• Title/Summary/Keyword: East island

Search Result 569, Processing Time 0.023 seconds

Mean Flow and Variability at the Upper Portion of the East Sea Proper Water in the southwestern East Sea with APEX Floats

  • Lee, Ho-Man;Kim, Tae-Hee;Kim, Ju-Ho;Youn, Yong-Hoon
    • Proceedings of the Korean Environmental Sciences Society Conference
    • /
    • 2003.11a
    • /
    • pp.145-150
    • /
    • 2003
  • 16 APEX floats, autonomous profiling floats deployed as part of the Array for Real-time Geostrophic Oceanography (ARGO) program, are used to understand the currents at 800 m underwater in the southwestern East Sea. The flow penetrates into the Ulleung basin (UB) through two paths: an extension of the southward flowing the North Korean Cold Water along the east coast of Korea and between Ulleung Island and Dok island. Flows at 800 m are observed range 0.2 to 4.29 cm/sec and the variability in the north in the DB is stronger than that in the south. The eddy kinetic energy is found a few $cm^{2}$ $S^{-2}$. In the UB, cyclonic flows from 0.3 - 1.6 cm/see are observed with the bottom topography.

  • PDF

A Circulation Study of the East Sea Using Satellite-Tracked Drifters 1 : Tsushima Current

  • LEE Dong-Kyu;LEE Jae-Chul;LEE Sang-Ryong;LIE Heung-Jae
    • Korean Journal of Fisheries and Aquatic Sciences
    • /
    • v.30 no.6
    • /
    • pp.1021-1032
    • /
    • 1997
  • Satellite-tracked drifters deployed in the East Sea since 1991 are used to study the Tsushima Current (TC). It is found that the TC is a steady current with a mean speed of 10 cm/s before it enters the East Sea. Only during the summer, the TC flows along Honshu Island with a mean speed of $30\~40\;cm/s$ and then exits through the Tsugaru Strait. In fall and winter, the TC does not follow the coast along Honshu Island but it enters into the interior of the East Sea before it reaches the Tsugaru Strait. The water that passes the West Channel of the Korea Strait mostly comes from the western East China Sea and spreads into the interior of the East Sea. It also forms the large eddies in the southern East Sea. The outflow through the Tsugaru Strait comes from the interior of the East Sea in all seasons except summer. The mean speed of the Tsugaru Strait outflow is about 60 cm/s. The largest current variability is found in the eastern central area of the East Sea, south of sub-polar front.

  • PDF

Distribution of Fish Larvae and Juveniles in the East China Sea and the Yellow Sea in Spring during 1994-1997 (1994-1997년 봄철 동중국해 및 황해 자치어 분포)

  • KIM Jin Koo;KANG Chung Bae;AHN Geon;OKI Daiju;KIM Yong Uk;TABETA Osame
    • Korean Journal of Fisheries and Aquatic Sciences
    • /
    • v.38 no.1
    • /
    • pp.29-38
    • /
    • 2005
  • The distributions of fish larvae and juveniles from the East China Sea, Yellow Sea and near Tsushima Island were investigated in Spring using the Maruchi (1994-1995) and Unagi (1996-1997) nets. A total of 94 species of fish larvae and juveniles belonging to 49 families under 17 orders were identified, of which Engraulis japonicus was dominant in every year except 1995 where Trachurus japonicus was dominant. Cluster analysis based on abundance and species composition by sampling stations (St.) revealed that the similar stations formed an arcuate group from Tsushima Island to southern Jeju Island in 1994, and from the Yellow Sea to southern Jeju Island in 1996. We concluded that these patterns resulted from the influence of the Tsushima Current prevailing in the east, and the Chinese Continental Waters and/or Hwanghae Cold Waters prevailing in the west, with Jeju Island exerting an influence in the centre. The diversity and composition of St. 97-3 and St. 97-5, both located where the Tsushima Current splits from the Kuroshio Current, was greatly different despite their close proximity. However, the former is located on the continental shelf, with the latter on the continental slope. This suggested that both topography and the Kuroshio Current have the most influence on the distribution of fish larvae and juveniles in this region. Furthermore, the weak Hwanghae Cold Waters of 1997 may have also limited the mixing of fish larvae and juveniles between the two stations.

Seasonal Variation of Volume Transport through the Straits of the East/Japan Sea Viewed from the Island Rule

  • Seung, Young Ho;Han, Soo-Yeon;Lim, Eun-Pyo
    • Ocean and Polar Research
    • /
    • v.34 no.4
    • /
    • pp.403-411
    • /
    • 2012
  • Among others, a question that has long been unanswered is why the seasonal variation of volume transport is larger in the Soya and Korea/Tsushima Straits than in the Tsugaru Strait. An attempt is made to answer this question in terms of the island rule with friction being taken into account. The problem is idealized as a simple model. The model results indicate that volume transport through a channel is determined not only by the circulation created around the adjacent island but also by those created around the neighboring islands farther away. The latter is due to the presence of bottom friction in the channels. The volume transports through the Korea/Tsushima, Tsugaru and Soya Straits estimated from the model using observed wind data show the general pattern of observed seasonality, although they contain large errors associated with the uncertain frictional parameter employed in the model. The model indicates that the observed seasonality arises essentially from the fact that wind stress curl changes its sign, from negative in the summer to positive in winter, following a large fluctuation of zero-stress curl latitude east of Hokkaido.

