Please use this identifier to cite or link to this item: http://hdl.handle.net/10553/48533
Title: Laboratory simulation of ocean surface circulation in the Canary Islands area: Applications to pollutant transport prediction
Authors: Pacheco, M. 
Rodríguez, G. 
García-Weil, L. 
Tejera, A. 
Pérez-Martell, E. 
UNESCO Clasification: 2510 Oceanografía
Keywords: Canary Islands
Ocean surface circulation
Laboratory simulation
Boundary
Issue Date: 2000
Publisher: WIT Press 
Journal: Environmental Studies 
Conference: Third International Conference on Environmental Problems in Coastal Regions, Coastal Environment III 
Abstract: The adverse effects of spilling pollutants in water have focused attention on thebehaviour of contaminants at sea, especially at coastal and shelf seas due to theirkey role for a wide range of human activities and interest. In particular, when oilis spilled in the marine environment, a primary concern is where the oil will go.Oil spill models suitable for use in oil spill response and contingency planning,providing rapid predictions of the movement of spilled oil, require an adequateknowledge about the ocean surface circulation in the area around the oil spilllaunch site to estimate the probabilities of contacting portions of a coastline.Unfortunately, field measurement programs are so expensive and timeconsuming that usually the existing information is scant and sparse. Numericaland physical models represent an alternative to alleviate this drawback.This paper presents preliminary results of ocean circulation in the CanaryIslands area obtained through laboratory simulations. Experiments were carriedout in the SINTEF Coriolis rotating basin, using a simplified topography thatreflects the most relevant morphological aspects of the study area in the upper400 m of the ocean. The tank was filled with water of homogeneous density, insuch a way that the density stratification effects were removed. Therefore, theobserved flow perturbations might be due to the gradients of fluid depths, orvorticity changes, the blocking effects of the islands on the incident flow and thetopographic irregularities of the coastline. Ink and surface drifters were releasedto visualise relevant structures and to estimate the surface flow by tracking the drifter paths under different flow conditions.
URI: http://hdl.handle.net/10553/48533
ISBN: 1-85312-827-9
ISSN: 2041-479X
1462-6098
DOI: 10.2495/CENV000281
Source: Environmental Coastal Regions III [ISSN 1462-6098],v. 5, p. 301-310, (2000)
Appears in Collections:Actas de congresos
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