Large solitary meanders are arguably the dominant mode of variability in the Agulhas Current. Observational studies have shown that these large meanders are associated with strong upwelling velocities and affect the shelf circulation for over 100 days per year. Here 10-year time series from two ocean general circulation models are used to create a composite picture of the Agulhas Current and its interactions with the shelf circulation in meandering and nonmeandering modes. Both models show good agreement with the size, propagation speed, and frequency of observed meanders. These composite meanders are then used to examine the response of shelf waters to the onset of large meanders, with the use of model output enabling the dynamics at depth...
The variability of the inshore circulation of the Agulhas Current on the Natal continental shelf reg...
The southwest continental shelf of Africa is characterized by a strong western boundary current with...
Author Posting. © American Geophysical Union, 2014. This article is posted here by permission of Am...
AbstractSix large solitary meanders in the Agulhas Current, so-called Natal Pulses, propagated down ...
Includes bibliographical references (p. [147]-158).Includes abstract.The oceanic structure and circu...
The Agulhas Current is the strongest Western Boundary Current of the Southern Hemisphere and it play...
The Agulhas Bank is a wide continental shelf that forms the southern tip of the African continent. O...
[from introduction] The Agulhas Current is by far the largest western boundary current of the southe...
The 2013 Intergovernmental Panel on Climate Change report, using CMIP5 and EMIC model outputs sugges...
For the first time, the temperature transport of the Agulhas Current is quantified in a time series....
Around 4-5 times per year the Atlantic Ocean receives warm, saline waters from the Indo-Pacific Ocea...
The Agulhas Current is the major western boundary current of the Southern Hemisphere [Lutjeharms, 20...
The greater Agulhas Current has been shown to be a key link in the global thermohaline circulation a...
The inter-ocean exchange of warm and salt-enriched waters around South Africa (Agulhas leakage), may...
The broad continental shelf extension south of Africa is known as the Agulhas Bank. It is a complex ...
The variability of the inshore circulation of the Agulhas Current on the Natal continental shelf reg...
The southwest continental shelf of Africa is characterized by a strong western boundary current with...
Author Posting. © American Geophysical Union, 2014. This article is posted here by permission of Am...
AbstractSix large solitary meanders in the Agulhas Current, so-called Natal Pulses, propagated down ...
Includes bibliographical references (p. [147]-158).Includes abstract.The oceanic structure and circu...
The Agulhas Current is the strongest Western Boundary Current of the Southern Hemisphere and it play...
The Agulhas Bank is a wide continental shelf that forms the southern tip of the African continent. O...
[from introduction] The Agulhas Current is by far the largest western boundary current of the southe...
The 2013 Intergovernmental Panel on Climate Change report, using CMIP5 and EMIC model outputs sugges...
For the first time, the temperature transport of the Agulhas Current is quantified in a time series....
Around 4-5 times per year the Atlantic Ocean receives warm, saline waters from the Indo-Pacific Ocea...
The Agulhas Current is the major western boundary current of the Southern Hemisphere [Lutjeharms, 20...
The greater Agulhas Current has been shown to be a key link in the global thermohaline circulation a...
The inter-ocean exchange of warm and salt-enriched waters around South Africa (Agulhas leakage), may...
The broad continental shelf extension south of Africa is known as the Agulhas Bank. It is a complex ...
The variability of the inshore circulation of the Agulhas Current on the Natal continental shelf reg...
The southwest continental shelf of Africa is characterized by a strong western boundary current with...
Author Posting. © American Geophysical Union, 2014. This article is posted here by permission of Am...