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GEOPHYSICAL RESEARCH LETTERS,
VOL. 29, NO. 3,
1040,
doi:10.1029/2001GL013990,
2002
Flow structure and transport in the Yucatan Channel
Julio Sheinbaum
Departamento de Oceanografía Física,
CICESE,
Ensenada Baja California,
México,
USA
Julio Candela
Departamento de Oceanografía Física,
CICESE,
Ensenada Baja California,
México,
USA
Antoine Badan
Departamento de Oceanografía Física,
CICESE,
Ensenada Baja California,
México,
USA
José Ochoa
Departamento de Oceanografía Física,
CICESE,
Ensenada Baja California,
México,
USA
Abstract
The direct ocean current observations across the Yucatan Channel collected during the Canek program allow the best description
to date of the exchange between the Caribbean Sea and the Gulf of Mexico. A net transport of 23.8 ± 1 Sv (1 Sv = 106m3s−1; 95% confidence interval) flowed through the Yucatan Channel from the Caribbean Sea into the Gulf of Mexico, during the period
between September 1999 and June 2000. This is about 20 percent less than the 30 Sv accepted as the nominal transport of the Florida Current, and less also than the 28 Sv assumed for Yucatan in closing the transport budgets for Caribbean passages. The discrepancy may be an imbalance due to fluctuations
in the transports through other passages of the system, especially the Old Bahama and Northwest Providence Channels, which
remain poorly known. Our data corroborate the principal features of the flow through the Yucatan Channel: The northerly surface
Yucatan Current and its southerly Under-current off Mexico, and the southerly surface Cuban Counter-current near Cuba; but
previously unobserved mean currents are found to exist at depth, especially on the eastern side of the channel. Fluctuations
seen in the deep flows are related to volume anomalies over the Gulf of Mexico. A transport through the Yucatan Channel smaller
than previously thought has significant implications for the dynamics of the Gulf of Mexico and its modeling, since this transport
is the principal forcing of its circulation. The circulation budgets in the Western Subtropical Atlantic should be revised
considering these new results.
Published 15
February
2002.
Index Terms: 4512 Oceanography: Physical: Currents; 4532 Oceanography: Physical: General circulation; 4576 Oceanography: Physical: Western boundary currents; 4243 Oceanography: General: Marginal and semienclosed seas.
Read Full Article (file size: 458865 bytes) Cited by
Citation: Sheinbaum, J., J. Candela, A. Badan, and J. Ochoa
(2002),
Flow structure and transport in the Yucatan Channel,
Geophys. Res. Lett.,
29(3),
1040,
doi:10.1029/2001GL013990.
Copyright 2002 by the American Geophysical Union.
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