4.5 Article

Fronts, jets, and counter-flows in the Western Iberian upwelling system

Journal

JOURNAL OF MARINE SYSTEMS
Volume 35, Issue 1-2, Pages 61-77

Publisher

ELSEVIER
DOI: 10.1016/S0924-7963(02)00076-3

Keywords

coastal upwelling; jets and counter-flows; filaments; Western Iberian Buoyant Plume (WIBP); topographic forcing; canyons

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The results of a fine resolution hydrology survey conducted off the nor-them Portuguese coast at the end of the upwelling season are presented, The most striking features were the upwelling front and the associated southward jet. Counter-flows were detected both over the slope and at the inner-shelf. The southward current is surface intensified with maxim-am values of about 40 cm s(-1) and diverges to the south of the observed area recirculating both onshore and offshore. Along the slope, a warmer and saltier poleward current interacts with the jet generating an anticyclonic eddy about the Aveiro Canyon, Possible mechanisms of topographic forcing and filament development in the zone are discussed. Inshore, a coastal current advects wanner water northward creating a second front at the inner-shelf. The surface layers to the coastal side of the upwelling front are dominated by a low salinity lens, which we proposed to name the Western Iberia Buoyant Plume (WIBP). The equatorward flow, the coastal current and the stratification input of the WIBP introduce strong complexity into the dynamics of this doublefrontal upwelling system. The plume is stirred being partially advected to the south and offshore while entrained in the upwelling jet, On the shore side, the plume is advected to the north by the coastal counter-flow. A conceptual model of circulation is presented. (C) 2002 Elsevier Science B.V. All rights reserved.

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