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8.7: High-Latitude Surface Currents

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    45569
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    In the North Atlantic and North Pacific, secondary gyres occur at higher latitudes than the subtropical gyres. They are called “subpolar gyres” and rotate in the direction opposite that of the adjacent subtropical gyres. Subpolar gyres are wind-driven in the same way as subtropical gyres. However, the prevailing winds of the region, the polar easterlies, are much more variable than trade winds.

    Because of this wind variability and the complex shapes of the ocean basins in polar regions, the subpolar gyres are more complex and variable than the subtropical gyres.

    In the Southern Hemisphere, subpolar surface currents are different from their Northern Hemisphere counterparts. The primary reason is the lack of continents in the Southern Hemisphere. Because of the wide connection between the oceans, Southern Hemisphere subpolar currents flow all the way around the Antarctic continent (Fig. 8-3). At high latitudes, a geostrophic current, the East Wind Drift, flows westward around Antarctica. It flows in response to the pressure gradient caused by the elevation of the sea surface near the Antarctic continent due to southerly Ekman transport in the polar easterly wind belt. Farther from Antarctica, an eastward current, the Antarctic Circumpolar Current (or West Wind Drift), flows geostrophically around Antarctica under a sea surface that slopes up to the north as a result of the Ekman transport of the westerlies (Fig. 8-3). The Antarctic Circumpolar Current is combined with, and a part of, the eastward-moving currents of the Southern Hemisphere subtropical gyres in each ocean.


    8.7: High-Latitude Surface Currents is shared under a not declared license and was authored, remixed, and/or curated by LibreTexts.

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