Horizontal transport induced by upwelling in a canyon-shaped reservoir |
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Authors: | Patricia Okely Jörg Imberger |
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Affiliation: | (1) Centre for Water Research, University of Western Australia, Crawley, WA, 6009, Australia |
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Abstract: | Several processes associated with spatial variations in buoyancy flux and mixing set up local and lake-wide horizontal temperature gradients, that in turn drive slow gravitational currents. These motions can dominate the horizontal transport and re-distribution of biological and chemical material. Here intrusions, indicative of horizontal transport, are identified in field data from a small drinking water reservoir, and the origin and character of the flows investigated using a 3-dimensional (3D) hydrodynamic model. It is shown that a horizontal temperature gradient is set up along the surface layer, due to upwelling shifting the metalimnion closer to the surface towards the upwind region, leading to a spatial variation in entrainment. The flows driven by these gradients form significant mass flux paths, enhancing exchange with the boundaries and controlling the fate of upwelled fluid. Further, the interaction of these currents with other hydrodynamic conditions is explored; namely the interaction with surface wind-driven currents, and the influence of different internal seiches generated by alternative lake bathymetries. Handling editor: D. Hamilton |
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Keywords: | Lake Horizontal transport Upwelling Differential deepening Convective circulation Internal seiche |
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