Abstract

Abstract. A regional-scale ocean model was used to hindcast the coastal circulation over the Middle Atlantic Bight (MAB) and Gulf of Maine (GOM) from 2004 to 2013. The model was nested inside a data assimilative global ocean model that provided initial and open boundary conditions. Realistic atmospheric forcing, tides and observed river runoff were also used to drive the model. Hindcast solutions were compared against observations, which included coastal sea levels, satellite altimetry sea surface height, in situ temperature and salinity measurements in the GOM, and observed mean depth-averaged velocities. Good agreements with observations suggest that the hindcast model is capable of capturing the major circulation variability in the MAB and GOM. Time- and space-continuous hindcast fields were used to depict the mean circulation, along- and cross-shelf transport and the associated momentum balances. The hindcast confirms the presence of the equatorward mean shelf circulation, which varies from 2.33 Sv over the Scotian Shelf to 0.22 Sv near Cape Hatteras. Using the 200 m isobath as the shelf/slope boundary, the mean cross-shelf transport calculations indicate that the shelfbreak segments off the Gulf of Maine (including the southern flank of Georges Bank and the Northeast Channel) and Cape Hatteras are the major sites for shelf water export. The momentum analysis reveals that the along-shelf sea level difference from Nova Scotia to Cape Hatteras is about 0.36 m. The nonlinear advection, stress, and horizontal viscosity terms all contribute to the ageostrophic circulation in the along-isobath direction, whereas the nonlinear advection plays a dominant role in determining the ageostrophic current in the cross-isobath direction.

Highlights

  • The northeastern coast of North America borders the Atlantic Ocean, with a continental shelf extending over 5000 km

  • The annual mean shelf water transport estimated by Loder et al (1998) shows that there is a systematic reduction in shelfbreak transport, varying roughly from 7.5 Sv in the Labrador Sea to 0.7 Sv off Nova Scotia

  • One caveat we identified during the course of Middle Atlantic Bight and Gulf of Maine (MABGOM) model implementation is coastal hydrography biases in the HYCOM solution

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Summary

Introduction

The northeastern coast of North America borders the Atlantic Ocean, with a continental shelf extending over 5000 km. The shelf width and depth here are typically 100– 200 km and 100–200 m, respectively, but there are significant regional variations associated with coastline indentations by gulfs and with submarine banks and basins. From a North Atlantic basin-scale circulation point of view, this segment lies in the western boundary confluence zone, with the subpolar gyre and the Labrador Current/Scotian Shelf waters moving south and the subtropical gyre and the Gulf Stream moving north, constituting a unique setting for a wide range of important interdisciplinary oceanographic and environmental management issues. There are further reductions in net transport as Scotian shelf and slope waters enter the Gulf of Maine (GOM) and subsequently move into the Middle Atlantic Bight (MAB).

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