4.6 Article Proceedings Paper

Line P ocean temperature and salinity, 1956-2005

Journal

PROGRESS IN OCEANOGRAPHY
Volume 75, Issue 2, Pages 161-178

Publisher

PERGAMON-ELSEVIER SCIENCE LTD
DOI: 10.1016/j.pocean.2007.08.017

Keywords

climate physical oceanography; water properties; time series; ocean stations

Categories

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Vertical profiles of temperature and salinity have been measured for 50 years along Line P between the North American west coast and mid Gulf of Alaska. These measurements extend 1425 kin into the gulf at 13 or more sampling stations. The 10-50-m deep layer of Line P increased in temperature by 0.9 degrees C from 1958 to 2005, but is significant only at the 90% level due to large interannual variability. Most of this increase in temperature accompanies the 1977 shift in wind patterns. Temperature changes at 100-150 in and salinity changes in both layers are not statistically significant. Much of the variance in temperature is in the upper 50 in of Line P, and temperature changes tend to be uniform along Line P except for waters on the continental margin. Salinity changes are dominated by variability in the halocline between 100 and 150 in depth and are less uniform along Line P. Largest oscillations in temperature and salinity are between 1993 and 2003. These events can be understood by considering changes in eastward wind speed and wind patterns that are revealed in the first two modes of the Pacific Decadal Oscillation. Changes in these patterns are indicators for both Ekman surface forcing (Surface ocean currents flow to the right of the wind direction) and Ekman pumping (Surface waters diverge away from regions of positive wind stress curl, leading to upwelling of colder saltier water). Changes in temperature along the nearshore part of Line P suggest Ekman surface forcing is the stronger of the two processes in the upper layer. The change in salinity anomalies in the halocline along the seaward end of Line P, following the wind shift in 1977, is in agreement with enhanced upwelling caused by stronger Ekman pumping in this region. (c) 2007 Published by Elsevier Ltd.

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