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The images that are in these directories are three day composite images. The date on the image is the middle day of the three days. A composite is different than an average as it is used to reduce cloud coverage. This means that if there is cloud coverage on one or more of the data points, this value is not used to compute the average. These composites are made with both day and night satellite pass imagery. The West Florida Shelf satellite images have dimensions of 512x512 pixels at a spatial resolution of 1.4 km x 1.5 km, covering the area 24° N - 30.5° N and 87.5° W - 80.5° W.These images are useful to examine the details of sea surface temperature patterns off the western coasts of Florida and over the West Florida Shelf. They serve particularly well to examine the proximity of the Gulf of Mexico's Loop Current and eddies it may have shed to the shelf. These images help examine the seasonal development of cold patches due to upwelling along the western and northern coasts of Florida, such as upwelling associated with the cold tongue which forms off the panhandle and follows along the shelf break. The images also show temperatures in Florida Bay and in the Florida Keys. The archive is arranged by year and month. Links appearing in gray-on-gray text have no data available for that particular month. We offer our images with a Google Earth perspective. |
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University of South Florida > College of Marine Science > Institute for Marine Remote Sensing (IMaRS) > Sea Surface Temperature - Composite > West Florida Shelf Satellite Imagery - Composite University of South Florida, College of Marine Science, Institute for Marine Remote Sensing (IMaRS) http://imars.marine.usf.edu/cgi-bin/db?site=wfl&mode=runmean&index=1&type=st Address questions and comments to WebMaster Updated Mon Nov 23 17:26:26 2009 (BJM) | ||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||