Topic 1. Some steric-height features of the water off the Pacific coast of Canada; Topic 2. Possible warming of the water at station P in the northeast Pacific during 1956-1984 [abstract]


Autoria(s): Tabata, S.
Data(s)

1986

Resumo

TOPIC 1: In terms of seasonal scale, temperature effect dominates the annual change of steric height in the open ocean whereas salinity effect controls it along the continental shelf. Large portion of the annual change of height relative to the 1000-db surface is contained in the upper 100m layer. However, in interannual scale large anomalies of steric height in the open ocean, are more often than not, caused by halosteric rather than thermosteric effect. At least in the open ocean the heights are almost totally determined by the behavior of deep water. Their interannual variability appears to be related to the cumulative effect of Eckman pumping. TOPIC 2: There is a "trend" that over the past 28 years the water at Station P has warmed. Least-square analysis indicates that this warming may be significant but shortening of the time-series data by approximately 10 years fails to show that this is the case. These "trends" have to be interpreted with care. The warming may be "apparent" in that it is not indicated clearly in the deep isopynal surfaces which, during the above period, have deepened. Thus warming at the isobaric surfaces may be the effect of the downward migration of the isopynal surfaces.

Formato

application/pdf

Identificador

http://aquaticcommons.org/14319/1/13%20-%20S.%20Tabata.pdf

Tabata, S. (1986) Topic 1. Some steric-height features of the water off the Pacific coast of Canada; Topic 2. Possible warming of the water at station P in the northeast Pacific during 1956-1984 [abstract]. In: 3rd Workshop on Climate Variability of the Eastern North Pacific and Western North America [PACLIM] , 25-28 March 1986 ,Asilomar Conference Center, Pacific Grove, CA, p. 26.

Idioma(s)

en

Relação

http://aquaticcommons.org/14319/

Palavras-Chave #Oceanography
Tipo

Conference or Workshop Item

NonPeerReviewed