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Observed flow variability along the thalweg, and on the coastal slopes of the Gulf of Finland, Baltic Sea

Bottom-mounted ADCP measurements from 10 installations, collected between 2009 and 2014 and each lasting several months, are analysed in order to distinguish between different flow regimes, and to detect variability (a) along the thalweg of the elongated basin, with different regimes in summer and i...

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Bibliographic Details
Published in:Estuarine, coastal and shelf science coastal and shelf science, 2017-08, Vol.195, p.23-33
Main Authors: Lilover, Madis-Jaak, Elken, Jüri, Suhhova, Irina, Liblik, Taavi
Format: Article
Language:English
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Summary:Bottom-mounted ADCP measurements from 10 installations, collected between 2009 and 2014 and each lasting several months, are analysed in order to distinguish between different flow regimes, and to detect variability (a) along the thalweg of the elongated basin, with different regimes in summer and in winter, and (b) on the coastal slopes. In the deep thalweg area the mean flow speed amounts to 6–13 cm s−1, whereas the maximum speeds appear in winter near the bottom of the basin, and in summer within the halocline (around 70 m depth). The mean zonal flow component reveals a nearly depth uniform inflow during winter, and a layered inflow-outflow during summer. In years where up-estuary (W to SW) winds are stronger during the summer, inflow dominates in upper layers, and anti-estuarine outflow dominates in deeper layers. This causes the export of a salt wedge, and the weakening of haline stratification. Infra-low frequency zonal currents (i.e. excluding topographic waves etc. with periods of less than 10 days) have a structure which is uniform with depth for 53% of the time in winter; in summer, a layered structure is present 65% of the time. However, during both periods the reversed estuarine flow (inflow in upper layers and outflow in the bottom layer) appears, on average, for 30% of the time. The deep flow zonal component is well correlated with westward winds during summer (r = 0.84), and south-westward winds during winter (r = 0.77). On the coastal slopes, the speed of the currents are lower than in the thalweg region, and they decay with depth. In the vertical the flow exhibits a layered structure in both the winter and summer seasons. •Flow variability in large estuarine basin is analysed by multi-monthly ADCP data.•On thalweg mean flow speed increases with depth, on coastal slopes it decreases.•Along-basin flow is mostly depth-uniform during winter and layered during summer.•Deep along-basin inflow is well correlated with down-estuary wind.•Reversed estuarine flow appears on the average during 30% of time.
ISSN:0272-7714
1096-0015
DOI:10.1016/j.ecss.2016.11.002