Author:
Antenucci Jason P.,Ivey Gregory N.
Abstract
Long-term measurements of temperature and velocity collected at six depths in 302 m of water off the North West Cape of Western Australia (21°37′35″S, 113°56′11″E) revealed several periods of extreme near-bed currents. The dominant forcing at the site is the M2 tide, with energy levels generally decreasing as the bottom is approached. There is, however, a dramatic change in the energy distribution for all frequencies in excess of the M4 tidal frequency between 80 and 10 m above the seabed. Waves in this frequency bandwidth are critical to the local bottom slope and show a strong linear internal wave signature; however, they do not appear to conform with linear internal wave reflection theory. Dissipation estimates reveal energetic motions with dissipation rates of ~10−5 m2 s−3. Superimposed on this ambient state, three energetic events with duration varying between 8 and 24 h can also be detected. These are characterised by large increases in energy levels in the high-frequency range, and peak speeds varying from 0.59 m s−1 to 1.87 m s−1. These events appear to be driven by direct local energy inputs at high frequencies.
Subject
Ecology,Aquatic Science,Ecology, Evolution, Behavior and Systematics,Oceanography
Cited by
2 articles.
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