The Columbia River Plume Study: Subtidal variability in the velocity and salinity fields

被引:200
作者
Hickey, BM
Pietrafesa, LJ
Jay, DA
Boicourt, WC
机构
[1] Univ Washington, Sch Oceanog, Seattle, WA 98195 USA
[2] Univ Maryland, Horn Point Environm Labs, Coll Environm & Estuarine Studies, Cambridge, MD 21613 USA
[3] Oregon Grad Inst, Portland, OR 97291 USA
[4] N Carolina State Univ, Dept Marine Earth & Atmospher Sci, Raleigh, NC 27695 USA
来源
JOURNAL OF GEOPHYSICAL RESEARCH-OCEANS | 1998年 / 103卷 / C5期
关键词
D O I
10.1029/97JC03290
中图分类号
P7 [海洋学];
学科分类号
0707 ;
摘要
A comprehensive study of the strongly wind driven midlatitude buoyant plume from the Columbia River, located on the U.S. west coast, demonstrates that the plume has two basic structures during the fall/winter season, namely, a thin (similar to 5-15 m), strongly stratified plume tending west to northwestward during periods of southward or light northward wind stress and a thicker (similar to 10-40 m), weakly stratified plume tending northward and hugging the coast during periods of stronger northward stress. The plume and its velocity field respond nearly instantaneously to changes in wind speed or direction, and the wind fluctuations have timescales of 2-10 days. Frictional wind-driven currents cause the primarily unidirectional flow down the plume axis to veer to the right or left of the axis for northward or southward winds, respectively. Farther downstream, currents turn to parallel rather than cross salinity contours, consistent with a geostrophic balance. In particular, during periods when the plume is separated from the coast, currents tend to flow around the mound of fresher water. At distances exceeding about 20 km from the river mouth, the along-shelf depth-averaged flow over the inner to midshelf is linear, and depth-averaged acceleration is governed to lowest order by the difference between surface and bottom stress alone. In this region, along-shelf geostrophic buoyancy-driven currents at similar to 5 m (calculated from surface density) and along-shelf geostrophic wind-driven currents (computed from a depth-averaged linear model) are comparable in magnitude (similar to 10-25 cm s(-1)).
引用
收藏
页码:10339 / 10368
页数:30
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