Wave-generated flow on coral reefs - an analysis for two-dimensional horizontal reef-tops with steep faces
Contribuinte(s) |
H. F. Burcharth |
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Data(s) |
01/01/2005
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Resumo |
Waves breaking on the seaward rim of a coral reef generate a flow of water from the exposed side of the reef to the sheltered side and/or to either channels through the reef-rim or lower sections of the latter. This wave-generated flow is driven by the water surface gradient resulting from the wave set-up created by the breaking waves. This paper reviews previous approaches to modelling wave-generated flows across coral reefs and discusses the influence of reef morphology and roughness upon these flows. Laboratory measurements upon a two-dimensional horizontal reef platform with a steep reef face provide the basis for extending a previous theoretical analysis for wave set-up on a reef in the absence of a flow [Gourlay, M.R., 1996b. Wave set-up on coral reefs. 2. Set-up on reefs with various profiles. Coastal Engineering 28, 1755] to include the interaction between a unidirectional flow and the wave set-up. The laboratory model results are then used to demonstrate that there are two basic reef-top flow regimes-reef-top control and reef-rim control. Using open channel flow theory, analytical relationships are derived for the reef-top current velocity in terms of the offreef wave conditions, the reef-top water depth and the physical characteristics of the reef-top topography. The wave set-up and wave-generated flow relationships are found to predict experimental values with reasonable accuracy in most cases. The analytical relationships are used to investigate wave-generated flows into a boat harbour channel on Heron Reef in the southern Great Barrier Reef. (c) 2005 Elsevier B.V. All rights reserved. |
Identificador | |
Idioma(s) |
eng |
Publicador |
Elsevier Science Bv |
Palavras-Chave | #Engineering, Civil #Engineering, Ocean #Marine Environment #Coral Reefs #Wave Set-up #Wave-generated Flow #Wave-current Interaction #Roughness #Reef Morphology #Open Channel Flow Controls #Heron Island #Great Barrier Reef #Nutrient-uptake Rates #Set-up #Physical Derivation #Roughness #Breaking #Transformation #Atoll #C1 #770405 Physical and chemical conditions #290899 Civil Engineering not elsewhere classified #0905 Civil Engineering |
Tipo |
Journal Article |