Lecture 16-Coastal Oceanography I Flashcards
What is the definition of the coastal zone?
-the region that is affected by coastal processes that make the environment different from that of the open ocean -wave breaking, erosion, river outflow
What are the differences between the coastal zone and the open ocean? (3)
1.Waves= don’t break on the open ocean but do on the coast -the energy is released by wave breaking, imparts the energy on the coast 2.Erosion 3. River outflow= freshwater interacts with salt water
Does the distance from shore of boundary between open ocean and coastal region vary?
-varies greatly depending on ocean depth and the relative importance of waves, erosion and river outflow -get regions where it is short as there is drop off to the depth -so the ocean ground profile determines the lengths of coastal zone -competing influences change
What are the processes that are active in the coastal zone? (6)
- Waves and wave breaking 2. Erosion 3. Sediment transport 4. Tides 5. River outflows and estuaries 6. Strong effect on biology -wave breaking leads to erosion -erosion is highly dependent on the material on the coast -very different from place to place and the resulting sediment transport is very different depending -the sediment can be dumped in different places= accretion -tides= occur in open ocean too but in coastal= change the level of sea -impacts on bioloigcal processes -many humans settled on estuaries
What is a wind driven wave?
-an instability arising from the relative motion of two fluids of very different densities (air and water, water= 1000x different density than air and they are in relative motion)
What is the source of energy of wind-driven waves?
-wind -wind imparts energy on the surface of the ocean -almost all the time the wind is faster -leads to wave generation
Do waves transport mass horizontally?
- no, not until they break
- currents do that
- motion of the object is circular
- the transport is in a circle for a wind driven ocean wave
- so the bird bill bob up and down and from side to side
What is a crest?
-the top bit of the wave
What is a trough?
-the bottom part of a wave
What is wave height?
-vertical distance between trough and crest
What is wave amplitude?
-1/2 of wave height -vertical distance from still water level to the crest
What is still water level?
-the average of the height of the crest and the trough, the average between the two, height of the water if there were no waves
What is wavelength?
-distance between two crests
What is frequency of a wave?
-number of wave crests passing point A or B each second
What is period of a wave?
-time required for wave crest at point A to reach point B
(period= usually several seconds, frequency= 0.2 if period is 5 seconds)
What is the path of an individual water molecule on water surface in a wave?
-orbital path
What is the generation of waves over open ocean like?
- wind creates small ripples, these travel
- become bigger depending on the wind
- then become fully developed and change into swells eventually
What are swells?
- remotely generated waves that and propagated/moved into another region
- waves can travel in regions without wind, they travel from the region where they were generated to wind calm areas
- over 1000s of km
What is a fetch?
- distance over which the wind blows in the same direction
- the longer the fetch the more energy the wave can get
What are fully developed waves/seas?
no longer extracting any energy from the wind
What does the point where waves become fully developed depends on?
so the point in which it becomes fully developed depends on the fetch distance and duration
What happens as wave approaches shore?
-bottom friction slows it down -the amount of energy is then concentrated in a smaller volume (as it is traveling slower) -this pushes the wave up -when the top moves faster than the bottom (which is slowed down by bottom drag) the wave breaks