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A Survey of Coastal Conditions Around the Continental US Using a High-Resolution Ocean Reanalysis

Progress in oceanography/Progress in Oceanography(2023)

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Abstract
Obtaining a long-term perspective on the evolution of the ocean is hindered by a lack of sub-surface observations. Ocean reanalyses, which merge fields from an ocean model with observations using complex data assimilation techniques, provide a dynamically consistent estimate of the ocean in time and space. Recently developed ocean reanalyses, several with resolutions finer than 10 km, provide a three-dimensional view of the ocean, including on the continental shelf. Here, we use monthly fields from the 1/12° Global Ocean Reanalysis and Simulations (GLORYS) over the years 1993–2019 to provide a broad survey of temperature, salinity, and mixed layer depth over the shelf (depth < 400 m) around the continental United States. The analyses reveal noteworthy aspects of US coastal oceanography, including: i) how bathymetry shapes the seasonal cycle of bottom water temperature (BWT) and the role of the mixed layer in linking the BWT and sea surface temperature (SST) anomalies; ii) the persistence, trends and distributions of SST and BWT anomalies, which strongly influence extremes such as marine heatwaves; iii) the influence of the outflow from the Mississippi and Columbia rivers on the adjacent ocean; and iv) how the mean and anomalous vertical structure of temperature and salinity vary between the northeast, southeast, Gulf of Mexico and California Current Large Marine Ecosystems. In addition to documenting coastal ocean conditions, the broader goal of the survey is to encourage more detailed studies using high resolution ocean reanalyses such as GLORYS.
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