Terdecadal Observations of Western Boundary Currents in the Coral Sea
Terdecadal Observations of Western Boundary Currents in the Coral Sea
Abstract:
Since 1985, a 30 year time series of current and temperature data has been collected by AIMS and since 2007 in partnership with Australia’s Integrated Marine Observing System. The data derive from a current meter mooring pair along the continental shelf slope monitoring currents in the Coral Sea adjacent to the Great Barrier Reef. The array was deployed to provide direct measurements of flow on the continental shelf and slope and estimates of geostrophic current anomalies to compare with satellite altimeter derived currents. The two locations are located near Jewell Reef at 14o S in 360m and near Myrmidon Reef at 18 o S in 200m water depth. Initially point Rotary Current Meters were used but were replaced by Acoustic Doppler Current Profilers from the late 1990s so the observations have evolved from a few points in the water column to true current profiles.
The northern mooring is located in the region where the Southern Equatorial Current impacts on the North Queensland shelf causing it to bifurcate into the equatorward Gulf of Papua Current and the poleward East Australian Current. Embedded in these are eddies that cause pulsing and at times current reversals that can significantly affect across shelf intrusions and cross shelf exchange. Being located in the sub-tropics the observations have captured multiple extreme tropical cyclone events and seasonal internal wave activity. The data is being used in conjunction with satellite altimetry to validate hindcasts of a number of hydrodynamic models.