English edit

Etymology edit

polar +‎ -ward

Adjective edit

polarward (comparative more polarward, superlative most polarward)

  1. In the direction of the North Pole or the South Pole; away from the equator.
    • 1962, D. J. Bargman, Tropical Meteorology in Africa:
      On the polarward side of the trough, the disturbance appears as the wave in the Easterlies described by Riehl [9].
    • 1990, Current Research, page 285:
      In general, the polarward flow is strongest as a result of western intensification (Stommel, 1948; Munk and Carrier, 1950).
    • 2002, Christopher T. Russell, S. Savin, Dynamic Processes in the Critical Magnetospheric Regions and Radiation Belt Models, page 2719:
      However, during low geomagnetic activity the distribution of latitudinally asymmetric events is close to Iijima and Potermra's Region 1 and 2 current picture: the equatorward events prevail in the morning and postmidnight sectors, and the polarward ones – in the evening and premidnight.

Adverb edit

polarward (comparative more polarward, superlative most polarward)

  1. Toward the North Pole or the South Pole; away from the equator.
    • 1891, Matthew Fontaine Maury, The Physical Geography of the Sea, and Its Meteorology, page 86:
      There is, therefere, a constant tendency with the air that these upper currents carry polarward to be crowded out, so to speak — to slough off and turn back.
    • 1942, Proceedings of the Indiana Academy of Science - Volume 51, page 27:
      Continued low temperatures soon left little moisture in the air with the result that sublimation is today moving glaciers polarward all over the world.
    • 1982, Seymour Oscar Schlanger, Maria Bianca Cita, Nature and Origin of Cretaceous Carbon-Rich Facies, page 214:
      SMW would be formed at the salinity maximum spreading both polarward and equatorward.