We use cookies to improve your experience, some are essential for the operation of this site.

Satellite image showing Pinocchio's Nose warm water intrusion along the Shelf.

Satellite image showing Pinocchio's Nose warm water intrusion along the Shelf.
Satellite image showing Pinocchio's Nose warm water intrusion along the Shelf.
Satellite image showing Pinocchio's Nose warm water intrusion along the Shelf.
Satellite image showing Pinocchio's Nose warm water intrusion along the Shelf.
Comments (0)
316154
Cook, John E.
Satellite image showing Pinocchio's Nose warm water intrusion along the Shelf.
Illustration
12/26/2017
PinochioNoseMap2.jpg
Used in Oceanus magazine, Vol. 53, No. 1, pg. 41.
Image Of the Day caption:
In 2014, satellite imagery revealed an elongated body of warm Gulf Stream water pushing onto the edge of New England's continental shelf toward the southwest. Scientists have seen similiar phenomena several times since 2006something WHOI physical oceanographers Glen Gawarkiewicz and Weifeng Zhang dubbed "Pinocchios Nose Intrusions." Temperature measurements made by autonomous ocean gliders at the Ocean Observatories Initiative's Coastal Pioneer Array showed that the 2014 warm-water intrusion extended down to about 260 feetalmost to the seafloor. The intrusions can rapidly increase water temperatures by more than ten degrees Fahrenheit, and could have important repercussions for the region's commercial fisheries.
Illustration by Jack Cook
© Woods Hole Oceanographic Institution
Labels
This item includes these files
Collections