• Title/Summary/Keyword: Cold Bottom Water

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Year-to- Year Variation of Cold Waters around the Korea Strait

  • Min, Hong-Sik;Kim, Young-Ho;Kim, Cheol-Ho
    • Ocean Science Journal
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    • v.41 no.4
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    • pp.227-234
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    • 2006
  • Year-to-year variation of bottom cold waters around the Korea Strait was investigated based on bottom temperatures measured by submarine telephone cable between Pusan, Korea and Hamada, Japan from 1982 to 1992. The characteristics of bottom temperatures could be divided into three different groups: the Korean side, the middle, and the Japanese side. Temperature drops in summer appeared in all the three regions implying the intrusion of cold waters into the Korea Strait. Significant decreases in the Korean side were observed in 1983, 1986, 1990, 1991, and 1992 when bottom temperatures were high in the middle. In contrast, bottom temperatures significantly decreased in the middle in 1985, 1988, and 1989 when the temperature drops in the Korean side were relatively small. This tendency for a negative relationship was also shown in the second mode of an EOF analysis. In the years when bottom temperatures significantly decrease din the Korean side, the cold water along the east coast of Korea expanded offshore and its temperature was low. On the contrary, cold water in the southern region of the Ulleung Basin developed in the years when bottom temperatures decreased considerably in the middle.

Southwestward Intrusion of Korea Strait Bottom Cold Water Observed in 2003 and 2004

  • Shin, Chang-Woong;Kim, Cheol-Soo;Byun, Sang-Kyung;Jeon, Dong-Chull;Hwang, Sang-Chull
    • Ocean Science Journal
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    • v.41 no.4
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    • pp.291-299
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    • 2006
  • Hydrographic surveys were carried out four times in the western channel of the Korea Strait in March and August 2003 and in June and November 2004. The bottom cold water, which was lower than $10^{\circ}C$, appeared in the channel trough except in March 2003. It flowed southwestward along the shelf of Korean coasts in August 2003 and in November 2004. The width and the maximum speed of the intrusion current were about 20 km and approximately $25\;cm\;s^{-1}$, respectively, off Ulsan, Korea. The volume transport of the bottom cold water was estimated 0.019 Sv ($Sv{\equiv}10^6\;m^3\;s^{-1}$) in August 2003 and 0.026 Sv in November 2004.

Characteristics and origin of the Cold Water in the South Sea of Korea in Summer (여름철 남해 저온수의 특성과 기원)

  • Cho, Yang-Ki;Kim, Kuh
    • 한국해양학회지
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    • v.29 no.4
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    • pp.414-421
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    • 1994
  • In summer, the water colder than 14$^{\circ}C$ exists near the bottom in the South Sea of Korea. We investigate the characteristics and the origin of this bottom cold water by the analysis of temperature and salinity data. The salinity of the bottom cold water in June and August is 33.4∼34.0% which is lower by about 0.6% than that of cold water in April. In 1983, the water in August is colder than in June. These facts indicate that the bottom cold water in summer is not the same one formed in the South Sea in winter, but flowed into the area from the neighbouring seas. Based upon frequency distribution of the occurrence of the cold water and temperature and salinity analysis of waters in the Cheju Strait, it is suggested that the origin of the bottom cold water is west of the Cheju Strait.

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A Study on the Fluctuation of Bottom Cold Water in the Western Channel of Korea Strait

  • Jong-Hwui Yun;Kyu-Dae Cho
    • Journal of the Korean Institute of Navigation
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    • v.21 no.4
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    • pp.39-47
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    • 1997
  • We researched the mechanism on th flucturain of Bottom Cold Water in the western channel of Korea Strait, using 13 years(1981~1933) oceanographic data of FRDA. The bottom cold water in the western channel appears more often in summer and fall than in winter and spring, and its year-to-year variation of temperature is very large. Such variation seems to be closely related with the variations of cold waters in the subsurface layer of the southwestern East Sea. According to the longitudinal temperature distribution along the korean southeastern coast, a density difference occurs all the time at the still deepth between the western channel and the southwestern East Sea. Thus, it is inferred that the cold waters would intrude into the western channle form the subsurface layer in the southwestern East Sea as a density-driven current, and it intensity depends upon the density difference.

