Observations and simulations of the bottom nepheloid layer in the Lafourche Trough, Louisiana Continental Shelf
Abstract
The "Lafourche Trough" is a mud/silt -dominated, elongate seafloor depression located between transgressive sandy shoals approximately 50 km south of Cocodrie, Louisiana. These irregular bathymetric features are relicts of the abandoned Lafourche delta complex that still have an impact upon coupled sediment-hydrodynamic processes occurring today. Repeated optical and physical oceanographic surveys conducted during the spring of 2015 and winter 2017 reveal persistent bottom nepheloid layers (BNLs) characterized by extreme optical turbidity (beam attenuation 10 m-1, 532 nm). The manifestation and persistence of cohesive sediment BNLs in this area appears to result from a complex interplay between tidal currents, bathymetry, and frontal dynamics along the edge of the Mississippi River plume. Numerical experiments were performed using the Coupled Ocean Atmosphere Mesoscale Prediction System (COAMPS), an integrated air-sea-wave operational forecasting tool, that includes a simplified numerical sediment resuspension and transport scheme in order to simulate the nepheloid layer observations through the trough. The model results suggest that the wave-current bottom boundary layer is a critical factor in BNL development, and thusly, without wave model integration into COAMPS the system struggles to replicate the observations. Future modeling work will need to explore the potential suppression of physical mixing due to density perturbations along the BNL to fluid mud continuum within the bottom boundary layer.
- Publication:
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AGU Fall Meeting Abstracts
- Pub Date:
- December 2017
- Bibcode:
- 2017AGUFMEP21E1890J
- Keywords:
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- 3020 Littoral processes;
- MARINE GEOLOGY AND GEOPHYSICS;
- 3022 Marine sediments: processes and transport;
- MARINE GEOLOGY AND GEOPHYSICS;
- 4534 Hydrodynamic modeling;
- OCEANOGRAPHY: PHYSICAL;
- 4568 Turbulence;
- diffusion;
- and mixing processes;
- OCEANOGRAPHY: PHYSICAL