In the case of coastal
California, the offshore marine layer is enabled by the cold relative sea surface temperatures of the Pacific Ocean. California receives this unusually cold water through a process called the
California Current, where cool polar water is transported from the Gulf of Alaska to the California coast. This process creates anomalously cool water temperatures given the latitude of California, and causes a strong temperature inversion. Surface waters in coastal California are kept cold through a process called
upwelling, which involves cooler, deeper waters rising to the top of a water column. Occasionally the marine layer becomes particularly deep, and the clouds on land can persist all day. This can happen at any time of the year, inspiring colloquialisms such as "May Gray" or "
June Gloom". An approaching frontal system or trough can also drive the marine layer onshore. Though California is a notable example of the marine layer, these atmospheric phenomena exist in several other places around the world. Marine layers often form on the west coasts of continents, where upwelling usually occurs, and where there is a relatively warm air mass moving over a cool body of water. They can also form on the coasts of cool lakes, such as the Great Lakes in the United States. ==See also==