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Sievers & Nowlin 1984
Sievers, H.A. and Nowlin, W.D. (1984). The stratification and water masses at Drake Passage. Journal of Geophysical Research 89: doi: 10.1029/JC080i014p10489. issn: 0148-0227.

The waters at Drake Passage are known to be separated horizontally into four distinct zones of relatively small geostrophic shear by three fronts in which the shear and eastward flow are large. The two northern fronts, Subantarctic Front and Polar Front, that bound the Polar Frontal Zone comprise most of the transport of the Antarctic Circumpolar Current. Vertical sections of closely spaced (~50 km) oceanographuc stations made across Drake Passage in the summers of 1975 and 1976 produced quality measurements of temperature, salinity oxygen, silicate, nitrate, and phosphate. Based on these data, a traditional description of characteristic distributions is presented. Good sampling resolution in the vertical allows maxima in hydrostatic stability to be traced laterally (approximately along isopycnals) between individual stations. Eleven strata of maximum stability are identified. Most vertically sperate distinct water masses. The most pronounced stability stratum is associated with the seasonal pycnocline; north of the Polar Front, it separates the Subantarctic Surface Waters from Subantarctic Mode Water. To the south of the Polar Front the seasonal pycnocline is found slightly above the temperature minimum characteristic of the Antarctic Surface Waters in austral summer. This stability stratum extends northward near the base of the Subantarctic Mode Water. Another stability stratum extending across the entire passage forms the upper boundary for the Circumpolar Deep Water. South of the Polar Front, this stratum is at the base of the Antarctic Surface Water; to the north it is the lower boundary of the Antarctic Intermediate Water. Although Subantarctic Mode Water and Antarctic Intermediate Water are separated by a stability stratum north of the Polar Front, there is no such separation between Antarctic Intermediate Water and the temperature minimum of the Antarctic Surface Water south of the front. This suggests that Subantarctic Mode Water and Intermediate Water are distinct and that the latter derives from the surface waters south of the Polar Front. At greater depths a horizontally discontinuous stratum is found between the Upper and Lower Circumpolar Deep Water. Two horizontally continuous stability strata are found near the base of the Circumpolar Deep Water, marking the transition to a high-silicate variety of denser deep water from the Southeast Pacific Basin. The densest water mass found is Weddell Sea Deep Water, which flows through a gap in the South Scotia Ridge and along the southern Scotia Sea to fill the trough in the southern Drake Passage. It is overlain by a laterally continuous stratum of relative maximum stability.

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Journal of Geophysical Research
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American Geophysical Union
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