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The Limits of Ocean Forcing on the Exchange Flow of the Salish Sea Journal of Geophysical Research: Oceans

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NOAA Institutional Repository2025-06-16 更新2026-04-25 收录
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https://doi.org/10.1029/2025JC022384
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The dynamics of ocean‐estuary exchange depend on a variety of local and remote ocean forcing mechanisms where local mechanisms include those directly forcing the estuary such as tides, river discharge, and local wind stress; remote forcing includes forcing from the ocean such as coastal wind stress and coastal stratification variability. We use a numerical model to investigate the limits of oceanic influence, such as wind‐driven upwelling, on the Salish Sea exchange flow and salt transport. We find that along‐shelf winds substantially modulate flow throughout the Strait of Juan de Fuca until flow reaches sill‐influenced constrictions. At these constrictions the exchange flow variability becomes sensitive to local tidal and river forcing. The salt exchange variability is tidally dominated at Admiralty Inlet and upwelling has little impact on seasonal salt exchange variability. While within Haro Strait, the salt exchange variability is driven by a mix of coastal upwelling and local forcing including river discharge. There, the transition from oceanic to local control of salt exchange occurs over a longer distance and is primarily identifiable in the increasing variability of bulk outflowing salinity values. The differences between the two locations highlight how ocean variability interacts with both tidal pumping and gravitational circulation. We also distinguish between transient ocean forcing which can modify fjord properties near the mouth of the strait and seasonal ocean forcing which primarily affects along‐strait pressure gradients. The results have implications for understanding the transport variability of biogeochemical variables that are influenced by both along‐shelf winds and local sources.
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NOAA
创建时间:
2025-06-16
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