
As our observational transect was nearly normal to the Kuroshio flow, measured meridional shear is considered to be residual vertical shear. Meridional sections of (a) back-rotated observed zonal residual vertical shear, (b) meridional residual vertical shear, and model (c) and (d) at x = 100 km and at day 11.25. Topography of Honshu Island is shown in green shading. Satellite sea surface height (absolute dynamic topography) (color) of the Kuroshio Front east of Japan around superimposed with (i) geostrophic currents inferred from absolute dynamic topography (white arrows), (ii) the ship track (meridional thick black line), and (iii) the horizontal dimensions of the numerical domain in Fig. However, most of this is reabsorbed into the balanced flows with relatively little lost to explicit model dissipation O(0.001–0.047) TW. The study described here suggests that an unforced front can lose power from balanced circulations to near-inertial waves of O(0.36) TW. This power input is balanced by energy dissipation processes such as bottom drag O(0.1) TW ( Wunsch and Ferrari 2004) and lee-wave generation O(0.2 TW) ( Nikurashin and Ferrari 2011) near the bottom boundary. Wind power input to the ocean general circulation is estimated to be O(1) TW ( Wunsch 1998). Retrieved August 28, 2015.Schematic of this study. "First look: The James Beard Public Market (Renderings)". "Snøhetta Releases Designs for the James Beard Public Market". "James Beard Public Market developers propose new Morrison Bridge ramps". "How removing a Morrison Bridge ramp could change the James Beard Public Market". "James Beard Public Market won't be 'a rarefied yuppie food hall': 5 details about the market". "Multnomah County approves public market land deal". "Past Tense Oregon: Long-gone Portland Public Market Building once stood tall". "In downtown Portland, developer of James Beard Public Market promises to keep Oregonian's birthplace". "Downtown PDX gearing up for new foodie market". "Portland Foodies Rejoice: Snøhetta Is Designing the Planned James Beard Public Market". "This is What Portland's Groundbreaking James Beard Public Market Might Look Like". "James Beard Public Market scraps plan for downtown location".


According to the market's director, it will include solar panels and green roofing, be divided into 12-by-12-foot (3.7 m × 3.7 m) stalls, and have a mezzanine level for education and cooking classes.

The market is expected to cost $30 million to construct, with the funds coming from public donations and Multnomah County. Multnomah County sold 3.12 acres (1.26 ha) of property to Melvin Mark Companies and the James Beard Public Market Foundation in June 2012 for $10.43 million. After closing in 1942 due to lack of demand, it was later used as the headquarters of The Oregon Journal from 1948 to 1961. Its construction enabled removal of the on-street Carroll Public Market. It was located on what is now Tom McCall Waterfront Park in between the Hawthorne Bridge and Morrison Bridge. The original site for the James Beard Public Market is located near the former site of the Portland Public Market, which was the largest public market in the United States when it was built in December 1933 for $1 million.

Part of the originally proposed site of the market abuts The Oregonian Printing Press Park, where the first copy of The Oregonian was printed in December 1850. The market's namesake, James Beard, in 1981
