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Rae et al. 1996
Rae, C.M.D., Garzoli, S.L. and Gordon, A.L. (1996). The eddy field of the southeast Atlantic Ocean: A statistical census from the Benguela Sources and Transports Project. Journal of Geophysical Research 101: doi: 10.1029/95JC03360. issn: 0148-0227.

Data collected during the Benguela Sources and Transports project were examined to determine some statistical properties of the eddy field observed in the Cape Basin. Seven anticyclonic eddies were encountered during the hydrographic surveys. Two of these were shown to be of Brazil Current origin (this paper and Smythe-Wright et al. <1996>). Inverted echosounder (IES) records of acoustic travel time were scaled to the depth of the thermocline, represented in the Cape Basin by the 10¿C isotherm. These records indicate that a minimum of four to six eddies, assumed to be of Agulhas origin, entered the Cape Basin per year during the sampling period. They were associated with depressions in the 10¿C isotherm records ranging from 100 to 400 m and of a duration between 30 and 100 days. The thermocline appears to shallow appreciably after the passage of an eddy before relaxing to the local mean. Estimates of the heat and salt contents of the hydrographically surveyed eddies indicated that the mean available heat and salt anomalies of the eddies were 0.55¿1020 J and 3.5¿1012 kg, respectively. Extrapolating the hydrographic data to the eddies detected in the IES record shows the eddy field responsible for the transfer of 2.2 to 3.3¿1020 J yr-1 (0.007 PW), 14 to 21¿1012 kg salt yr-1, and 2.6 to 3.8¿106 m3 s-1. ¿ American Geophysical Union 1996

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Abstract

Keywords
Oceanography, Physical, Eddies and mesoscale processes, Oceanography, General, Descriptive and regional oceanography, Information Related to Geographic Region, Atlantic Ocean
Journal
Journal of Geophysical Research
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Publisher
American Geophysical Union
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