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Abstract
9907854 Barth
Investigators at Oregon State University, University of North Carolina,
and Columbia University will collaborate on an intensive five-year study
to combine a unique set of observational tools and ocean and atmosphere
models to investigate the circulation, biology, and chemistry of the Oregon
coastal ocean. This project is under the auspices of the Coastal Ocean
Processes (CoOP) Program and is in response to an Announcement of Opportunity
for Wind-DrivenProcess Studies in the Northeast Pacific. The area to be
studied on the Oregon shelf responds strongly to wind forcing during both
summer, when mean winds favor upwelling, and winter, when mean winds favor
downwelling.
A set of scientific hypotheses related to cross-shelf transport processes
in a wind-driven system will be addressed by conducting field experiments
together with coordinated ocean circulation/ ecosystem and atmospheric
modeling. The hypotheses are: (1) the presence of upwelling and downwelling
jets and fronts locally alters cross-shelf circulation in the surface
and bottom boundary layers and in the interior; (2) alongshore topographic
variations dictate the relative importance of two-dimensional versus three-dimensional
cross-shelf transport processes; (3) patterns of turbulence on the shelf
during upwelling and downwelling are influenced by fronts and jets, and
the levels of turbulence can reach sufficient intensity to influence the
mesoscale circulation; (4) the magnitude and distribution of primary production
on the shelf and its subsequent transport offshore is controlled solely
by the geometry of upwelling; (5) alongshore variations in turbulent mixing
control the magnitude and distribution of primary production; and (6)
the reduced cross-shelf transport implied by the presence of a downwelling
front allows nutrients, trace metals and seed stocks of phytoplankton
and zooplankton to accumulate in the mid- to inner shelf, thus priming
the system for a strong biological response at the outset of upwelling.
To address the hypotheses, intensive observations will be made in two
regions: one in a region of relatively simple topography and one in a
region of abrupt topography. High-resolution sampling will be conducted
using ships, an instrumented aircraft, a set of moorings, and a land-based
coastal radar to make high -spatial resolution surface current maps. A
high-resolution, three-dimensional shelf circulation and coupled ecosystem
ocean model will be used in direct support of the field experiments by
contributing to the dynamical synthesis of the observations and for relevant
process studies. A mesoscale atmospheric modeling effort will provide
estimates of surface forcing, continuous in space and time, for the ocean
model and for interpretation of the oceanic observations.
These measurements bring together a unique set of observational tools
not previously applied simultaneously to the study of coastal dynamics.
Coordinated with ocean circulation/ecosystem and atmospheric modeling,
the proposed effort will significantly advance our understanding of cross-shelf
transport processes on wind-driven continental shelves.
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