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contributor authorMcSweeney, Jacqueline M.;Lerczak, James A.;Barth, John A.;Becherer, Johannes;MacKinnon, Jennifer A.;Waterhouse, Amy F.;Colosi, John A.;MacMahan, Jamie H.;Feddersen, Falk;Calantoni, Joseph;Simpson, Alexandra;Celona, Sean;Haller, Merrick C.;Terrill, Eric
date accessioned2022-01-30T18:06:30Z
date available2022-01-30T18:06:30Z
date copyright10/7/2020 12:00:00 AM
date issued2020
identifier issn0022-3670
identifier otherjpod200090.pdf
identifier urihttp://yetl.yabesh.ir/yetl1/handle/yetl/4264504
description abstractTemperature and velocity measurements from 42 moorings were used to investigate the alongshore variability of nonlinear internal bores as they propagated across the central California inner shelf. Moorings were deployed September–October 2017 offshore of the Point Sal headland. Regional coverage was ~30 km alongshore and ~15 km across shore, spanning 9–100-m water depths. In addition to subtidal processes modulating regional stratification, internal bores generated complex spatiotemporal patterns of stratification variability. Internal bores were alongshore continuous on the order of tens of kilometers at the 50-m isobath, but the length scales of frontal continuity decreased to O(1 km) at the 25-m isobath. The depth-averaged, bandpass-filtered (from 3 min to 16 h) internal bore kinetic energy ⁡(KEIB¯) was found to be nonuniform along a bore front, even in the case of an alongshore-continuous bore. The pattern of along-bore KEIB¯ variability varied for each bore, but a 2-week average indicated that KEIB¯ was generally strongest around Point Sal. The stratification ahead of a bore influenced both the bore’s amplitude and cross-shore evolution. The data suggest that alongshore stratification gradients can cause a bore to evolve differently at various alongshore locations. Three potential bore fates were observed: 1) bores transiting intact to the 9-m isobath, 2) bores being overrun by faster, subsequent bores, leading to bore-merging events, and 3) bores disappearing when the upstream pycnocline was near or below middepth. Maps of hourly stratification at each mooring and the estimated position of sequential bores demonstrated that an individual internal bore can significantly impact the waveguide of the subsequent bore.
publisherAmerican Meteorological Society
titleAlongshore Variability of Shoaling Internal Bores on the Inner Shelf
typeJournal Paper
journal volume50
journal issue10
journal titleJournal of Physical Oceanography
identifier doi10.1175/JPO-D-20-0090.1
journal fristpage2965
journal lastpage2981
treeJournal of Physical Oceanography:;2020:;volume( 50 ):;issue: 010
contenttypeFulltext


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