2 research outputs found

    Western boundary circulation and coastal sea-level variability in Northern Hemisphere oceans

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    The northwest basins of the Atlantic and Pacific oceans are regions of intense western boundary currents (WBCs): the Gulf Stream and the Kuroshio. The variability of these poleward currents and their extensions in the open ocean is of major importance to the climate system. It is largely dominated by in-phase meridional shifts downstream of the points at which they separate from the coast. Tide gauges on the adjacent coastlines have measured the inshore sea level for many decades and provide a unique window on the past of the oceanic circulation. The relationship between coastal sea level and the variability of the western boundary currents has been previously studied in each basin separately, but comparison between the two basins is missing. Here we show for each basin that the inshore sea level upstream of the separation points is in sustained agreement with the meridional shifts of the western boundary current extension over the period studied, i.e. the past 7 (5) decades in the Atlantic (Pacific). Decomposition of the coastal sea level into principal components allows us to discriminate this variability in the upstream sea level from other sources of variability such as the influence of large meanders in the Pacific. Our result extends previous findings limited to the altimetry era and suggests that prediction of inshore sea-level changes could be improved by the inclusion of meridional shifts of the western boundary current extensions as predictors. Long-duration tide gauges, such as Key West, Fernandina Beach or Hosojima, could be used as proxies for the past meridional shifts of the western boundary current extensions

    Spreadsheets for GSNW, KEI and tide gauge derived sea-level modes

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    A set of CSV files containing different timeseries presented in Ocean Science paper &#39;Western boundary circulation and coastal sea-level variability in northern hemisphere oceans&#39;, from Samuel Ti&eacute;folo Diabat&eacute; and Coauthors (submitted). - Atlantic_PCs.csv: contains the two leading principal components of the tide gauge obtained sea-level anomalies for the Atlantic set of tide gauges. - Pacific_PCs.csv: same as previous, but for the Pacific set of tide gauges. - GSNW.csv: contains our Gulf Stream North Wall index, as defined in the paper. - KEI.csv: contains our Kuroshio Extension Index, as defined in the paper.</span
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