Atmospherically-forced sea-level variability in western Hudson Bay, Canada

In recent years, significant trends toward earlier breakup and later freeze‐up of sea-ice in Hudson Bay have led to a considerable increase in shipping activity through the Port of Churchill, which is located in western Hudson Bay and is the only deep-water ocean port in the province of Manitoba. Th...

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Main Authors: Dmitrenko, Igor, Volkov, Denis, Stadnyk, Tricia, Tefs, Andrew, Babb, David, Kirillov, Sergei, Crawford, Alex, Sydor, Kevin, Barber, David
Format: Text
Language:English
Published: 2021
Subjects:
Online Access:https://doi.org/10.5194/os-2021-50
https://os.copernicus.org/preprints/os-2021-50/
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spelling ftcopernicus:oai:publications.copernicus.org:osd94929 2023-05-15T15:55:04+02:00 Atmospherically-forced sea-level variability in western Hudson Bay, Canada Dmitrenko, Igor Volkov, Denis Stadnyk, Tricia Tefs, Andrew Babb, David Kirillov, Sergei Crawford, Alex Sydor, Kevin Barber, David 2021-06-18 application/pdf https://doi.org/10.5194/os-2021-50 https://os.copernicus.org/preprints/os-2021-50/ eng eng doi:10.5194/os-2021-50 https://os.copernicus.org/preprints/os-2021-50/ eISSN: 1812-0792 Text 2021 ftcopernicus https://doi.org/10.5194/os-2021-50 2021-06-21T16:22:14Z In recent years, significant trends toward earlier breakup and later freeze‐up of sea-ice in Hudson Bay have led to a considerable increase in shipping activity through the Port of Churchill, which is located in western Hudson Bay and is the only deep-water ocean port in the province of Manitoba. Therefore, understanding sea level variability at the Port is an urgent issue crucial for safe navigation and coastal infrastructure. Using tidal gauge data from the Port along with an atmospheric reanalysis and Churchill River discharge, we assess environmental factors impacting synoptic to seasonal variability of sea-level at Churchill. An atmospheric vorticity index used to describe the wind forcing was found to correlate with sea level at Churchill. Statistical analyses show that, in contrast to earlier studies, local discharge from the Churchill River can only explain up to 5 % of the sea level variability. The cyclonic wind forcing contributes from 22 % during the ice-covered winter-spring season to 30 % during the ice-free summer-fall season due to cyclone-induced storm surge generated along the coast. Multiple regression analysis revealed that wind forcing and local river discharge combined can explain up to 32 % of the sea level variability at Churchill. Our analysis further revealed that the seasonal cycle of sea level at Churchill appears to be impacted by the seasonal cycle in atmospheric circulation rather than by the seasonal cycle in local discharge from the Churchill River, particularly post-construction of the Churchill River diversion in 1977. Sea level at Churchill shows positive anomalies for September–November compared to June–August. This seasonal difference was also revealed for the entire Hudson Bay coast using satellite-derived sea level altimetry. This anomaly was associated with enhanced cyclonic atmospheric circulation during fall, reaching a maximum in November, which forced storm surges along the coast. Complete sea-ice cover during winter impedes momentum transfer from wind stress to the water column, reducing the impact of wind forcing on sea level variability. Expanding our observations to the bay-wide scale, we confirmed the process of wind-driven sea-level variability with (i) tidal-gauge data from eastern Hudson Bay and (ii) satellite altimetry measurements. Ultimately, we find that cyclonic winds generate sea level rise along the western and eastern coasts of Hudson Bay at the synoptic and seasonal time scales, suggesting an amplification of the bay-wide cyclonic geostrophic circulation in fall (October–November), when cyclonic vorticity is enhanced, and Hudson Bay is ice-free. Text Churchill Churchill River Hudson Bay Sea ice Copernicus Publications: E-Journals Canada Hudson Hudson Bay
institution Open Polar
collection Copernicus Publications: E-Journals
op_collection_id ftcopernicus
