… of theestuary will cause the range of the tide to increase landward. However, this is counteracted by the friction of the seabed on the water flow, and the … force theestuarinecirculation to …
BJ Neilson, A Kuo, J Brubaker - 2012 - books.google.com
… The purpose of this volume is to review the status of our understanding of estuarine circulation and how thecirculation patterns affect living and nonliving resources in estuaries. …
P MacCready, WR Geyer - Annual review of marine science, 2010 - annualreviews.org
… narrow estuaries, the lateral structure of theestuarinecirculation … is that both theestuarine circulation and tidal-straining scale with the … Another challenge is that theestuarinecirculation …
… at the Egrcmont section. For this reason the total freshwater discharge into theestuary is taken as the … The RIO value varies between about 24 m”/scc and 250 ma/set, with a meldian of …
… structure and variability of the exchange flow to be estimated for the first time from the shelf into the farthest reaches of Puget Sound. This study utilizes the total exchange flow formalism …
Z Liu, J Gan, H Wu, J Hu, Z Cai, Y Deng - Frontiers in Marine Science, 2021 - frontiersin.org
… on estuarinecirculation in the Changjiang River Estuary and coastal circulations in the ECS and southern YS, and pay more attention on thecirculation dynamics than the recent …
… status of our understanding of estuarine circulation and how thecirculation patterns affect … in estuaries. For many years, the primary paradigm for estuarinecirculation was the two-…
JF Festa, DV Hansen - Estuarine and coastal marine science, 1976 - Elsevier
… The classic example of this type of misadventure was the diversion of Santee River water into the Cooper River in South Carolina. Readjustment of theestuarinecirculation to the new …
P MacCready, RM McCabe… - Journal of …, 2021 - Wiley Online Library
… In this paper we focus on thecirculation of one of these complex systems—the Salish Sea, a large, interconnected system of very deep basins and shallow straits forced by strong tides …