Publication | Open Access
Polar <scp>F</scp>ront around the <scp>K</scp>erguelen <scp>I</scp>slands: An up‐to‐date determination and associated circulation of surface/subsurface waters
126
Citations
22
References
2014
Year
Ocean DynamicsEngineeringPolar EnvironmentsMarine ChemistryMarine SystemsOceanographyEarth ScienceOcean MonitoringOceanic ScienceOceanographic ResearchAssociated CirculationPf LocationOceanic SystemsMarine GeologySurface/subsurface WatersCryosphereKerguelen IslandsArctic OceanographyHydrologyClimate DynamicsUp‐to‐date DeterminationClimatologyPolar FrontPhysical OceanographyMarine BiologySurface Water
Abstract The circulation of iron‐rich shelf waters around the Kerguelen Islands plays a crucial role for a climatically important, annually recurrent phytoplankton spring bloom over the sluggish shelf region and its downstream plume area along the Antarctic circumpolar flow. However, there is a long‐standing confusion about the Polar Front (PF) in the Kerguelen region due to diverse suggestions in the literature for its geographical location with an extreme difference over 10° of latitude. Based on abundant historical hydrographic data, the in situ hydrographic and current measurements during the 2011 KEOPS2 cruise, satellite chlorophyll images, and altimetry‐derived surface velocity fields, we determine and validate an up‐to‐date location of the PF around the Kerguelen Islands. Artificial Lagrangian particle trajectories computed from altimetric velocity time series are analyzed for the possible pathways and sources of different surface/subsurface waters advected into the chlorophyll bloom area east off the islands studied during the KEOPS2 cruise. The PF location determined as the northernmost boundary of the Winter Water colder than 2°C, which is also associated with a band of strong currents, appears to be primarily controlled by topography. The PF rounds the Kerguelen Islands from the south to deflect northward along the eastern escarpment up to the northeastern corner of the Kerguelen Plateau before making its southward retroflection. It is shown that the major surface/subsurface waters found within the deep basin east of the Kerguelen Islands originate from the shelf around the Heard Island, rather than from the shallow shelf north of the Kerguelen Islands.
| Year | Citations | |
|---|---|---|
Page 1
Page 1