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Characteristics of coastal and estuarine circulation ENVR608 • Characteristics of shelf and coastal ocean • Characteristics of estuaries • Classification of estuaries ENVR608 Definitions • • • • • • • Shelf sea Coastal ocean Shelf break, shelf slope Estuary Coastal zone Marginal sea Mediterranean Sea ENVR608 ENVR608 •Shelf Sea: A sea area between a continental shelf break with a water depth of about 200 m and the land shore. About 70% of global fish resources spend part of their life cycle in the coastal seas. Accounts for 90% of marine biomass yield Great influence of freshwater and nutrients from the land Chemical reactions occur there rapidly between substances from the land as they encounter substances from the ocean Boundary layer of kinetic energy exchange with open ocean ENVR608 •Coastal Ocean Coastal ocean as those shelf sea regions that display the dynamics of the deep ocean, modified by shallow water depth and the presence of the coast. The driving force for water movement is the wind stress and that thermohaline forces (the influence of temperature and salinity changes on the stratification) are of secondary importance. •Shelf Break: The location where the continental shelf joins the flanks of the continents near the 200 m depth ENVR608 a In tru sio n of K ur os hi o ch Ex ith w e ang hin C st Ea Ex ge w n a ch ior r e t n ith i uth o S of Sea a n Chi Contour of bathymetry over the continental shelf of North South China Sea ENVR608 •Estuary: A semi-enclosed coastal body of water which has a free connection with the open sea and within which seas water is measurably diluted with fresh water derived from land drainage The place where land and sea meet. Water movement is controlled primarily by thermohaline forcing Freshwater from land sends salt water upstream far beyond the river mouth Vigorous mixing ENVR608 Pearl River Estuary ENVR608 •Coastal Zone: Shallowest part of the shelf sea (immediate vicinity of the coastline) Strong sediment movement Strong effect from bottom friction, boundary layer dynamics Wave breaking •Marginal (Adjacent) Sea: A part of the ocean that is separated from the major ocean basins by topographic features ENVR608 ENVR608 Surface Cha. has large concentration at the coastal ocean over continental shelf ENVR608 Dynamics: shallow water (shelf, coastal ocean) and deep sea e.g. South China Sea •Mediterranean Sea Ocean that has only limited communication with the major ocean basins Circulation is mainly driven by thermohaline forcing ENVR608 : Characteristics of Coastal Ocean: ENVR608 • Shallow water depth: (1)Friction effect: besides wind-induced surface boundary (Ekman) layer, bottom friction forms bottom friction (Ekman) layer -The nutrients released by detritus accumulated at the bottom may be carried to the surface waters and used in phytosynthesis. (2) Amplification of tide and tidal current and intensified tidal mixing ENVR608 Contours of bottom depth (m) in the coastal Waters along Oregon ENVR608 Sea Surface Temperature ENVR608 Surface and bottom boundary layers (Vertical diffusive values) Surface friction (Ekman) layer Bottom friction (Ekman) layer ENVR608 •Presence of coastline: Resulting convergence and divergence when flow arrives or departs the coast, generating upwelling or downwelling Sea level increase/decrease, leads to variation of pressure gradient, surge (or storm surge) . ENVR608 Mass accumulation and pressure-gradient set up at the coast Surface elevation ENVR608 Surface elevation Depth-integrated velocity Loss of mass nearshore, set-up of pressure gradient and current as a ENVR608 result of the presence of coast as wind blowing southward. Gain of mass nearshore, set-up of pressure gradient and current as a result of the presence of coast as wind blowing northward. ENVR608 The topography (in meters) in the northern South China Sea ENVR608 The selected crossshelf sections (dashed lines) are marked by their grid numbers. 372 338 305 zoomed area in the region between Guangdong and Xiamen ENVR608 The location where shelf isobaths protrude shoreward is marked by SCI (shoreward convex isobaths). (a) (b) (c) depth-integrated velocity magnitude (m s-1) and (d) surface elevation (m). Daily mean (a) surface, (b) bottom velocity vectors (m s-1) ; (c)The (d)as red and blue contour lines, 30 m and 50 m isobaths are shown respectively. ENVR608 Bottom Surface Day 10 Day 10 Day 30 Day 30 Daily average surface (left column) and bottom (right column) σθ (kg m-3) on days 10 and 30, showing the strong shoreward advection near widened shelf and the subsequently eastward advection ENVR608 of dense bottom waters between Shanwei and Shantou during upwelling. v Cross-shelf transport of materials density NO3 phytoplankton zooplankton ENVR608 •Terrestrial influences River discharge, buoyancy-driven force ENVR608 A sketch of the circulation on the shelf produced by freshwater input into the coastal zone. The diagram is valid for the northern hemisphere. In the southern hemisphere the current direction is reversed. (An x in a circle indicates a current going into the page; a dot in a circle indicates a current coming out of the page.) ENVR608 Buoyancy-induced coastal jet River Discharge ENVR608 Physical Environment in the Pearl River Estuary and Adjacent Continental Shelf 4. Seasonal variation of river plume Time average distribution of surface chlorophyll concentration (mg m-3) from MODIS data during June 29 to July 7, 2007. (From Liang L.) Ocean true color. (From Gan, J.) ENVR608 ENVR608 bulge Eastward current increased by pressure gradient set-up by the buoyancy of river plumeENVR608 Seaward current increased by the stratification in the plume which enhance the efficiency of wind stress •Open ocean influences (across-shelf transports) Large scale circulation (e.g. Kuroshio intrusion into South China Sea) Eddies and other meso-scale disturbances Internal waves ENVR608 ENVR608 Positive values refer to shoreward transport from SCS basin Transport across 1000 m isobath, indicating exchanges between open ocean and coastal waters ENVR608 Onshore propagation Shoreward propagation of solitary waves, showing the ENVR608 influence of open ocean disturbances on coastal waters Internal solitary waves (Empirical) classification of Estuaries • Salt wedge estuary •Highly stratified estuary •Slightly stratified estuary •Vertically mixed estuary •Inverse estuary ENVR608 Estuary and Estuarine Circulation ENVR608 Salinity in a salt wedge estuary ENVR608 Salt wedge estuary • R/V is large (R: fresh water volume; V: tidal volume) • front between fresh water and oceanic water at the surface near the estuary mouth ENVR608 Salt wedge in the Mississippi River ENVR608 highly stratified estuary ENVR608 Highly stratified estuary • R/V to 0.1 – 1, stronger tidal current at the bottom • Create instability and internal wave • a net upward transport of mass and salt (entrainment) • Intensified circulation induced by entrainment ENVR608 Intensification of circulation in a highly stratified estuary ENVR608 Highly stratified estuary, Hardanger Fjord, Norway ENVR608 slightly stratified estuary ENVR608 slightly stratified estuary • R/V 0.005 - 0.1, much strong tidal current • Strong turbulent everywhere, mass and salt vigorously mix between two layers ENVR608 Slightly stratified estuary Chesapeake Bay, USA ENVR608 vertically mixed estuary ENVR608 Verically mixed estuary • R/V <0.005 • Efficient turbulent mixing • No distinction between upper and lower layers ENVR608 inverse estuary ENVR608 Inverse estuaries Myall River channel in New South Wales, Australia ENVR608 Inverse estuary • No river input of fresh water • The evaporation and salinity water accumulation at the head of estuary lead to vertically anti-clockwise circulation • salinity in the upper layer decreases towards the sea; the salinity in the lower layer increases towards the estuary head ENVR608