SOUTHERN OCEAN CURRENTS AND RECURVATURE CURRENT

Of the surface ocean currents in the Antarctic seas, there are found the eastward-flowing current running east in the water Lat. 50°-60°S and the westward-flowing current more or less circling Antarctica in the water. South of Lat. 60°S, the latter being drifted by east wind. The first Antarctic exp...

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Bibliographic Details
Main Author: Takeharu KUMAGORI
Format: Article in Journal/Newspaper
Language:English
Japanese
Published: National Institute of Polar Research 1963
Subjects:
Online Access:https://doi.org/10.15094/00007276
https://doaj.org/article/9b8973319b5e4f4c88c93e249f4108f5
Description
Summary:Of the surface ocean currents in the Antarctic seas, there are found the eastward-flowing current running east in the water Lat. 50°-60°S and the westward-flowing current more or less circling Antarctica in the water. South of Lat. 60°S, the latter being drifted by east wind. The first Antarctic expedition by the UMITAKA-MARU in 1957 discovered a recurvature current occurring in the water south of Lat. 60°-65°S between these two currents, as the result of differential speed of east-drifting wind and the eastward-flowing current, and the recurvature current flowing in the direction, southeast, south, southwest, southeast. The present survey confirmed the existence of this current through the observation conducted in the water of Long. 80°E-Long. 20°W.