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The Influence of Horizontal Circulation on the Supply and Distribution of Tracers [and Discussion]
A theoretical analysis of the mixing associated with (horizontal) advection and dispersion is used to show that the larger scale, longer-term distribution of conservative tracers in the southern North Sea is primarily determined by the residual circulation pattern. Model estimates of this circulatio...
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Published in: | Philosophical transactions of the Royal Society of London. Series A: Mathematical, physical, and engineering sciences physical, and engineering sciences, 1993-06, Vol.343 (1669), p.405-421 |
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Main Authors: | , , , , , , |
Format: | Article |
Language: | English |
Subjects: | |
Citations: | Items that this one cites Items that cite this one |
Online Access: | Get full text |
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Summary: | A theoretical analysis of the mixing associated with (horizontal) advection and dispersion is used to show that the larger
scale, longer-term distribution of conservative tracers in the southern North Sea is primarily determined by the residual
circulation pattern. Model estimates of this circulation have been substantiated from new year-long high-frequency radar monitoring
of flow through the Dover Strait. Model simulations of the saline balance and for the dissolved metals Cd, Cu, Pb, Zn and
Ni are made for the North Sea Project (NSP) survey period, using river and atmospheric inputs specified from the 1987 Quality
Status Report. Computed concentrations are in reasonable agreement with measured values (except for lead where losses by rapid
adsorption were not included in the model). The flushing time, F$_{\text{T}}$, of the southern North Sea (to 56 degrees N)
is approximately 240 days. For any conservative tracer and this value of F$_{\text{T}}$, the observed seasonal amplitude in
concentration corresponding to a seasonal inflow I cos wt is only 0.23 of the steady concentration corresponding to a continuous
inflow I. By contrast with the above responses for `conservative' tracers entering from rivers or adjacent seas, concentrations
of certain `non-conservative' tracers can be almost entirely determined by localized exchange processes. Thus the spatial
pattern of seasonal variability in temperature and dissolved oxygen is shown to be closely correlated with the inverse of
water depth. For such tracers, the influence of advection is small and generally confined to coastal or stratified waters.
For shorter term processes, this influence of advection is further reduced. The transport of suspended sediments is highly
dependent on particle size. While the transport of fast-settling sediments is complicated by periodic episodes of settlement
and re-suspension, transport of slow-settling sediments (the main agent for adsorbed contaminants) approximates that of a
dissolved tracer. Thus, to first order, simple models incorporating residual advection are adequate to relate inputs to concentrations
(averaged over appropriate time and length scales) for reasonably conservative dissolved tracers. Likewise point-models are
often adequate to study processes fundamentally concerned with vertical exchange rates particularly for shorter-term processes
in well-mixed waters away from the coastal zone. |
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ISSN: | 1364-503X 0962-8428 1471-2962 2054-0299 |
DOI: | 10.1098/rsta.1993.0055 |