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On the southerly extent of the Antarctic Circumpolar Current in the southeast Pacific

TLDR
The Southern Polar Front (SPF) as discussed by the authors is a branch of the Antarctic Circumpolar Current (ACC) that lies 6° south of the Polar Front at 88°W and 3° north of the Continental Water Boundary.
Abstract
A front at 67°S in the Bellingshausen Sea at 85°W is shown to be part of the Antarctic Circumpolar Current (ACC) and the southernmost zone of concentrated eastward transport at that longitude. The front lies 6° south of the Polar Front at 88°W and 3° north of the Continental Water Boundary. The front is continuous to the east through Drake Passage where it forms a southern branch of the Polar Front, for which reason we have named it the Southern Polar Front. Data from a towed profiling CTD were able to distinguish the Polar Front from the Southern Polar Front, even though they were only 0.5° apart. Thus the width of the ACC south of the Polar Front varied considerably. About a third of the transport of the ACC also lay south of the Polar Front, with 15 Sv carried by the Southern Polar Front alone at 85°W. Distinguishing features of the Southern Polar Front were a water mass boundary associated with a zone of concentrated baroclinic flow and a surface salinity minimum. These features also have been found at the Greenwich Meridian at 53°S, so the Southern Polar Front can be traced round at least a quarter of the globe. To the west of the Bellingshausen Sea both Eltanin data and the Fine Resolution Antarctic Model show that the AAC is at its narrowest at 145°W, where its southern boundaries lie as far north as 56°S. At this longitude the ACC meets the topographic barrier of the Pacific-Antarctic Ridge. To conserve potential vorticity the current is forced to make a southward loop as it crosses the ridge and the current broadens dramatically. The flow remains broad until forced to sharpen by the constriction of Drake Passage. A similar broadening of the ACC is seen where it crosses the Southwest Indian Ridge south of Africa at 30°E. Here it remains broad until it encounters the Kerguelen Plateau. Thus the eastern boundaries of both the Weddell and Ross Gyres are determined by where the ACC crosses midocean ridges.

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Journal ArticleDOI

On the meridional extent and fronts of the Antarctic Circumpolar Current

TL;DR: In this article, large-scale features of the Antarctic Circumpolar Current (ACC) were described using all historical hydrographic data available from the Southern Ocean, and the geopotential anomaly of the sea surface relative to 1000 db reveals the highly-sheared eastward flow of the ACC and the strong steering of the current by the ridge system around Antarctica.
Journal ArticleDOI

Location and dynamics of the Antarctic Polar Front from satellite sea surface temperature data

TL;DR: In this paper, the location of the Antarctic Polar Front (PF) was mapped over a 7-year period (1987-1993) within images of satellite-derived sea surface temperature.
Journal ArticleDOI

Structure of Southern Ocean fronts at 140°E

TL;DR: In this article, the major fronts between Tasmania and Antarctica are described on the basis of repeat hydrographic and expendable bathythermograph (XBT) sections and satellite altimetry.
Journal ArticleDOI

Physical controls on biogeochemical zonation in the Southern Ocean

TL;DR: In this paper, the authors proposed to divide the Southern Ocean into three major zones: the Subantarctic Zone (SAZ), the Antarctic Transport Zone (ATZ), and the Subtropical Zone (SACCZ).
Journal ArticleDOI

Climate variability in the Amundsen and Bellingshausen Seas

TL;DR: Satellite data reveal a 20% decline in sea ice extent in the Amundsen and Bellingshausen Seas in the two decades following 1973 as mentioned in this paper, negatively correlated with surface air temperatures on the west side of the Antarctic Peninsula.
References
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Climatological atlas of the world ocean

TL;DR: A project to objectively analyze historical ocean temperature, salinity, oxygen, and percent oxygen saturation data for the world ocean has recently been completed at the National Oceanic and Atmospheric Administration's (NOAA) Geophysical Fluid Dynamics Laboratory, Princeton, New Jersey.
Book

Climatological Atlas of the World Ocean

TL;DR: A project to objectively analyze historical ocean temperature, salinity, oxygen, and percent oxygen saturation data for the world ocean has recently been completed at the National Oceanic and Atmospheric Administration's (NOAA) Geophysical Fluid Dynamics Laboratory, Princeton, New Jersey.
Book

On the Total Geostrophic Circulation of the South Pacific Ocean: Flow Patterns, Tracers and Transports

TL;DR: In this article, the authors used tracer fields to indicate the sense of flow in various areas and depths, and added the barotropic component to the baroclinic flow defined by the density field.
Journal ArticleDOI

Frontal zone mixing and Antarctic Bottom water formation in the southern Weddell Sea

TL;DR: In this paper, a hydrographic section occupied by closely spaced stations during the International Weddell Sea Oceanographic Expedition aboard the USCGC Glacier in austral summer 1973 was used to investigate the mixing in the frontal zone near the shelf break.
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