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Abstract(s)
Observations indicate that the fortnightly fluctuations in mean water level increase in amplitude along the lower
half of a tide-dominated estuary (The Guadiana estuary) with negligible river discharge but remain constant upstream.
Analytical solutions reproducing the semi-diurnal wave propagation shows that this pattern results from reflection effects at the estuary head. The phase difference between velocity and elevation increases from the mouth to the head (where the wave has a standing nature) as the high and low water levels get progressively closer to slack water. Thus, the tidal (flood-ebb) asymmetry in discharge is reduced in the upstream direction. It becomes negligible along the upper estuary half, as the mean sea level remains constant despite increased friction due to wave shoaling. Observations of a flat mean water level along a significant portion of an upper estuary, easier to obtain than the phase difference, can therefore indicate significant reflection of the propagating semi-diurnal wave at the head. Details of the analytical model shows that changes in the mean depth or length of semi-arid estuaries, in particular for macrotidal locations, affect the fortnightly tide amplitude, and thus the upstream mass transport and inundation regime. This has significant potential impacts on the estuarine environment.
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Keywords
Estuário semiárido Variabilidade subtidal Propagação de ondas Não estacionário Fluir Exploração Sedimento Fricção Comportamento Sistemas
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Publisher
Copernicus Gesellschsft MBH