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A climatology of salty intrusions over the continental shelf from Georges Bank to Cape Hatteras

TLDR
In this paper, Salty slope water (Smax intrusions) are often found over the continental shelf of the Middle Atlantic Bight (MAB) in summer, and are concentrated at the depth of the seasonal pycnocline.
Abstract
[1] Intrusions or lens of anomalously salty slope water (Smax intrusions) are often found over the continental shelf of the Middle Atlantic Bight (MAB). Salty intrusions were identified in 11% of 10,652 historical hydrographic profiles. Intrusions occurred primarily in summer, were observed across the entire shelf, but were most common over the outer shelf, and were concentrated at the depth of the seasonal pycnocline. The percentage of profiles with intrusions increased linearly along the MAB shelf from Georges Bank (3%) to Chesapeake Bay (15%), suggesting either a north to south increase in generation or an along-shelf accumulation associated with a decay timescale of 90 days or longer. Intrusions were typically less than 30 m thick, with a salinity anomaly of less than 0.5, though 10% of the anomalies were greater than 1. The thickness increased as the stratification decreased in a manner consistent with double-diffusively driven lateral intrusions. Intrusions did not preferentially occur during certain wind conditions. Salty intrusions increase the average salinity of the MAB shelf during summer by 0.3 or more, depending on how rapidly intrusions mix with the surrounding shelf water.

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Citations
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Journal ArticleDOI

Seasonal evolution of hydrographic fields in the central Middle Atlantic Bight from glider observations

TL;DR: In this article, the first sustained glider observations in the Middle Atlantic Bight were used to describe the seasonal evolution of hydrographic fields off New Jersey, showing that near surface temperatures respond to the seasonal cycle of surface heating, while waters at depth are primarily influenced by advection of cold waters from the north in the cold-pool during spring/summer, and warming due to mixing during fall.
Journal ArticleDOI

Dynamics of the direct intrusion of Gulf Stream ring water onto the Mid-Atlantic Bight shelf

TL;DR: In this article, the authors present a direct intrusion of Gulf Stream warm-core ring water onto the shelf representing a previously unknown exchange process at the shelf break, which has important biogeochemical implications and could facilitate migration of marine species across the shelfbreak barrier and transport low-nutrient surface Gulf Stream ring water to the otherwise productive shelfbreak region.
Journal ArticleDOI

An assessment of the skill of real-time models of Mid-Atlantic Bight continental shelf circulation

TL;DR: In this paper, the authors evaluate whether real-time models presently in operation for the Mid-Atlantic Bight (MAB) can deliver useful predictions of subtidal frequency currents and subsurface temperature and salinity for downscaling purpose.
Journal ArticleDOI

Seasonal climatology of wind-driven circulation on the New Jersey Shelf

TL;DR: In this article, the spatial structure of the mean and seasonal surface circulation in the central region of the Mid-Atlantic Bight (New Jersey Shelf) is characterized using 6 years of CODAR long-range HF radar data (2002-2007).
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Mesoscale eddies in the South Atlantic Bight and the Gulf Stream Recirculation region: Vertical structure

TL;DR: In this paper, sea level anomalies from altimeters are combined with decade-long potential temperature and salinity profiles from Argo floats to investigate the vertical structure of mesoscale eddies in the South Atlantic Bight and the Gulf Stream Recirculation region.
References
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Journal ArticleDOI

Double diffusion in oceanography

TL;DR: Turner et al. as mentioned in this paper showed how opposing stratifications of two component species could drive convection if their diffusivities differed, and they also identified the potential for the oscillatory instability when cold, fresh water overlies warm, salty water.
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The 1983-1984 Shelf Edge Exchange Processes (SEEP)--I experiment: hypotheses and highlights

TL;DR: A multidisciplinary SEEP-I study of particle formation, transformation, transport, sedimentation, and storage was conducted across the shelf-break south of Martha's Vineyard and Long Island during July 1983-October 1984 as discussed by the authors.
Journal ArticleDOI

The vertical length scale of double-diffusive intrusions

TL;DR: In this paper, a laboratory model has been developed to stimulate the mixing at an oceanic front across which there are large T-S anomalies but a small net horizontal density difference.
Journal ArticleDOI

A climatology of the shelfbreak front in the Middle Atlantic Bight

TL;DR: In this paper, historical data are used to produce two-dimensional climatological fields of temperature and salinity for the region south of Nantucket shoals, along the south flank of Georges Bank, and off the coast of New Jersey.
Journal ArticleDOI

Lateral mixing of water masses

TL;DR: In this article, the vertical transport of heat and salt in the salt-finger convective regime can be enhanced by the vertical shear of a "medium" scale motion, which converts compensating temperature-salinity variations on isopycnal surfaces into strong vertical T-S gradients.
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