Cross-Front Mixing and Frontal Upwelling in a Controlled Quasi-Permanent Density Front in the Gulf of St. Lawrence

  • Tang C
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Abstract

Bedford Inst. Oceanogr., Dartmouth, N.S., Canada J (Journal-Article) M (Marine); B (Brackish) CTD data obtained from three transects across a controlled quasi-permanent density front in the Gulf of St. Lawrence were analyzed for the purpose of investigating cross-front mixing, mechanisms for frontal convergence, secondary circulation induced by the front and relationship between surface mixed-layer properties and frontal structure. Water mass analysis indicates that mixing takes place mainly in the ambient water, from the lower boundary of the frontal layer down to similar to 100 m. On the side of heavier water, there is a region of low surface temperature. The water masses have a distribution suggestive of upwelling in the low surface temperature region. The thickness of the surface mixed layer varies across the front. Outside the frontal zone there is a well-developed mixed layer of a thickness of about 25 m. It disappears complete...

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Tang, C. L. (1983). Cross-Front Mixing and Frontal Upwelling in a Controlled Quasi-Permanent Density Front in the Gulf of St. Lawrence. Journal of Physical Oceanography, 13(8), 1468–1481. https://doi.org/10.1175/1520-0485(1983)013<1468:cfmafu>2.0.co;2

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