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		The Expedition - Objectives|  |  |  | A schematic of the circulation over the
Chukchi Sea and Beaufort/Chukchi slope is presented above, showing the
three branches of the inflowing Pacific water. These branches are
color-coded with navy blue being the most nutrient-rich waters and
light blue being the least nutrient-rich. The Siberian Coastal Current
(green) is present in summer and fall, but absent or weak in winter
and spring. On the continental slope, the Pacific-origin water
encounters Atlantic-origin Water (red) which is flowing
counter-clockwise around the Arctic basin. Offshore of the slope, in
the interior of the Canada Basin, is the clockwise wind-driven flow of
the Beaufort Gyre (purple). |  | Click to enlarge |  Overview | Objectives | Science Crew | The Ship
 
 Our multi-year project, which represents the physical oceanographic
		component of SBI Phase 2, focuses on
		understanding the flow of waters from the Bering Sea onto the Chukchi
		and Beaufort shelves, and the subsequent transferral of these waters
		into the deep Arctic basin.
 
 Towards this end, two mooring arrays will be deployed: (1) A
		widely-spaced array on the Chukchi shelf to measure the three branches
		of inflowing Pacific-origin water from Bering Strait (indicated by the
		black stars on the figure), and (2) A high-resolution array on the
		Beaufort slope to measure exchange processes that transfer the
		Pacific-origin water to the deep basin (indicated by the black line in
		the figure). The Chukchi array is a joint University of Washington /
		University of Alaska (UW/UAF) project, and the Beaufort array is being
		deployed by the Woods Hole Oceanographic Institution (WHOI).
 
 The purpose of our cruise on the USCGC Polar Star
		is to deploy these arrays, and collect
		additional hydrographic measurements along several key transects.  The
		moorings will sample over a period of 14 months. Next fall (2003) the
		team will return to retrieve the data and put the moorings back into
		the water for another year.  In fall of 2004, the team will
		recover the moorings in a final cruise.
 
 UW/UAF project -
		The fate of a large and strongly
		forced Arctic shelf outflow: Physical and biochemical process
		studies.
 
 Objectives:
 
		WHOI project -
		Dynamics of exchange in the Beaufort
		Sea boundary current system: Implications for interior ventilation.To quantify the characteristics of the shelf flow in the Chukchi
		   Sea (e.g. transport, temperature, salinity), and to determine which
		   upstream processes are principally responsible for the variability
		   of these characteristics.  
		To quantify the variability of the system on seasonal and
		   interannual timescales, and to assess what might be the connections
		   with a changing climate.
		To provide the temporal context of the Chukchi shelf water
		   properties and flows that will be essential for other SBI
		   investigators who are addressing the regional biochemical and
		   physical processes.
		 
 Objectives:
 
		These two projects together will improve our understanding of the fate
		of Pacific-origin water in the western Arctic, and its impact on the
		ventilation of the interior basin.  The physical data will also
		provide an important
		context for the biochemical measurements being carried out as part of
		SBI.To quantify the mean and seasonally varying transport, structure,
		   and water mass content of the boundary current system downstream of
		   the Chukchi Sea outflow points. 
		To determine the nature and cause of the mesoscale variability of
		   the boundary current, and assess the impact of the variability on the
		   cross-stream exchange of mass and properties.
		To identify the dynamics of the secondary circulation.
		To elucidate the source of the eddies in the interior western
		   Arctic by comparing the seasonally changing boundary current water to
		   the observed characteristics of the mid-basin eddy field.
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