Abstract In field observations from a sinuous estuary, the drag coefficientbased on the momentum balance was in the range of, much greater than expected from bottom friction alone.also varied at tidal and seasonal timescales.was greater during flood tides than ebbs, most notably during spring tides. The ebb tidewas negatively correlated with river discharge, while the flood tideshowed no dependence on discharge. The large values ofare explained by form drag from flow separation at sharp channel bends. Greater water depths during flood tides corresponded with increased values of, consistent with the expected depth dependence for flow separation, as flow separation becomes stronger in deeper water. Additionally, the strength of the adverse pressure gradient downstream of the bend apex, which is indicative of flow separation, correlated withduring flood tides. Whilegenerally increased with water depth,decreased for the highest water levels that corresponded with overbank flow. The decrease inmay be due to the inhibition of flow separation with flow over the vegetated marsh. The dependence ofduring ebbs on discharge corresponds with the inhibition of flow separation by a favoring baroclinic pressure gradient that is locally generated at the bend apex due to curvature‐induced secondary circulation. This effect increases with stratification, which increases with discharge. Additional factors may contribute to the high drag, including secondary circulation, multiple scales of bedforms, and shallow shoals, but the observations suggest that flow separation is the primary source.
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Tidally Modulated Glacial Seismicity at the Foundation Ice Stream, West Antarctica
Abstract We investigate the occurrence of repeating glacial seismicity near the grounding line of the Foundation Ice Stream and further upstream using continuous broadband seismic data collected by Polar Earth Observing Network (POLENET/A‐NET) stations from 2014 through 2019. Through manual identification and cross‐correlation analysis, 2,237 discrete icequakes (1.5 ML 2.6) are detected in two spatial clusters, one located at the grounding line of the Foundation Ice Stream (2,219 event detections) and a second located further upstream proximal to a subglacial ridge (18 event detections). Seismicity is predominantly concentrated in the Schmidt Hills, located adjacent to the grounding line of the Foundation Ice Stream, and shows clear ocean tide modulation. Seismic events primarily occur during spring tides, and, on a shorter timescale, concurrent with the rising tide preceding daily maximum high tide. The seismicity can be attributed to stick‐slip motion and fracturing that preferentially occur during rising tides. Seismicity located further upstream in the southern portion of the Foundation Ice Stream most likely reflects basal stick‐slip processes associated with the subglacial topographic high.
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- PAR ID:
- 10428747
- Publisher / Repository:
- DOI PREFIX: 10.1029
- Date Published:
- Journal Name:
- Journal of Geophysical Research: Earth Surface
- Volume:
- 128
- Issue:
- 7
- ISSN:
- 2169-9003
- Format(s):
- Medium: X
- Sponsoring Org:
- National Science Foundation
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