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Propagation and origin of warm anomalies in the Angola Benguela upwelling system in 2001
Authors:M. Rouault   S. Illig   C Bartholomae   C.J.C. Reason  A. Bentamy
Affiliation:aOceanography Department, University of Cape Town, Private Bag, Rondebosch 7701, South Africa;bJet Propulsion Laboratory, NASA, Pasadena, USA;cNational Marine Information and Research Centre, PO Box 912, Swakopmund, Namibia;dInstitut Français pour la Recherche et l’Exploitation de la Mer, Plouzane, France;eLegos, Toulouse, France
Abstract:Warmer than average sea surface temperatures were observed by the Tropical Rainfall Mission Microwave Imager in the Angola Benguela Current system in late austral summer 2001 and persisted for about three months. These coastal anomalies extended offshore by 1 to 4° longitude and were not due to local ocean atmosphere interaction or relaxation of the upwelling favorable southerly winds. Instead, they were remotely forced by ocean atmosphere interaction in the Tropical Atlantic. Satellite remote sensing and a linear ocean model suggest that relaxation of trade winds along the equator triggered Kelvin waves that crossed the basin within a month in early 2001. Westerly wind anomalies were also observed in December 2000 and January 2001 over most of the Tropical Atlantic contributing to a warm preconditioning due to an enhancement of the oceanic annual cycle. This led to abnormal sea level heights near equatorial Africa that propagated southwards along the coast towards the Angola Benguela Frontal zone. This process increased the seasonal penetration of warm and salty water of tropical origin into the Angola Benguela upwelling system.
Keywords:Angola Benguela upwelling system   Tropical Atlantic variability   Ocean atmosphere interaction
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