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On the East Australian Current: Variability, encroachment, and upwelling M Roughan, Scripps Institution of Oceanography, UCSD J H. Middleton, University of New South Wales Australia
ABSTRACT: [ 1] Observations from an intensive oceanographic field program which
took place in 1998 - 1999 about the separation point of the East Australian
Current (EAC) show significant spatial and temporal variability of the EAC.
Upstream of the separation point, southward flowing currents are strong, with
subinertial velocities of up to 130 cm s(-1) in the near-surface waters,
whereas downstream currents are highly variable in both strength ( 1 - 70 cm
s(-1)) and direction. Upwelling is observed to occur through both wind-driven
and current-driven processes, with wind effects playing a lesser role. By
contrast, the encroachment of the EAC upon the coast has a profound effect on
the coastal waters, accelerating the southward (alongshore) currents and
decreasing the temperature in the bottom boundary layer (BBL) by up to 5
degreesC. As the axis of the jet moves onshore, negative vorticity increases in
association with an increase in nonlinear acceleration. During this time,
bottom friction is increased, the Burger number is reduced, and the BBL
shut-down time lengthens. The observed upwelling is attributed to enhanced
onshore Ekman pumping through the BBL resulting from increased bottom stress as
the southerly flow accelerates when the EAC encroaches across the continental
shelf.
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