Oceanography (Mar 2015)

Variability in Near-Surface Salinity from Hours to Decades in the Eastern North Atlantic: The SPURS Region

  • Stephen Riser,
  • Jessica Anderson,
  • Andrey Shcherbina,
  • Eric D'Asaro

DOI
https://doi.org/10.5670/oceanog.2015.11
Journal volume & issue
Vol. 28, no. 1
pp. 66 – 77

Abstract

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We examine the variability of near-surface salinity in a 10° × 10° region of the eastern North Atlantic, the location of the first part of the Salinity Processes in the Upper-ocean Regional Study (SPURS-1). The data used were collected over a two-year period, largely by a group of two types of profiling floats equipped with sensors that record high-resolution temperature and salinity measurements in the upper few meters of the water column. By comparing the SPURS-1 measurements to observations in the area from previous decades, we examine variability at time scales ranging from a few hours (mostly consisting of rainfall-driven decreases in salinity) to diurnal cycles in temperature and salinity, seasonal variability and the annual cycle, and finally to decadal-scale changes. The relationship of near-surface salinity to the hydrological cycle suggests a continuous spectrum of variability in this cycle from hours to decades

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