Please use this identifier to cite or link to this item: http://hdl.handle.net/10553/50058
Title: Water and nutrient fluxes off Northwest Africa
Authors: Pastor, Maria V.
Pelegrí Llopart,José Luis 
Hernández-Guerra, Alonso 
Font, Jordi
Salat, Jordi
Emelianov, Mikhail
UNESCO Clasification: 251007 Oceanografía física
Keywords: Coastal upwelling
Central waters
Frontal features
Double diffusion
Transport processes, et al
Issue Date: 2008
Publisher: 0278-4343
Journal: Continental Shelf Research 
Abstract: A historical data set is used to describe the coastal transition zone off Northwest Africa during spring 1973 and fall 1975, from 17° to 26°N, with special emphasis on the interaction between subtropical (North Atlantic Central Waters) and tropical (South Atlantic Central Waters) gyres. The near-surface geostrophic circulation, relative to 300 m, is quite complex. Major features are a large cyclonic pattern north of Cape Blanc (21°N) and offshore flow at the Cape Verde front. The large cyclone occurs in the region of most intense winds, and resembles a large meander of the baroclinic southward upwelling jet. The Cape Verde frontal system displays substantial interleaving that may partly originate as mesoscale features at the coastal upwelling front. Property–property diagrams show that the front is an effective barrier to all properties except temperature. The analysis of the Turner angle suggests that the frontal system is characterized by large heat horizontal diffusion as a result of intense double diffusion, which results in the smoothing of the temperature horizontal gradients. Nine cross-shore sections are used to calculate along-shore geostrophic water-mass and nutrient transports and to infer exchanges between the coastal transition zone and the deep ocean (import: deep ocean to transition zone; export: transition zone to deep ocean). These exchanges compare well with mean wind-induced transports and actual geostrophic cross-shore transport estimates. The region is divided into three areas: southern (18–21°N), central (21–23.5°N), and northern (23.5–26°N). In the northern area geostrophic import is roughly compensated with wind-induced export during both seasons. In the central area geostrophic import is greater than wind-induced export during spring, resulting in net import of both water (0.8 Sv) and nitrate (14 kmol s−1), but during fall both factors again roughly cancel. In the southern area geostrophy and wind join to export water and nutrients during both seasons, they increase from 0.6 Sv and 3 kmol s−1 during fall to 2.9 Sv and 53 kmol s−1 during spring.
URI: http://hdl.handle.net/10553/50058
ISSN: 0278-4343
DOI: 10.1016/j.csr.2008.01.011
Source: Continental Shelf Research [ISSN 0278-4343], v. 28, p. 915-936
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