Mississippi River Plume Dynamics Using Coastal Altimetry Data and
Modeling
- Vassiliki Kourafalou,
- Ioannis Androulidakis
Abstract
River discharges that are large enough to be impacted by Coriolis when
they reach the coastal ocean create a buoyancy-driven coastal current in
the direction of Kelvin wave propagation. This geostrophically adjusted
current is a major circulation feature, controlling the transport of
riverine waters and associated materials, such as sediments, nutrients
and pollutants. Coastal models in areas of large rivers need to
accurately represent this coastal current and its variability under the
influence of other factors impacting coastal circulation. Coastal
altimetry data are an important source of suitable observations to guide
modeling and applications. Use of such data around the Mississippi River
Delta will be shown, in tandem with in situ data and a high resolution
hydrodynamic model that has been optimized for river plume dynamics.
During the 2010 Deepwater Horizon incident, this methodology evaluated a
period of strong coastal current, which was found relevant to the
transport of hydrocarbons from the historically unprecedented Gulf of
Mexico oil spill. During the 2015 Mississippi flood episode, the coastal
altimetry data confirmed the weak coastal current due to the offshore
removal of riverine waters under the influence of oceanic circulation,
namely the Loop Current and associated eddies. This variability was
captured by both coastal altimetry data and the model, leading to good
agreement with in situ data further offshore, along the branches that
carried Mississippi waters toward South Florida.