language English
description In recent years, significant trends toward earlier breakup and later freeze‐up of sea-ice in Hudson Bay have led to a considerable increase in shipping activity through the Port of Churchill, which is located in western Hudson Bay and is the only deep-water ocean port in the province of Manitoba. Therefore, understanding sea level variability at the Port is an urgent issue crucial for safe navigation and coastal infrastructure. Using tidal gauge data from the Port along with an atmospheric reanalysis and Churchill River discharge, we assess environmental factors impacting synoptic to seasonal variability of sea-level at Churchill. An atmospheric vorticity index used to describe the wind forcing was found to correlate with sea level at Churchill. Statistical analyses show that, in contrast to earlier studies, local discharge from the Churchill River can only explain up to 5 % of the sea level variability. The cyclonic wind forcing contributes from 22 % during the ice-covered winter-spring season to 30 % during the ice-free summer-fall season due to cyclone-induced storm surge generated along the coast. Multiple regression analysis revealed that wind forcing and local river discharge combined can explain up to 32 % of the sea level variability at Churchill. Our analysis further revealed that the seasonal cycle of sea level at Churchill appears to be impacted by the seasonal cycle in atmospheric circulation rather than by the seasonal cycle in local discharge from the Churchill River, particularly post-construction of the Churchill River diversion in 1977. Sea level at Churchill shows positive anomalies for September–November compared to June–August. This seasonal difference was also revealed for the entire Hudson Bay coast using satellite-derived sea level altimetry. This anomaly was associated with enhanced cyclonic atmospheric circulation during fall, reaching a maximum in November, which forced storm surges along the coast. Complete sea-ice cover during winter impedes momentum transfer from wind stress to the water column, reducing the impact of wind forcing on sea level variability. Expanding our observations to the bay-wide scale, we confirmed the process of wind-driven sea-level variability with (i) tidal-gauge data from eastern Hudson Bay and (ii) satellite altimetry measurements. Ultimately, we find that cyclonic winds generate sea level rise along the western and eastern coasts of Hudson Bay at the synoptic and seasonal time scales, suggesting an amplification of the bay-wide cyclonic geostrophic circulation in fall (October–November), when cyclonic vorticity is enhanced, and Hudson Bay is ice-free.
format Text
author Dmitrenko, Igor
Volkov, Denis
Stadnyk, Tricia
Tefs, Andrew
Babb, David
Kirillov, Sergei
Crawford, Alex
Sydor, Kevin
Barber, David
spellingShingle Dmitrenko, Igor
Volkov, Denis
Stadnyk, Tricia
Tefs, Andrew
Babb, David
Kirillov, Sergei
Crawford, Alex
Sydor, Kevin
Barber, David
Atmospherically-forced sea-level variability in western Hudson Bay, Canada
author_facet Dmitrenko, Igor
Volkov, Denis
Stadnyk, Tricia
Tefs, Andrew
Babb, David
Kirillov, Sergei
Crawford, Alex
Sydor, Kevin
Barber, David
author_sort Dmitrenko, Igor
title Atmospherically-forced sea-level variability in western Hudson Bay, Canada
title_short Atmospherically-forced sea-level variability in western Hudson Bay, Canada
title_full Atmospherically-forced sea-level variability in western Hudson Bay, Canada
title_fullStr Atmospherically-forced sea-level variability in western Hudson Bay, Canada
title_full_unstemmed Atmospherically-forced sea-level variability in western Hudson Bay, Canada
title_sort atmospherically-forced sea-level variability in western hudson bay, canada
publishDate 2021
url https://doi.org/10.5194/os-2021-50
https://os.copernicus.org/preprints/os-2021-50/
geographic Canada
Hudson
Hudson Bay
geographic_facet Canada
Hudson
Hudson Bay
genre Churchill
Churchill River
Hudson Bay
Sea ice
genre_facet Churchill
Churchill River
Hudson Bay
Sea ice
op_source eISSN: 1812-0792
op_relation doi:10.5194/os-2021-50
https://os.copernicus.org/preprints/os-2021-50/
op_doi https://doi.org/10.5194/os-2021-50
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