The Evolution of Plume Fronts in the Rhine Region of Freshwater Influence

Journal Article (2021)
Author(s)

Sabine Rijnsburger (TU Delft - Environmental Fluid Mechanics)

Raúl P. Flores (Universidad Técnica Federico Santa María, University of Washington)

Julie D. Pietrzak (TU Delft - Environmental Fluid Mechanics)

Alexander R. Horner-Devine (University of Washington)

Alejandro J. Souza (CINVESTAV Unidad Merida)

Firmijn Zijl (Deltares)

Environmental Fluid Mechanics
Copyright
© 2021 S. Rijnsburger, Raúl P. Flores, J.D. Pietrzak, Alexander R. Horner-Devine, Alejandro J. Souza, Firmijn Zijl
DOI related publication
https://doi.org/10.1029/2019JC015927
More Info
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Publication Year
2021
Language
English
Copyright
© 2021 S. Rijnsburger, Raúl P. Flores, J.D. Pietrzak, Alexander R. Horner-Devine, Alejandro J. Souza, Firmijn Zijl
Environmental Fluid Mechanics
Issue number
7
Volume number
126
Pages (from-to)
1-28
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Abstract

The Rhine region of freshwater influence (ROFI) is strongly stratified, rotational, relatively shallow and has large tides, resulting in a dynamic field of fronts that are formed by multiple processes. We use a 3D numerical model to obtain a conceptual picture of the frontal structure and the processes responsible for generating this multiple front structure in the Rhine ROFI. The horizontal salinity gradient and numerical tracers are used to identify three different types of fronts: outer, inner, tidal plume and relic tidal plume fronts. Tidal plume front (TPF) trajectories together with the tracers demonstrate that TPFs exist for longer than one tidal cycle. A Lagrangian frontogenesis analysis shows that the fronts are strengthened mainly as a result of increased convergence, which is observed to occur at times when tidal straining is large. Additionally the alongshore tidal excursion and the dominance of the tidal currents over the intrinsic frontal propagation speed, trap TPFs within 20 km from the river mouth. Trapping and re-strengthening maintain several fronts at a time in the mid-field region, resulting in a multi-frontal system. The observation of a complex river plume system is expected to be important for cross-shore exchange, transport and coastal ecology.