Analyses of CTD and current meter data obtained between 1978 and 1988
off southern Labrador reveal two distinct regimes in the Labrador Curr
ent. The first lies over the shelf and upper slope and is the traditio
nal Labrador Current transporting cold low-salinity water south from B
affin Bay and Hudson Strait. The main branch of this flow, located ove
r the shelf break, exhibits an annual variation in speed with a minimu
m in March-April and a maximum in October. Historical temperature and
salinity data suggest this variation is related to the fact that the a
nnual variation in steric height is 0. 1 m greater over the continenta
l shelf than over the deep ocean. The greater amplitude over the shelf
is due to the large salinity variations induced by the additional fre
shwater in spring and summer, which is largely confined to the waters
over the shelf. The effect of the annual variation in salinity is also
examined through diagnostic estimates of the Joint Effect of Baroclin
icity and Relief (JEBAR). These reinforce the contention that there is
an annual variation in both speed and transport of the flow over the
shelf break in response to the variation in the freshwater transport f
rom the north. The second current regime, referred to in this analysis
as the deep Labrador Current, lies over the lower continental slope,
seaward of the flow over the shelf break. It is a more barotropic flow
than the shelf break current and exhibits a different annual cycle. T
he flow minimum appears in summer rather than spring, and the maximum
is in winter rather than fall. This observation is consistent with ear
lier estimates of the Sverdrup transport in the subpolar gyre.