In Summer, the Origin of Tsushima Warm Current Water in the Western Channel of the Korea Strait-2 on the Water in the Middle Layer (하계 대한해협 서수도에 유입되는 Tsushima난류수의 기원-2 중층수에 대한 고찰)

  • 윤종휘
    • Journal of the Korean Institute of Navigation
    • /
    • v.14 no.2
    • /
    • pp.61-76
    • /
    • 1990
  • It was found that three different water masses were vertically situated in the western channel of the Korea Strait in summer. Of these water masses , the origin and inflow path of the middle water were discussed and estimated by comparing with water characteristics of neighbouring sea. As a result, (1) the middle water is formed on the continental shelf in the East China Sea by the mixing of the Kuroshio Water and Chinese Continental Coastal Water, (2) the middle water seems intruded through the sea around 127 E west off Kyushu Island and east off Cheju the Island.

  • PDF

Variation of the Sea Level in the Korean seas Using Altimeter Data (TOPEX/POSEIDON)

  • Seo, Won-Chan;Yoon, Hong-Joo
    • Journal of information and communication convergence engineering
    • /
    • v.6 no.4
    • /
    • pp.430-433
    • /
    • 2008
  • A merged altimeter data products are used to estimate sea level variation in the East Sea between 1993 and 2006. The altimeter data show a high correlation coefficient (0.85) after applying gaussian low pass filter for 180days at Ulleung island. The both of Mukho coast and Ulleung island are minimal sea level in March to May and maximal in September to November. Sea level of Mukho coast is higher than that of Ulleung island during March to May, while Mukho coast is lower during September to November because the North Korea Cold Current flows along the coast line of Mukho. Generally sea level variation at Mukho coast and Ulleung island associated with seasonal variations.

Satellite data analysis of the China Coastal Waters in the Seas surrounding Jeju Island, Korea

  • Yoon, Hong-Joo
    • Proceedings of the KSRS Conference
    • /
    • v.1
    • /
    • pp.344-347
    • /
    • 2006
  • China Coastal Water (CCW) usually appears in the seas surrounding Jeju Island annually (June?October) and is very pronounced in August. The power spectrum density (PSD), sea level anomalies (SLAs), and sea surface temperatures (SSTs) were found to peak annually and semiannually. The peaks at intervals of 80-, 60-, and 43-days are considered to be influenced by CCW and the Kuroshio Current. Generally, low-salinity water appears to the west of Jeju Island from June through October and gradually propagates to the east, where CCW meets the Tsushima Current. Empirical orthogonal function (EOF) analysis of SLAs and SSTs indicated that the variance in SLAs and SSTs was 55.70 and 98.09% in the first mode, respectively. The PSD for the first mode of EOF analysis of SLAs was stronger in the western than in the eastern waters because of the influence of CCW. The PSD for the EOF analysis of SSTs was similar in all areas (the Yangtze Estuary and the waters to the west and east of Jeju Island), with a period of approximately 260 days.

  • PDF

Interpretation of the Folk House Type at Cheju Island into Meaning of Culture Area by Corresponding Kitchen Form to Dwellers' Life (부엌 구조(構造)와 생활(生活)의 대응을 바탕으로한 제주도(濟州道) 민가(民家) 유형(類型)의 문화지역적(文化地域的) 해석(解釋))

  • Lee, Hee-Bong;Song, Byeong-Eon
    • Journal of architectural history
    • /
    • v.8 no.4 s.21
    • /
    • pp.81-94
    • /
    • 1999
  • The purpose of this study is to interpret a house as material into culture. Main method is an ethnographic interview with dwellers as a part of a participant observation, a kind qualitative study. Significantly two different types of folk housing are discovered in East and West areas of the Cheju Island. In the East, kitchen itself forms a separated building, Jeongji-gori, whereas in the West, kitchen is within a main building, An-gori. Different type of kitchen is formed by the different family system. While independent family system of son and father selects a separate kitchen building as a general rule of Cheju Island, an extended family system between father and son selects same kitchen, Jeongji-gori, in the east area. Natural environment of infertile soil of east area makes family work together and eat together. Inner space of the kitchen building is utilized not only in cooking but also in eating, working, and sleeping. In order to explain folk house type, a 'culture area' concept is suggested. The interrelated 'cultural type' of architecture behind a physical surface 'type' is suggested as a new typology.

  • PDF

Ten newly recorded species of insect on Dokdo Island, South Korea

  • Park, Bia;Kang, Gyu-Won;Song, Geun-Myeong;Ko, Guk-Hyang;Park, Duk-Young;Lee, Jong-Wook
    • Journal of Species Research
    • /
    • v.6 no.3
    • /
    • pp.280-290
    • /
    • 2017
  • A survey of insect fauna on Dokdo Island was conducted by Yeungnam University from 2009 to 2016. The survey locations were the two islands of Dokdo Island (i.e., East and West Islands), located in the East Sea of South Korea. As a result of the survey, we identified five orders, 20 families and 27 species including 10 species newly recorded on Dokdo Island, of which Eupelmus australiensis (Girault) is recorded for the first time in South Korea. In combination with the results of previous surveys made from 1981 to 2016, the insect fauna of Dokdo Island is now known to consist of 10 orders, 77 families and 164 species (and 29 additional undetermined species). In this paper, we list the insect fauna on Dokdo Island and present photographs of 10 species with brief taxonomic notes of a eupelmid species.

First Record of Maritime Pseudoscorpion Garypus japonicus (Garypidae) from Korea

  • Choi, Eun-Hwa;Hwang, Ui-Wook
    • Animal Systematics, Evolution and Diversity
    • /
    • v.25 no.3
    • /
    • pp.261-264
    • /
    • 2009
  • A maritime pseudo scorpion Garypus japonicus Beier, 1952 collected from Dokdo Island in the East Sea of Korea is reported and illustrated, which is the first record in Korea. The family Garypidae is also newly recorded in Korea. G. japonicus has been known only from Japan by Beier (1952) so far. Through the present study, its distributional range is extended to Korea.