Seiche events at the Slave River Delta and Great Slave Lake, Northwest Territories: An assessment of process and impact

Seiche events are important hydrodynamic processes that impact the Slave River Delta, during the late summer and autumn. Given the scarcity of previous research on seiche events at river deltas and the physical dimensions and orientation of the Slave River Delta, this location at the southern shore...

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Main Author: Gardner, James Tobias
Format: Text
Language:unknown
Published: Scholars Commons @ Laurier 2002
Subjects:
Online Access:https://scholars.wlu.ca/etd/442
https://scholars.wlu.ca/context/etd/article/1441/viewcontent/MQ75877.PDF
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spelling ftwlaurieruniv:oai:scholars.wlu.ca:etd-1441 2023-06-11T04:11:45+02:00 Seiche events at the Slave River Delta and Great Slave Lake, Northwest Territories: An assessment of process and impact Gardner, James Tobias 2002-01-01T08:00:00Z application/pdf https://scholars.wlu.ca/etd/442 https://scholars.wlu.ca/context/etd/article/1441/viewcontent/MQ75877.PDF unknown Scholars Commons @ Laurier https://scholars.wlu.ca/etd/442 https://scholars.wlu.ca/context/etd/article/1441/viewcontent/MQ75877.PDF Theses and Dissertations (Comprehensive) Hydrology text 2002 ftwlaurieruniv 2023-05-07T16:36:52Z Seiche events are important hydrodynamic processes that impact the Slave River Delta, during the late summer and autumn. Given the scarcity of previous research on seiche events at river deltas and the physical dimensions and orientation of the Slave River Delta, this location at the southern shore of Great Slave Lake is ideal to study the occurrence and impacts of seiche events at a river delta. Seasonal changes to long-term water level trends and water level variability on Great Slave Lake, correspond to changes to the Slave River flow potentially associated with the impacts of regulation of the Peace River. However climate change in the Slave River basin has not been quantified and may have a role on the hydrologic changes noted at the lake. An assessment of lake level variability provides the hydrological context in which to address seiche events on the lake. Seiches are prevalent on the lake from July to ice freeze-up. however they are most prevalent during the autumn when lake levels approach the lowest open-water seasonal level. Seiches are defined by the magnitude of the fluctuation of water level. There have been some changes of the periodicity, frequency and typical magnitudes of seiches prior to and subsequent to river regulation. Water level records from Fort Resolution and Yellowknife Bay, NWT, provide a long record of seiche events. These are identified in the data record. Seiches that set-up against the south shore of the lake are forced by northwesterly winds predominantly. Wind speeds typically range from 15-30 km/h. Seiche set-down events are forced by southeasterly winds of the same velocity. It follows then that seiche set-up and set-down events at the north shore of the lake, are driven by the opposite wind directions. Southeasterly winds force seiche set-up, while seiche set-down events are forced by northwesterly winds at Yellowknife Bay. Data from the delta distributaries demonstrate the temporal and spatial dynamics of seiche events. The delta has a very low slope, which enhances the ... Text Fort Resolution Great Slave Lake Northwest Territories Slave River Yellowknife Wilfrid Laurier University, Ontario: Scholars Commons@Laurier Fort Resolution ENVELOPE(-113.691,-113.691,61.049,61.049) Great Slave Lake ENVELOPE(-114.001,-114.001,61.500,61.500) Northwest Territories Yellowknife Yellowknife Bay ENVELOPE(-114.336,-114.336,62.367,62.367)
institution Open Polar
collection Wilfrid Laurier University, Ontario: Scholars Commons@Laurier
op_collection_id ftwlaurieruniv
language unknown
topic Hydrology
spellingShingle Hydrology
Gardner, James Tobias
Seiche events at the Slave River Delta and Great Slave Lake, Northwest Territories: An assessment of process and impact
topic_facet Hydrology
description Seiche events are important hydrodynamic processes that impact the Slave River Delta, during the late summer and autumn. Given the scarcity of previous research on seiche events at river deltas and the physical dimensions and orientation of the Slave River Delta, this location at the southern shore of Great Slave Lake is ideal to study the occurrence and impacts of seiche events at a river delta. Seasonal changes to long-term water level trends and water level variability on Great Slave Lake, correspond to changes to the Slave River flow potentially associated with the impacts of regulation of the Peace River. However climate change in the Slave River basin has not been quantified and may have a role on the hydrologic changes noted at the lake. An assessment of lake level variability provides the hydrological context in which to address seiche events on the lake. Seiches are prevalent on the lake from July to ice freeze-up. however they are most prevalent during the autumn when lake levels approach the lowest open-water seasonal level. Seiches are defined by the magnitude of the fluctuation of water level. There have been some changes of the periodicity, frequency and typical magnitudes of seiches prior to and subsequent to river regulation. Water level records from Fort Resolution and Yellowknife Bay, NWT, provide a long record of seiche events. These are identified in the data record. Seiches that set-up against the south shore of the lake are forced by northwesterly winds predominantly. Wind speeds typically range from 15-30 km/h. Seiche set-down events are forced by southeasterly winds of the same velocity. It follows then that seiche set-up and set-down events at the north shore of the lake, are driven by the opposite wind directions. Southeasterly winds force seiche set-up, while seiche set-down events are forced by northwesterly winds at Yellowknife Bay. Data from the delta distributaries demonstrate the temporal and spatial dynamics of seiche events. The delta has a very low slope, which enhances the ...
format Text
author Gardner, James Tobias
author_facet Gardner, James Tobias
author_sort Gardner, James Tobias
title Seiche events at the Slave River Delta and Great Slave Lake, Northwest Territories: An assessment of process and impact
title_short Seiche events at the Slave River Delta and Great Slave Lake, Northwest Territories: An assessment of process and impact
title_full Seiche events at the Slave River Delta and Great Slave Lake, Northwest Territories: An assessment of process and impact
title_fullStr Seiche events at the Slave River Delta and Great Slave Lake, Northwest Territories: An assessment of process and impact
title_full_unstemmed Seiche events at the Slave River Delta and Great Slave Lake, Northwest Territories: An assessment of process and impact
title_sort seiche events at the slave river delta and great slave lake, northwest territories: an assessment of process and impact
publisher Scholars Commons @ Laurier
publishDate 2002
url https://scholars.wlu.ca/etd/442
https://scholars.wlu.ca/context/etd/article/1441/viewcontent/MQ75877.PDF
long_lat ENVELOPE(-113.691,-113.691,61.049,61.049)
ENVELOPE(-114.001,-114.001,61.500,61.500)
ENVELOPE(-114.336,-114.336,62.367,62.367)
geographic Fort Resolution
Great Slave Lake
Northwest Territories
Yellowknife
Yellowknife Bay
geographic_facet Fort Resolution
Great Slave Lake
Northwest Territories
Yellowknife
Yellowknife Bay
genre Fort Resolution
Great Slave Lake
Northwest Territories
Slave River
Yellowknife
genre_facet Fort Resolution
Great Slave Lake
Northwest Territories
Slave River
Yellowknife
op_source Theses and Dissertations (Comprehensive)
op_relation https://scholars.wlu.ca/etd/442
https://scholars.wlu.ca/context/etd/article/1441/viewcontent/MQ75877.PDF
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