West Caroline Basin
The West Caroline Basin is an oceanic basin in the south-west Pacific Ocean north of New Guinea.
Bathymetry and oceanography
The West Caroline Basin is bordered by the islands and banks of Melanesia to the north and west, including the Caroline and Palau islands, and to the east the Eauripik Rise separates it from the East Caroline Basin. Its depth lies between.The Eauripik Rise reaches a depth of and allows Pacific deep and intermediate waters to enter the basin.
The West Caroline Basin is separated from the West Mariana Basin by the Caroline Seamounts. These two basins are connected by the Mariana and Yap trenches separated by a sill deep. Water above this depth can reach the West Caroline Basin without perturbations and temperature and salinity profiles for the two basins are similar.
This trench, the only conduit for bottom waters in the West Caroline Basin, ventilates the basin.
The North Equatorial Current flows westward across the West Caroline Basin between 25°N and 5°N around 170-180°E in February but lies below 10°N in August. As it reaches the Philippine continental shelf it splits into two currents, the southern branch of which joins the east-bound Equatorial Counter Current.