Quality of Shelf Water Oscillations at Macquarie Island in the Antarctic Southern Ocean: The Anomalous Six minute Wave

Concerns about rising sea-levels due to global warming have increased the demand for a better understanding of coastal environments. The effects of local phenomenon such as shelf trapped waves may bias mean sea-level measurements and affect circulation and exchange processes important for coastal wa...

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Main Author: Galton-Fenzi, B
Format: Conference Object
Language:English
Published: - 2004
Subjects:
Online Access:http://ecite.utas.edu.au/71233
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spelling ftunivtasecite:oai:ecite.utas.edu.au:71233 2023-05-15T14:02:30+02:00 Quality of Shelf Water Oscillations at Macquarie Island in the Antarctic Southern Ocean: The Anomalous Six minute Wave Galton-Fenzi, B 2004 http://ecite.utas.edu.au/71233 en eng - Galton-Fenzi, B, Quality of Shelf Water Oscillations at Macquarie Island in the Antarctic Southern Ocean: The Anomalous Six minute Wave, Sigma Xi Annual Meeting and Student Research Conference, 11-14 November 2004, Montreal, Quebec, pp. 48. (2004) [Conference Extract] http://ecite.utas.edu.au/71233 Earth Sciences Oceanography Physical Oceanography Conference Extract NonPeerReviewed 2004 ftunivtasecite 2019-12-13T21:38:44Z Concerns about rising sea-levels due to global warming have increased the demand for a better understanding of coastal environments. The effects of local phenomenon such as shelf trapped waves may bias mean sea-level measurements and affect circulation and exchange processes important for coastal water biology. Historic observations have recorded oscillations of around 6 minutes with a beat of 3 hours at Macquarie Island in the Southern Antarctic Ocean (lat 54 deg 37 S, long 158 deg 52 E); these were theorised to result from two counter-rotating edge-waves of slightly different frequencies. This study provides an alternative hypothesis suggesting the oscillations correspond to the fundamental natural shelf period, with an envelope of periods characteristic of local coastal topography and bathymetry. New data collected over the month of June 2004, from a shore-mounted pressure transducer, was analysed using conventional Fourier and Wavelet techniques. The results agree with earlier observations and show the phenomenon to be highly variable contained within periods of about 7.4 to 5.5 minutes. The forcing mechanism is not clear with the oscillations occurring in bursts every 1 to 4 hours. Any bias to mean sea-level is thought to be insignificant. Local morphology is importantfor understanding the impact shelf anomalies may have on coastal water environments. Conference Object Antarc* Antarctic Antarctic Ocean Macquarie Island Southern Ocean eCite UTAS (University of Tasmania) Antarctic Antarctic Ocean Southern Ocean The Antarctic
institution Open Polar
collection eCite UTAS (University of Tasmania)
op_collection_id ftunivtasecite
language English
topic Earth Sciences
Oceanography
Physical Oceanography
spellingShingle Earth Sciences
Oceanography
Physical Oceanography
Galton-Fenzi, B
Quality of Shelf Water Oscillations at Macquarie Island in the Antarctic Southern Ocean: The Anomalous Six minute Wave
topic_facet Earth Sciences
Oceanography
Physical Oceanography
description Concerns about rising sea-levels due to global warming have increased the demand for a better understanding of coastal environments. The effects of local phenomenon such as shelf trapped waves may bias mean sea-level measurements and affect circulation and exchange processes important for coastal water biology. Historic observations have recorded oscillations of around 6 minutes with a beat of 3 hours at Macquarie Island in the Southern Antarctic Ocean (lat 54 deg 37 S, long 158 deg 52 E); these were theorised to result from two counter-rotating edge-waves of slightly different frequencies. This study provides an alternative hypothesis suggesting the oscillations correspond to the fundamental natural shelf period, with an envelope of periods characteristic of local coastal topography and bathymetry. New data collected over the month of June 2004, from a shore-mounted pressure transducer, was analysed using conventional Fourier and Wavelet techniques. The results agree with earlier observations and show the phenomenon to be highly variable contained within periods of about 7.4 to 5.5 minutes. The forcing mechanism is not clear with the oscillations occurring in bursts every 1 to 4 hours. Any bias to mean sea-level is thought to be insignificant. Local morphology is importantfor understanding the impact shelf anomalies may have on coastal water environments.
format Conference Object
author Galton-Fenzi, B
author_facet Galton-Fenzi, B
author_sort Galton-Fenzi, B
title Quality of Shelf Water Oscillations at Macquarie Island in the Antarctic Southern Ocean: The Anomalous Six minute Wave
title_short Quality of Shelf Water Oscillations at Macquarie Island in the Antarctic Southern Ocean: The Anomalous Six minute Wave
title_full Quality of Shelf Water Oscillations at Macquarie Island in the Antarctic Southern Ocean: The Anomalous Six minute Wave
title_fullStr Quality of Shelf Water Oscillations at Macquarie Island in the Antarctic Southern Ocean: The Anomalous Six minute Wave
title_full_unstemmed Quality of Shelf Water Oscillations at Macquarie Island in the Antarctic Southern Ocean: The Anomalous Six minute Wave
title_sort quality of shelf water oscillations at macquarie island in the antarctic southern ocean: the anomalous six minute wave
publisher -
publishDate 2004
url http://ecite.utas.edu.au/71233
geographic Antarctic
Antarctic Ocean
Southern Ocean
The Antarctic
geographic_facet Antarctic
Antarctic Ocean
Southern Ocean
The Antarctic
genre Antarc*
Antarctic
Antarctic Ocean
Macquarie Island
Southern Ocean
genre_facet Antarc*
Antarctic
Antarctic Ocean
Macquarie Island
Southern Ocean
op_relation Galton-Fenzi, B, Quality of Shelf Water Oscillations at Macquarie Island in the Antarctic Southern Ocean: The Anomalous Six minute Wave, Sigma Xi Annual Meeting and Student Research Conference, 11-14 November 2004, Montreal, Quebec, pp. 48. (2004) [Conference Extract]
http://ecite.utas.edu.au/71233
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