Field study on currents in a shallow, ice-covered lake

A field study on current structure and circulation characteristics in Lake Vendyurskoe, a small, shallow, ice-covered lake in Karelia, Russia, is presented. The current velocity magnitudes were generally found to be small. The most pronounced currents had an oscillating character, with velocity ampl...

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Bibliographic Details
Main Authors: Joakim Malm, Lars Bengtsson, Arkady Terzhevik, Pjotr Boyarinov, Er Glinsky, Nikolaj Palshin, Michail Petrov
Other Authors: The Pennsylvania State University CiteSeerX Archives
Format: Text
Language:English
Subjects:
Online Access:http://citeseerx.ist.psu.edu/viewdoc/summary?doi=10.1.1.507.2790
http://www.aslo.org/lo/toc/vol_43/issue_7/1669.pdf
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Summary:A field study on current structure and circulation characteristics in Lake Vendyurskoe, a small, shallow, ice-covered lake in Karelia, Russia, is presented. The current velocity magnitudes were generally found to be small. The most pronounced currents had an oscillating character, with velocity amplitudes on the order of millimeters per second. The oscillation period, obtained from spectral density calculations, corresponded to that of a barotropic uninodal seiche. The seichelike nature of the current oscillations was supported by the results from analysis of ice-level fluctuations, giving identical periods and a phase shift of one-fourth the period between the two types of oscillations. Mean currents measured during the winter were on the order of millimeters per second. Because Lake Vendyur-skoe does not have any significant river inflow or outflow during winter, the most probable cause of these currents is horizontal temperature (pressure) gradients. Scaling analysis indicated that these currents are geostrophic. This was supported by theoretical estimates, based on observed horizontal temperature gradients, being of the same order as the observed currents. The mean current velocities increased considerably after spring convection from <l to several millimeters per second. Hydrodynamic processes in ice-covered lakes have been