The Pacific Water flow branches in the eastern Chukchi Sea
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Title
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The Pacific Water flow branches in the eastern Chukchi Sea
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Other Titles
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동척치해에서의 태평양수 분기류
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Authors
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R.S. Pickart
P. Lin
F. Bahr
L.T. McRaven
J. Huang
A. Pacini
K.R. Arrigo
C.J. Ashjian
C. Berchok
M.F. Baumgartner
Cho, Kyoung-Ho
L.W. Cooper
S. Danielson
D. Dasher
A. Fuiwara
J. Gann
J.M. Grebmeier
J. He
T. Hirawake
M. Itoh
L. Juranek
T. Kikuchi
G.W.K. Moore
J. Napp
R.J. Nelson
S. Nishino
H. Statscewich
P. Stabeno
K.M. Stafford
H. Ueno
S. Vagle
T.J. Weingartner
B. Williams
S. Zimmermann
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Keywords
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Arctic Ocean; Chukchi Sea circulation; boundary currents
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Issue Date
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2023
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Citation
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R.S. Pickart, et al. 2023. "The Pacific Water flow branches in the eastern Chukchi Sea". PROGRESS IN OCEANOGRAPHY, 219(103169): 1-24.
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Abstract
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The flow of Pacific-origin water across the Chukchi Sea shelf impacts the regional ecosystem in profound ways, yet the two current branches on the eastern shelf that carry the water from Bering Strait to Barrow Canyon - the Alaskan Coastal Current (ACC) and Central Channel (CC) Branch - have not been clearly distinguished or quantified. In this study we use an extensive collection of repeat hydrographic sections occupied at three locations on the Chukchi shelf, together with data from a climatology of shipboard velocity data, to accomplish this. The data were collected predominantly between 2010-2020 during the warm months of the year as part of the Distributed Biological Observatory and Arctic Observing Network. The mean sections show that mass is balanced for both currents at the three locations: Bering Strait, Point Hope, and Barrow Canyon. The overall mean ACC transport is 0.34 ± 0.04 Sv, and that of the CC Branch is 0.86 ± 0.11 Sv. The dominant hydrographic variability at Bering Strait is seasonal, but this becomes less evident to the north. At Barrow Canyon, the dominant hydrographic signal is associated with year-to-year variations in sea-ice melt. Farther south there is pronounced mesoscale variability: an empirical orthogonal function analysis at Bering Strait and Point Hope reveals a distinct ACC mode and CC Branch mode in hydrography and baroclinic transport, where the former is wind-driven. Finally, the northward evolution in properties of the two currents is investigated. The poleward increase in salinity of the ACC can be explained by lateral mixing alone, but solar heating together with wind mixing play a large role in the temperature evolution. This same atmospheric forcing also impacts the northward evolution of the CC Branch.
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URI
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https://repository.kopri.re.kr/handle/201206/14962
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DOI
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http://dx.doi.org/10.1016/j.pocean.2023.103169
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Type
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Article
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Station
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Araon
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Indexed
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SCIE
- Appears in Collections
- 2023-2023, Korea-Arctic Ocean Warming and Response of Ecosystem (23-23) / Yang, Eun Jin (PM23040)
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