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Northern Adriatic response to a wintertime bora wind event
Author(s) -
Lee Craig M.,
Askari Farid,
Book Jeff,
Carniel Sandro,
CushmanRoisin Benoit,
Dorman Clive,
Doyle James,
Flament Pierre,
Harris Courtney K.,
Jones Burton H.,
Kuzmic Milivoj,
Martin Paul,
Ogston Andrea,
Orlic Mirko,
Perkins Henry,
Poulain PierreMarie,
Pullen Julie,
Russo Aniello,
Sherwood Christopher,
Signell Richard P.,
Thaler Dietmar
Publication year - 2005
Publication title -
eos, transactions american geophysical union
Language(s) - English
Resource type - Journals
SCImago Journal Rank - 0.316
H-Index - 86
eISSN - 2324-9250
pISSN - 0096-3941
DOI - 10.1029/2005eo160001
Subject(s) - geology , mesoscale meteorology , oceanography , front (military) , anticyclone , plume , structural basin , forcing (mathematics) , global wind patterns , climatology , geomorphology , meteorology , geography
During winters, the northern Adriatic Sea experiences frequent, intense cold‐air outbreaks that drive oceanic heat loss and imprint complex but predictable patterns in the underlying waters. This strong, reliable forcing makes this region an excellent laboratory for observational and numerical investigations of air‐sea interaction, sediment and biological transport, and mesoscale wind‐driven flow. Narrow sea surface wind jets, commonly known as “bora,” occur when cold, dry air spills through gaps in the Dinaric Alps (the mountain range situated along the Adriatic's eastern shore). Horizontal variations in these winds drive a mosaic of oceanic cyclonic and anticyclonic cells that draw coastal waters far into the middle basin. The winds also drive intense cooling and overturning, producing a sharp front between dense, vertically homogenous waters (North Adriatic Dense Water, or NAdDW) in the north and the lighter (colder, fresher), stratified waters of the Po River plume. Once subducted at the front, the NAdDW flows southward in a narrow vein following the isobaths (contours of constant depth) of the Italian coast. In addition to governing the basin's general circulation, these processes also influence sediment transport and modulate biological and optical variability

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