Abstract
Glacial troughs are flat-bottomed, steep-sided submarine valleys that
almost or en-tirely incise the shelf, and significantly alter coastal
circulation. When the alongshore flow is in the Kelvin-wave
(downwave/downwelling favorable) direction, troughs eject most of the
shelf transport offshore to the slope. This offshore ejection diminishes
wind-driven alongshore transport downwave of the trough. Conversely,
when the alongshore flow isagainst the Kelvin wave direction
(upwave/upwelling favorable), the trough moves transport, which had been
on the slope, to the shelf, enhancing shelf transport downwave ofthe
trough. Troughs enhance offshore ejection by generating relative
vorticity, which isdissipated by bottom friction, leading to
cross-isobath transport, and by accelerating along-shelf flow, which
leads to increased bottom Ekman transport. A barotropic, linear,
steady-state model is used to quantify the increased exchange between
shelf and slope, as a function of the trough geometry.