Articles | Volume 8, issue 1
https://doi.org/10.5194/essd-8-191-2016
https://doi.org/10.5194/essd-8-191-2016
12 May 2016
 | 12 May 2016

Mapping the Antarctic Polar Front: weekly realizations from 2002 to 2014

Natalie M. Freeman and Nicole S. Lovenduski

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Cited articles

Ansorge, I. J., Jackson, J. M., Reid, K., Durgadoo, J. V., Swart, S., and Eberenz, S.: Evidence of a southward eddy corridor in the south-west Indian ocean, Deep-Sea Res. Pt. II, 119, 69–76, https://doi.org/10.1016/j.dsr2.2014.05.012, 2014.
Atlantic Oceanographic and Meteorological Laboratory: High Density XBT Transects AX25, available at: http://www.aoml.noaa.gov/phod/hdenxbt/ax_home.php?ax=25, last access: 2 June 2015.
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Böning, C. W., Dispert, A., Visbeck, M., Rintoul, S. R., and Schwarzkopf, F. U.: The response of the Antarctic Circumpolar Current to recent climate change, Nat. Geosci., 1, 864–869, 2008.
Cai, W., Cowan, T., Godfrey, S., and Wijffels, S.: Simulations of Processes Associated with the Fast Warming Rate of the Southern Midlatitude Ocean, J. Climate, 23, 197–206, https://doi.org/10.1175/2009JCLI3081.1, 2010.
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The Antarctic Polar Front (PF) is an important physical and biogeochemical divide in the Southern Ocean, delineating distinct zones of temperature, nutrients and biological communities. Our study learns from and advances previous efforts to locate the PF via satellite by avoiding cloud contamination and providing circumpolar realizations at high spatio-temporal resolution. These realizations are consistent with concurrent in situ PF locations and previously published climatological PF positions.
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