4.4 Article

Water mass circulation on the continental shelf of the Gulf of Cadiz

Journal

DEEP-SEA RESEARCH PART II-TOPICAL STUDIES IN OCEANOGRAPHY
Volume 53, Issue 11-13, Pages 1182-1197

Publisher

PERGAMON-ELSEVIER SCIENCE LTD
DOI: 10.1016/j.dsr2.2006.04.011

Keywords

Cape Santa Maria; Cape San Vicente; upwelling filaments; Huelva front; wind-driven flow

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Acoustic Doppler Current Profiler data collected during three successive surveys in the Gulf of Cadiz in May-June 2001 have been used to analyse the surface circulation on the continental shelves of the Gulf of Cadiz and how this circulation matches the circulation in the ocean side of the Gulf. The wider and larger eastern continental shelf holds a cyclonic circulation bounded at the south by a shelf-break jet that is identified with the Huelva front. The coastal current that closes the gyre at the north is identified with the warm counterflow mentioned in the literature. Under westerly winds, this counter current recirculates toward the east while recent upwelled water near Cape Santa Maria is advected downstream by the shelf-break jet, leaving the cold signature at the surface that has been identified historically with the Huelva front. Under easterlies, part of the coastal counterflow invades the western continental shelf while the remaining recirculates eastward to close the cyclonic cell. The western continental shelf and slope is occupied by a larger-scale cyclonic eddy that extends into the deep ocean. This eddy has vertical length scale of hundreds of metres and is linked to the general wind forcing in the area. Both cyclonic structures are bounded at the south by a jet that enters in the Gulf of Cadiz moving around the second eddy and eastward to feed the Atlantic inflow through the Strait of Gibraltar. (c) 2006 Elsevier Ltd. All rights reserved.

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