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Diet of Juvenile Gold-eye Rockfish Sebastes thompsoni in the Yellow Sea Bottom Cold Water (황해 저층 냉수대에 출현하는 불볼락(Sebastes thompsoni) 치어의 위내용물 조성)

  • Kim, Hyeon Ji;Hwang, Kang-seok;Park, Jeong-Ho;Lee, Jeong Hoon;Baeck, Gun Wook;Jeong, Jae Mook
    • Korean Journal of Fisheries and Aquatic Sciences
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    • v.50 no.6
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    • pp.818-823
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    • 2017
  • The diet composition of juvenile gold-eye rockfish, Sebastes thompsoni (40-50 mm SL), was examined based on 121 individuals collected in the Yellow Sea Bottom Cold Water in August 2016. The Yellow Sea Bottom Cold Water is characterized a by water mass of <$10.0^{\circ}C$ and 33 psu. The juvenile gold-eye rockfish fed on Amphipods [57.3% index of relative importance (IRI)] and Euphausiacea (32.9%). Most of the point in the prey-specific abundance plot indicated a high between-phenotype component (BPC).

The Characteristics of Yellow Sea Bottom Cold Water in September, 2006 (2006년 9월 황해저층냉수괴의 분포 특성)

  • Choi, Young-Chan
    • Journal of Fisheries and Marine Sciences Education
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    • v.23 no.3
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    • pp.425-432
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    • 2011
  • In order to understand the characteristics of the distribution and the nutrients of the Yellow Sea Bottom Cold Water during summer to fall, temperature, salinity and nutrients have been investigated in the fifteen stations in the Yellow Sea. In september, the Changjiang diluted water with more than $20^{\circ}C$ distributed in the surface and the Yellow Sea Bottom Cold Water distributed in the layer below 30m depth with less than $10^{\circ}C$. Specially, water mass with less than $5^{\circ}C$ in the layer below 50m depth expanded southward down to the north latitude of $35^{\circ}$ with expanding more to the coasts of China than to the coasts of Korea. The salinity of the cold water mass with $8^{\circ}C$ in the deep layer of more than 50m depth was relatively high as 33.5 psu and expanded northward forming fronts of temperature and salinity. The concentration of total inorganic nitrogen was two times higher in the cold water mass than in the surface water, which means that resolution and consumption were low due to cold temperature in the bottom layer. In conclusion, the cold water expanded southward down to the north latitude of $35^{\circ}$ by September and had high concentration of nutrients.

The Ecosystem of the Southern Coastal Water of the East Sea, Korea II. Primary Productivity in and around Cold Water Mass

  • Han, Myung-Soo;Jang, Dong-Hyuk;Yang, Han-Soeb
    • Journal of the korean society of oceanography
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    • v.33 no.4
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    • pp.196-204
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    • 1998
  • $^{14}$C uptake experiments were carried out in and around the cold water mass in the southern part of the Korean East Sea in August and October 1995 to assess spatial and seasonal variability of primary productivity and its relation to physical and chemical factors. The cold and high saline water mass in the bottom layer extended upward to the surface layer and developed along the eastern coast of Korea in August. Chlorophyll-a concentration was maintained high in the cold water mass through August to October and its maximum concentration was 6.3 ${\mu}$g 1$^{-1}$ at Stn. 209-4 in August. Primary productivity and daily primary productivity ranged from 0.29 to 8.02 mgC m$^{-3}$ hr$^{-1}$ and from 58.3 to 63.1 mgC m$^{-2}$ d$^{-1}$, respectively, throughout the study period. Primary productivity of the cold water mass was higher than that of offshore waters in both summer and autumn seasons. P$_{max}$ and I$_{max}$ of the cold water mass in August were higher than those in October, except Stn. 208-5. These results suggest that high primary productivity in the cold water mass may be established by the upwelled nutrients and light adaptaion to convected phytoplankton due to upwelling of the bottom waters.

