A. Hecht et I. Gertman, Physical features of the eastern Mediterranean resulting from the integration of POEM data with Russian Mediterranean Cruises, DEEP-SEA I, 48(8), 2001, pp. 1847-1876
Citations number
30
Categorie Soggetti
Aquatic Sciences","Earth Sciences
Journal title
DEEP-SEA RESEARCH PART I-OCEANOGRAPHIC RESEARCH PAPERS
Two large-scale investigations of the eastern Mediterranean: POEM - an inte
rnational cooperative effort, and GOIN - an initiative of the former USSR,
were carried out between 1985 and 1995. The two projects were not coordinat
ed and therefore the cruises of the two sometime overlap and sometime compl
ement each other in time and in space. Statistical comparison between adjac
ent stations and comparisons between parameter maps indicated that there is
no need to adjust any of the data and that the two data bases could be com
bined into a single POEM - GOIN data base (PGDB). The PGDB was employed for
the description of winter and summer distributions of temperature and sali
nity in the eastern Mediterranean Sea. These appear to differ in some respe
cts from the climatologies extracted from the MODE or from those extracted
from the Naval Oceanographic Office gridded hydrographic data base. Since t
he MODE contains a large number of coastal cruises which were intended to m
onitor the Nile floods, the MODE salinity climatology reflects the conspicu
ous effects of those floods. However, this feature disappeared with the clo
sure of the Aswan dam in 1965. On the other hand, some well-known mesoscale
features of the eastern Mediterranean circulation do not appear in the cli
matological fields. We conclude that the differences are due to indiscrimin
ate averaging, which does not produce a useful representative climatology.
The PGDB also provided useful additional information in the southern region
of the Ionian Sea, which was not covered by POEM cruises. Thus, details of
the southern branch of the MAW, the branch that flows directly from the Si
cily straits to the Cretan Passage, could be described. The PGDB allowed us
to follow the history of the Irapetra Gyre and to show that, indeed, the g
yre appeared only in the summer of 1987 and, apparently, lasted only until
1995. We describe the changes throughout: this period, in intensity, size,
and position of the Irapetra Gyre. The examination of previous cruises as w
ell as a thorough search through the data of Med Atlas I indicated some occ
urrences of the Irapetra Gyre before its description by the POEM investigat
ion, and therefore this gyre should be defined as a recurrent feature. (C)
2001 Elsevier Science Ltd. All rights reserved.