Weekly Ocean News
DATASTREME OCEAN WEEK SEVEN: 13-17 March 2006
Ocean in the News:
- (Tues.) Bering Sea ecosystem affected by climate change -- A
team of US and Canadian scientists have been documenting changes in a full
range of biological communities in the northern Bering Sea that appear to be
associated with rising air and water temperatures, as well as decreased
seasonal ice cover. [EurekAlert!]
- (Tues.) Asian tsunami forces re-evaluation of earthquake
theories -- -- A recent NSF-funded report indicates that the data
collected following the devastating earthquake that generated the deadly 2004
Asian tsunami should cause scientists to rethink their theories involving
large-scale earthquakes. [EurekAlert!]
- West Coast waters to be protected -- Officials with NOAA's Fisheries
Service have recently approved a plan that would establish an "Essential
Fish Habitat" along coastal waters of the entire West Coast from
Washington State to southern California, which would prohibit certain types of
fishing methods deemed to cause long-term damage to the ocean floor and fish
stocks. [NOAA
News] Reaction came from various groups to the decision that 13
decommissioned oil rigs offshore of California would not be included in this
protected habitat. [ENN]
- Satellites assist participants in ocean race -- -- Participants in
the Volvo Ocean Race have been receiving satellite-derived information from
Canadian weather consulting company that permits the sailors to navigate their
way through the Southern Ocean, known for potentially dangerous icebergs. The
company has been using radar data acquired from the European Space Agency's
Envisat and the Canadian Space Agency's RADARSAT-1 satellites. [ESA]
- Closing West Coast salmon fishing recommended -- -- NOAA Fisheries
Service has also recommended prohibiting salmon fishing along the California
and Oregon coasts this year because fewer chinook salmon are spawning. [ENN]
- Hurricanes and ocean eddies involved in "hostile takeovers" --
Scientists at Johns Hopkins University and Los Alamos National Laboratory
have developed a theoretical model that appears to explain how certain
vortices, such as hurricanes and ocean eddies, can intensify by "hostile
takeovers' of smaller neighboring systems. [EurekAlert!]
- Global and US Hazards/Climate Extremes -- A review and analysis of
the global impacts of various weather-related events, including drought,
floods, and storms during the current month. [NCDC]
- Earthweek -- Diary of the Planet [earthweek.com] Requires
Adobe Acrobat Reader.
Concept of the Week: Seiche Model
A seiche (pronounced "say-sh") is a rhythmic oscillation of
water in an enclosed basin (e.g., bathtub, lake, or reservoir) or a partially
enclosed coastal inlet (e.g., bay, harbor, or estuary). With this oscillation,
the water level rises at one end of a basin while simultaneously dropping at
the other end. A seiche episode may last from a few minutes to a few days.
(Refer to pages 156-157 in your textbook for more on seiches.)
With a typical seiche in an enclosed basin, the water level near the center
does not change at all but that is where the water exhibits its greatest
horizontal movement; this is the location of a node. At either end of an
enclosed basin, vertical motion of the water surface is greatest (with minimal
horizontal movement of water); these are locations of antinodes. The
motion of the water surface during a seiche is somewhat like that of a seesaw:
The balance point of the seesaw does not move up or down (analogous to a node)
while people seated at either end of the seesaw move up and down (analogous to
an antinode).
Go to the University of Delaware's Seiche Calculator at
http://www.coastal.udel.edu/faculty/rad/seiche.html.
Set the "Modal Number" to 1 and then press "Calculate" for
a graphical simulation of a seiche in an enclosed basin.
Partially enclosed basins usually have a node located at the mouth (rather
than near the center) and an antinode at the landward end. Go to the Seiche
Calculator, set the "Modal Number" to 0.5 and then press
"Calculate" for a simulation of a seiche in a basin open to the
right. Furthermore, some basins are complex and have multiple nodes and
antinodes; these can be simulated on the Seiche Calculator by selecting
different values of "Modal Number" greater than one.
The natural period of a seiche depends on the length and depth of the basin
and generally ranges from minutes to hours. The period is directly proportional
to basin length. For example, the natural period of a seiche in a small pond is
considerably less than its period in a large coastal inlet. Also, for the same
basin, the natural period is inversely proportional to water depth; that is,
the period shortens as water deepens. Using the Seiche Calculator, you
may wish to experiment with different basin lengths and depths. Conversely, one
can determine the average depth of a lake by determining the period of the
seiche and the length of the lake.
Concept of the Week: Questions
- In an enclosed basin the node of a seiche is located [(at either
end) (near the center)] of the basin.
- The natural period of a seiche [(depends on)
(is independent of)] the size of an enclosed basin.
Historical Events:
- 13-15 March 1952...The world's 5-day rainfall record was set when a
tropical cyclone produced 151.73 inches rain at Cilos, Reunion Island in the
Indian Ocean. The 73.62 inches that fell in a 24-hour period
(15th-16th) set the world's 24-hour rainfall record.
(Accord's Weather Calendar)
- 14 March 1891...The submarine Monarch laid telephone cable along the
bottom of the English Channel to prepare for the first telephone links across
the Channel.
- 14 March 1903...President Theodore Roosevelt issued an executive order
making Pelican Island near Sebastian Florida a "preserve and breeding
ground for native birds", including pelicans and herons, marking the birth
of the National Wildlife Refuge System. (Wikipedia)
- 14 March 1918...The first US concrete seagoing ship was launched at Redwood
City, CA. (Today in Science)
- 15 March 1493...Christopher Columbus returned to Spain after his first
voyage to the New World. (Wikipedia)
- 15 March 1778...Nootka Sound, Vancouver Island was discovered by Captain
James Cook.
- 15 March 1946...For the first time, U.S. Coast Guard aircraft supplemented
the work of the Coast Guard patrol vessels of the International Ice Patrol,
scouting for ice and determining the limits of the ice fields from the air.
(USCG Historian's Office)
- 15 March 1960...Key Largo Coral Reef Preserve in the Florida Keys was
established as the nation's first underwater park. This preserve currently
includes John Pennekamp Coral Reef State Park and the adjacent Florida Keys
National Marine Sanctuary.
- 16 March 1521...Portuguese navigator Ferdinand Magellan reached the
Philippines. He was killed the next month by natives.
- 16 March 1834...The HMS Beagle anchored at Berkeley Sound, Falkland
Islands.
- 16 March 1889...A war between the U.S. and Germany was likely averted as a
hurricane sank all three U.S. and three German warships in the harbor at Apia,
Samoa. Joint U.S., German and Samoan rescue cooperation led to the Treaty of
Berlin (1889) that later settled the dispute. (Accord's Weather Calendar)
- 17 March 1891...The British steamer SS Utopia sank off the coast of
Gibraltar, killing 574 people. (Wikipedia)
- 17 March 1898...The USS Holland, the first practical submarine, was
demonstrated by John Holland as it made its first dive in the waters off Staten
Island, New York for one hour and 40 minutes. (Naval Historical Center)
- 17 March 1941...USCGC Cayuga left Boston with the South Greenland
Survey Expedition onboard to locate airfields, seaplane bases, radio and
meteorological stations, and aids to navigation in Greenland. (USCG Historian's
Office)
- 17 March 1959...The submarine USS Skate (SSN-578) surfaced at the
North Pole. (Naval Historical Center)
- 19 March 1866...The immigrant ship Monarch of the Seas sank in
Liverpool killing 738 people.
Return to DataStreme Ocean Website
Prepared by AMS DS Ocean Central Staff and Edward J. Hopkins, Ph.D., email
hopkins@meteor.wisc.edu
© Copyright, 2006, The American Meteorological Society.