Record Details

Bottom boundary layer flow and salt injection from the continental shelf to slope

ScholarsArchive at Oregon State University

Field Value
Title Bottom boundary layer flow and salt injection from the continental shelf to slope
Names Brink, K.H. (creator)
Shearman, R. Kipp (creator)
Date Issued 2006-07-14 (iso8601)
Abstract Austral winter oceanographic measurements from the northwest Australian continental shelf reveal salty water forming evaporatively inshore, moving across the wide shelf near the bottom and into the adjacent open ocean when the shelf edge alongshore flow is equatorward. The salt tongue is absent during more normal conditions, when the poleward Leeuwin Current is present. We hypothesize that the flow reversal enables shelf-wide bottom boundary layer (Ekman) transport and thus creates the shelf-edge convergence that accounts for the observed salt tongue. This flow is absent under sustained normal conditions because of buoyancy arrest in the bottom boundary layer.
Genre Article
Identifier Brink, K. H., & Shearman, R. K. (2006). Bottom boundary layer flow and salt injection from the continental shelf to slope. Geophysical Research Letters, 33. doi:10.1029/2006GL026311

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