Tidally-generated internal waves in Southeast Hudson Bay

The location of the amphidromic point of the M2 tide in Hudson Bay roughly coincides with Belcher Islands, a region where the surface mixed layer stays relatively fresh throughout summer and winter due to significant ice melt and river discharge. High-resolution satellite radar imagery for the ice-f...

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Bibliographic Details
Published in:Continental Shelf Research
Main Authors: Petrusevich, Vladislav, Dmitrenko, Igor, Kozlov, Igor, Kirillov, Sergey A., Kuzyk, Zou Zou A., Komarov, Alexander, Heath, Joel, Barber, David, Ehn, Jens
Format: Report
Language:English
Published: Elsevier Ltd. 2020
Subjects:
Online Access:http://hdl.handle.net/1993/34786
https://doi.org/10.1016/j.csr.2018.08.002
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Summary:The location of the amphidromic point of the M2 tide in Hudson Bay roughly coincides with Belcher Islands, a region where the surface mixed layer stays relatively fresh throughout summer and winter due to significant ice melt and river discharge. High-resolution satellite radar imagery for the ice-free season revealed that the coastal region in the south-east Belcher Islands is a hot spot for short-period internal wave activity. For a first investigation of tidal dynamics in the region, we took advantage of the sea ice platform to deploy an ice-tethered mooring consisting of nine conductivity and temperature sensors and an acoustic Doppler current profiler. The mooring was deployed at 65m depth in January–March 2014 in a narrow channel between Broomfield and O′Leary islands located in the south-east tip of the Belcher Islands group in Hudson Bay (56°20′N, 79°30′W), northeast Canada. The surface mixed layer under the land-fast ice in this area stays relatively fresh through winter presumably because of significant winter river discharge in nearby James Bay. The mooring recorded oscillations of temperature and salinity throughout the whole water column, which were attributed to vertical displacement caused by internal tidal waves. The tidal harmonic analysis performed for the M2 tidal constituent showed the dominance of the baroclinic tide with maximum velocity amplitudes at the surface and decreasing with depth. Vertical displacements of water parcels derived from both temperature and salinity were statistically similar and displayed the maximum values of 11.9m at 35m (instrument depth). The combination of winter hydrographic data and summer satellite observations confirmed that the observed internal waves were generated by the interaction of strong tides, typical for Hudson Bay, with highly variable bottom topography southeast of the Belcher Islands archipelago. Natural Sciences and Engineering Research Council (NSERC), Canada, Discovery Grant program, the ArcticNet Network of Centres of Excellence, Canada, ...