an order of magnitude smaller than the wind stress. Low-frequency
fluctuations in the predominantly geostrophic along-isobath flow were attributable to
variations in the cross-shelf density field associated with the seasonal cycle in surface
heating. During the fall, thermal wind shear was strongest, because the cross-isobath
temperature gradient was acting in concert with the persistent cross-isobath salinity
gradient to enhance the cross-isobath density gradient (i.e., warmer and fresher water
inshore). During the winter, in response to surface cooling, the cross-isobath temperature
gradient reversed sign, reducing the cross-isobath density gradient (i.e., cooler and fresher
water inshore).
Genre Article
Topic coastal oceanography
Identifier Shearman, R. K., and S. J. Lentz, Dynamics of mean and subtidal flow on the New England shelf, J. Geophys. Res., 108(C8), 3281, 2003. doi: 10.1029/2002JC001417

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