A conceptual model of the strongly tidal Columbia River plume

Alexander R. Horner-Devine, David A. Jay, Philip M. Orton, Emily Y. Spahn

Research output: Contribution to journalArticlepeer-review

122 Scopus citations

Abstract

The Columbia River plume is typical of large-scale, high discharge, mid-latitude plumes. In the absence of strong upwelling winds, freshwater from the river executes a rightward turn and forms an anticyclonic bulge before moving north along the Washington coast. In addition to the above dynamics, however, the river plume outflow is subject to large tides, which modify the structure of the plume in the region near the river mouth. Observations based on data acquired during a summer 2005 cruise indicate that the plume consists of four distinct water masses; source water at the lift-off point, and the tidal, re-circulating and far-field plumes. In contrast to most plume models that describe the discharge of low-salinity estuary water into ambient high-salinity coastal water, we describe the Columbia plume as the superposition of these four plume types. We focus primarily on a conceptual summary of the dynamics and mutual interaction of the tidal and re-circulating plumes. The new tidal plume flows over top of the re-circulating plume and is typically bounded by strong fronts. Soon after the end of ebb tide, it covers roughly 50-100% of the re-circulating plume surface area. The fronts may penetrate well below the re-circulating plume water and eventually spawn internal waves that mix the re-circulating plume further. The re-circulating plume persists throughout the tidal cycle and corresponds to a freshwater volume equivalent to 3-4 days of river discharge. Finally, the plume water masses are distinguished from one another in term of surface chlorophyll concentration, suggesting that the above classification may also describe different biological growth regimes. The low-salinity re-circulating plume serves as an extension of the estuary into the coastal ocean, or an "estuary at sea", because residence times during periods of high river flow are greater than those in the estuary.

Original languageEnglish
Pages (from-to)460-475
Number of pages16
JournalJournal of Marine Systems
Volume78
Issue number3
DOIs
StatePublished - Oct 2009

Keywords

  • Columbia River
  • Fronts
  • Internal waves
  • Residence time
  • River plume
  • Tides

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