Coastal Features
Pigment distributions off the northeast coast of South America (left,
Sept. 1979) are dominated by the influence of two great rivers--the Amazon and
the Orinoco--which together contribute 20 percent of the global river discharge
to the ocean. The Orinoco plume extends into the Caribbean, while the Amazon
plume flows north along the Brazilian coast and then meanders eastward across
the Atlantic, influenced by the North Equatorial Countercurrent. The tongue of
cold, nutrient-rich water of the Malvinas/Falkland Current borders on the
productive waters at the edge of the Argentinian continental shelf (inside left,
April 1979). The shallow, coastal waters which border the Gulf of Mexico
(inside right, Oct. 1979) support rich fisheries. Ocean currents flowing past
the Maldive Islands off the southern coast of India (right, Dec. 1979),
stimulate plumes of plankton-rich water.
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