Litcius/Paper detail

Axial Wind Effects on Stratification and Longitudinal Sediment Transport in a Convergent Estuary During Wet Season

Lianghong Chen, Wenping Gong, Malcolm E. Scully, Heng Zhang, Weicong Cheng, Wei Li

2020Journal of Geophysical Research Oceans23 citationsDOIOpen Access PDF

Abstract

Abstract The Coupled Ocean‐Atmosphere‐Wave‐Sediment Transport (COAWST) modeling system was used to examine axial wind effects on vertical stratification and sediment transport in a convergent estuary. The model demonstrated that stratification dynamics in the upper estuary (Kelvin number <1; ) are dominated by longitudinal wind straining, whereas the dominant mechanism governing estuarine stratification in the lower estuary (Kelvin number ~1) is lateral wind straining. Barotropic advection contributes to seaward sediment transport and peaks during spring tides, whereas estuarine circulation causes landward sediment transport with a maximum during neap tides. Down‐estuary winds impose no obvious effects on longitudinal sediment flux, whereas up‐estuary winds contribute to enhanced seaward sediment flux by increasing the tidal oscillatory flux. The model also demonstrates that bottom friction is significantly influenced by vertical stratification over channel regions, which is indirectly affected by axial winds.

Topics & Concepts

Stratification (seeds)EstuaryAdvectionWind stressBarotropic fluidGeologySediment transportKelvin waveOceanographySedimentEstuarine water circulationEnvironmental scienceHydrology (agriculture)Atmospheric sciencesGeomorphologyBiologyThermodynamicsGerminationDormancyPhysicsGeotechnical engineeringBotanySeed dormancyCoastal wetland ecosystem dynamicsCoastal and Marine DynamicsOceanographic and Atmospheric Processes