Currents and Temperatures as Observed in Drake Passage During 1975

R. Dale Pillsbury School of Oceanography, Oregon State University, Corvallis 97331

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Thomas Whitworth III Department of Oceanography, Texas A&M University, College Station 77843

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Worth D. Nowlin Jr. Department of Oceanography, Texas A&M University, College Station 77843

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Frank Sciremammano Jr. School of Oceanography, Oregon State University, Corvallis 97331

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Abstract

Current and temperature records from 10 meters on six year-long moorings deployed during February 1975 in Drake Passage are examined and discussed in the context of hydrographic data from that area. The mean flow directions are consistent with those from geopotential anomaly charts, showing a northward flow in the central passage and eastward through-passage flow in the south and north. Directly measured vertical shear below 1000 m is remarkably uniform with depth in the central passage. Periods of high shear correspond to periods of high speed and are associated with lateral shifts in the velocity cores imbedded in the Antarctic Circumpolar Current at Drake Passage. Fluctuations in temperature and current are highly correlated in the vertical. Although meters near 2700 m separated by 80 km or more show only a few significant horizontal correlations for record-length statistics, there appear to be coherent fluctuations in the central passage during winter. Temperature and speed variability suggest that there are distinct thermal and kinematic regimes in Drake Passage.

Abstract

Current and temperature records from 10 meters on six year-long moorings deployed during February 1975 in Drake Passage are examined and discussed in the context of hydrographic data from that area. The mean flow directions are consistent with those from geopotential anomaly charts, showing a northward flow in the central passage and eastward through-passage flow in the south and north. Directly measured vertical shear below 1000 m is remarkably uniform with depth in the central passage. Periods of high shear correspond to periods of high speed and are associated with lateral shifts in the velocity cores imbedded in the Antarctic Circumpolar Current at Drake Passage. Fluctuations in temperature and current are highly correlated in the vertical. Although meters near 2700 m separated by 80 km or more show only a few significant horizontal correlations for record-length statistics, there appear to be coherent fluctuations in the central passage during winter. Temperature and speed variability suggest that there are distinct thermal and kinematic regimes in Drake Passage.

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