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Modulation of currents near Durban

Authors :
Mark R. Jury
Source :
Regional Studies in Marine Science. 18:208-218
Publication Year :
2018
Publisher :
Elsevier BV, 2018.

Abstract

The modulation of near-surface currents off Durban (29.9S, 31E) is studied using monthly and daily ocean and atmosphere reanalysis products. Poleward flow on the shelf-edge exhibits long-lived 2–3 yr and 50–150 day fluctuations, whereas cyclonic circulations inshore exhibit short-lived ∼ 6 day pulsing by coastal winds. Monthly meridional currents near Durban 1979–2015 relate to lower air pressure over the SW Indian Ocean ( ∼ 37S, 40E) that slows the offshore anticyclonic gyre and shelf-edge Agulhas Current. Daily meridional currents near Durban 2009–2015 relate to a pattern of offshore positive / inshore negative sea surface temperatures that propagate poleward at ∼ 7 km/day. The upper ocean structure and circulation off KwaZulu-Natal is analyzed using daily 8 km resolution fields over the area 28–31.5S, 30–33E. The shelf oceanography of a cyclonic shear event on 25–26 October 2010 corresponds with a transient low pressure cell, 12 m/s southwest winds and 5 m swells. A coastal wind jet near Durban deepens the mixed layer >50 m during a cold air outbreak with latent heat flux >250 W/m2. While the regional atmosphere modulates longshore winds and inshore currents at high frequency, the offshore anticyclonic gyre pulses the shelf-edge Agulhas Current at low frequency in association with poleward moving eddies. As these advance down the coast, water draws off the shelf contributing to upwelling and productivity.

Details

ISSN :
23524855
Volume :
18
Database :
OpenAIRE
Journal :
Regional Studies in Marine Science
Accession number :
edsair.doi...........c2c104a72949584c0370c2af3f948b75
Full Text :
https://doi.org/10.1016/j.rsma.2017.10.009