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Science 3 September 1976:
Vol. 193. no. 4256, pp. 883 - 885
DOI: 10.1126/science.193.4256.883

Articles

Deep Current Measurements Suggest Long Waves in the Eastern Equatorial Pacific

ROBERT R. HARVEY 1 and WILLIAM C. PATZERT 2

1 Hawaii Institute of Geophysics, University of Hawaii, Honolulu 96822
2 Scripps Institution of Oceanography, La Jolla, California 92093

During the 1975 El Niño expedition an array of conventional and electric field type near-bottom current recorders was deployed at the equator 300 kilometers west of the Galápagos Islands. While hydrographic observations were indicating El Niño activity off the South American coast, the current meters recorded an oscillation with a 25-day period, a wavelength of about 1000 kilometers, and an amplitude of 0.04 meter per second propagating westward at approximately 0.5 meter per second. These characteristics agree with theoretical models of a first-mode baroclinic Rossby wave trapped at the equator.

Submitted on March 22, 1976
Revised on June 23, 1976


THIS ARTICLE HAS BEEN CITED BY OTHER ARTICLES:
Long Waves in the Eastern Equatorial Pacific Ocean: A View from a Geostationary Satellite.
R. LEGECKIS (1977)
Science 197, 1179-1181
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