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Observations of Bottom Currents in the Korea Strait (대한해협 저층해류의 관측)

  • Lee, Jae Chul;Kim, Dae Hyun
    • Korean Journal of Fisheries and Aquatic Sciences
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    • v.49 no.3
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    • pp.393-403
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    • 2016
  • A steady, strong southward flow was observed in the lower layer beneath the Tsushima Warm Current in the deepest trough of the Korea Strait. Known as the Korea Strait Bottom Cold Water (KSBCW), this bottom current had a mean velocity of 24 cm/s and temperatures below 8–10℃. The direction of the bottom current was highly stable due to the topographic effects of the elongated trough. To determine the path of the southward bottom current, ADCP (Acoustic Doppler Current Profiler) data from 14 stations between 1999 and 2005 were examined. Persistent southward flows with average speeds of 4–10 cm/s were observed at only three places to the north of the strait where the bottom depths were 100–124 m. The collected data suggest a possible course of the southward bottom current along the southeast Korean coast before entering the deep trough of the Strait.

Monthly Variation of Water Mass Distribution and Current in the Cheju Strait

  • Pang, Ig-Chan;Hong, Chang-Su;Chang, Kyung-Il;Lee, Jae-Chul;Klm, Jun-Teck
    • Journal of the korean society of oceanography
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    • v.38 no.3
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    • pp.87-100
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    • 2003
  • The monthly observations of hydrography in the Cheju Strait from September 1995 to June 1998 show that the Cheju Strait is occupied mostly by Tsushima Current Water in winter and coastal waters in summer. In summer, the Yangtze Coastal Water appears in the upper layer and cold water in the lower layer. Especially, the Yellow Sea Bottom Cold Water appears in August 1997, and the clockwise flow of warm water along the northwestern coasts of Cheju Island is disturbed by an eastward expansion of the cold water from the northwest. The cold water expansion seems to be partly associated with strong southeasterly winds. Current measurements in the Cheju Strait suggest that there exists steady eastward barotropic component of about 5 cm/sec, which corresponds to 0.2 Sv barotropic transport in the Cheju Strait. Geostropic transport (baroclinic component) ranges from 0.1 Sv in winter to 0.4 Sv in summer. By adding the barotrophic component of 0.2 Sv, the total transport varies from 0.3 Sv to 0.6 Sv, which is consistent with previous estimations. The transport increase in summer seems to be caused by the expansion of coastal water to the Cheju Strait.

On the Bottom Water in the Western Channel In the Korea Strait-1 - the inflow path of the bottom cold water - (대한해협 서수도의 저층수에 대한 연구-1 - 저층 냉수의 유입 경로 -)

  • YUN Jong-Hooi;KANG Shin-Hyoun;CHO Kyu-Dae;MOON Chang-Ho
    • Korean Journal of Fisheries and Aquatic Sciences
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    • v.25 no.1
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    • pp.1-14
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    • 1992
  • With 16 years' oceanographic data(1973-1988) of the National Fisheries Research and Development Agency and the CTD data collected by a training ship of Korea Maritime University during Nov. 6-11, 1989, the inflow path of the bottom cold water in the western channel of the Korea Strait were investigated. Temperature of the bottom water in the western channel shows the lowest in summer and large annual variation. According to the temperature distributions in the years when the bottom cold water exists in the western channel in summer, the cold water in the southwestern region of the East Sea seems to intrude into the western channel through the sea southeast 10- 15 miles off Ulsan with its properties showing slight change during advection.

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