Cruise Report - R/V Oceanus Voyage 309
30 July - 13 August, 1997
Coastal Mixing and Optics Experiment
Tracer and Microstructure Studies of Turbulence and Dispersion
James R. Ledwell, Neil S. Oakey, Timothy F. Duda, Harvey E. Seim,
and Miles A. Sundermeyer
The final Oceanus dye/microstructure cruise has been successfully
completed. Two dye releases were performed near the 70-meter
isobath, in the vicinity of 40.5 N, 70.5 W. The first was
in the upper pycnocline, at 15 to 20 meters, the second was 5
meters off the bottom. Copious profiling for dissipation rates
were interspersed with the tracer surveys. Special tows were
performed to measure conductivity variance dissipation rates at various
levels in the water column. Tracking of the dye patch was supported
by 300 khz broadband ADCP, which should also provide high resolution
shear and internal wave measurements. Six drogues were used to
enhance the dispersion studies and to assist with tracking of the
tracer patches. Although most of the moorings for CMO
had been recovered, the Williams/Trowbridge 7-meter BASS tripod
was redeployed to complement our experiment. The tripod was
successfully recovered on 14 August 1997 in excellent condition.
For the first experiment, 100 kg of Rhodamine WT were released
in a 2-km streak, on the = 24.6 surface, at around
20 meters depth, and about 13 km east of the central mooring site,
near the 70-meter isobath. The buoyancy frequency there was a
local maximum of about 15 cph. The stratification above this level
was unseasonably weak, perhaps due to a tropical storm that had passed
through the area in late July. Winds were light during the experiment;
tides were strong. Three good surveys were made of the patch over the
5 days of the experiment. A preliminary estimate of the diapycnal
diffusivity is on the order of 0.05 . Preliminary estimates
of the diffusivity from microstructure profiles taken between dye
surveys are of the same order of magnitude for the level of the dye
patch, but increase with depth as the stratification decreases.
The mean flow during this experiment was virtually nil, although
the patch was stretched into a narrow streak over 10 km long,
oriented across isobaths by the fourth day.
The second dye release was performed at approximately 65 meters depth,
5 meters off the bottom, approximately 1 km ESE of the BASS tripod.
100 kg of fluorescein was used, the depth being great enough for
photodecay to be negligible. Again the initial streak was about 2 km long.
Winds were light for the entire experiment, with tides near neap.
The subtidal flow was very low at the time of the release, but
became eastward during the experiment. If there was a
well-mixed bottom boundary layer at the time of the release, it was
confined to the bottom meter. The stratification at the level of the
release was about 15 cph just above the release surface, and more
than 20 cph in the 2 or 3 meters below it. The patch was
sampled well 3 times over 5 days, with microstructure profiling
to the bottom interspersed. The diffusivity again appeared to be
less than 0.1 . Inshore, the dye was spread into a smooth
patch, 5 km wide along shore by 10 km long across shore, that ultimately
contacted the bottom on the inshore end. Offshore, the dye extended
into a 1 km wide streak, stretched 30 km to the east (along shore)
at the end of 5 days.
A conventional CTD line was run at the beginning of the cruise, from
the 40-meter isobath to the 123-meter isobath: (40°55' N, 70°19' W) to
(40°07' N, 70°40' W), i.e., stations 1 to 19 in
the repeat line of Lentz et al. A short CTD tow-yo was
run at the end of the cruise from the 85-meter isobath
to the 50-meter isobath: (40°18' N, 70°03' W) to (40°38' N, 70°06' W).
The cruise was extremely productive of data, aided by the calm weather,
and a supportive crew and science party. The two dye/drogue releases
were smooth and well controlled. The six surveys seemed to be
relatively thorough. A total of 1101 EPSONDE profiles were obtained.
Approximately 15 hours of towed microconductivity measurements were
made at speeds of 3 to 4 knots. Although one drogue was lost just
after the first deployment, the other five remained
free for both experiments, and were successfully recovered.
The scientific fruit of the cruise awaits further analysis, but we
anticipate accurate estimates of diaypcnal diffusivity from the dye,
the microstructure profiles and the towed probe. The lateral
dispersion of the dye patches offers an interesting study of
the processes involved. We look forward to comparison of the
data from the deep experiment with data from the BASS tripod.
The following people were in the science party:
- Russell Burgett, University of Rhode Island
- David Ciochetto, WHOI1
- Terence G. Donoghue, WHOI
- Timothy F. Duda, WHOI
- Sharon Gillam-Locke, BIO2
- Blair Greenan, BIO
- James R. Ledwell, WHOI
- Scott Madin, WHOI
- Neil S. Oakey, BIO
- Christopher Rehmann, WHOI
- Robert Ryan, BIO
- Harvey E. Seim, Skidaway Institute of Oceanography
- Cynthia J. Sellers, WHOI
- Miles A. Sundermeyer, WHOI
- Stewart C. Sutherland, Lamont-Doherty Earth Observatory
- David Walsh, Dalhousie University
1WHOI = Woods Hole Oceanographic Institution
2BIO = Bedford Institute of Oceanography