Surface boundary-layer variability off Northern California, USA, during upwelling
A five-element mooring array is used to study surface boundary-layer transport over the Northern California shelf from May to August 2001. In this region, upwelling favorable winds increase in strength offshore, leading to a strong positive wind stress curl. We examine the cross-shelf variation in s...
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Veröffentlicht in: | Deep-sea research. Part II, Topical studies in oceanography Topical studies in oceanography, 2006-12, Vol.53 (25), p.2887-2905 |
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Sprache: | eng |
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Zusammenfassung: | A five-element mooring array is used to study surface boundary-layer transport over the Northern California shelf from May to August 2001. In this region, upwelling favorable winds increase in strength offshore, leading to a strong positive wind stress curl. We examine the cross-shelf variation in surface Ekman transport calculated from the wind stress and the actual surface boundary-layer transport estimated from oceanic observations. The two quantities are highly correlated with a regression slope near one. Both the Ekman transport and surface boundary layer transport imply curl-driven upwelling rates of about 3×10
−4
m
s
−1 between the 40 and 90
m isobaths (1.5 and 11.0
km from the coast, respectively) and curl-driven upwelling rates about 1.5×10
−4m
s
−1 between the 90 and 130
m isobaths (11.0 and 28.4
km from the coast, respectively). Thus curl-driven upwelling extends to at least 25
km from the coast. In contrast, upwelling driven by the adjustment to the coastal boundary condition occurs primarily inshore of the 40-m isobath. The upwelling rates implied by the differentiating the 40-m transport observations with the coastal boundary condition are up to 8×10
−4
m
s
−1. The estimated upwelling rates and the temperature–nitrate relationship imply curl-driven vertical nitrate flux divergences are about half of those driven by coastal boundary upwelling. |
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ISSN: | 0967-0645 1879-0100 |
DOI: | 10.1016/j.dsr2.2006.09.001 |