Chapter 10: River Plumes and Estuaries
Since the CZCS mission directed much of the instrument's observing
time to the coastal zone, some of the most visible features are the
interface where fresh water encounters salt water - where rivers
meet the sea. The influx of fresh water (frequently laden
with sediments and organic matter) into the oceans induces a variety of
physical, chemical, and biological phenomena that show up clearly in
many CZCS images.
In Chapter 5, the influence of the Orinoco River on the
Caribbean Sea during the rainy season was evident in an
October CZCS composite image. The CZCS image shown below, acquired
on October 9, 1984, highlights the plume of sediment discharging
into the Adriatic Sea from the mouth of the Po River, just south of Venice,
Italy. The adjoining photographic image was obtained by astronauts onboard
the Space Shuttle Challenger on the same day that the CZCS observed the region.
The island city of Venice is visible in the lagoon located at the upper
center of the shuttle photograph.
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| CZCS Image of the Po River |
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Shuttle Photograph
of the Po River
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The visibility of riverine sediment plumes in the ocean exhibits
considerable variation. The Po River plume is particularly easy to see
because it has a large amount of carbonate rocks in its watershed, which
are easily eroded to produce light-colored, reflective sediments. Other rivers,
such as the Yellow and Yangtze rivers in Asia, have high sediment loads
because of the large amount of rainfall in their watersheds, which transfers
a large amount of soil to the rivers.
River sediments can also transfer man-made pollutants
to the ocean. Chemicals such as pesticides and chlorinated organic compounds
can be adsorbed on the surface of soil particles. As the soil is
carried away by rain and into the rivers, it will be transferred to the river
mouth and to be deposited in the large amount of bottom sediments in
deltaic regions.
Why is this significant? In many cases, the interface of a river
with the ocean forms an estuary, an area that is characterized by
variations in salinity due to the mixing of fresh and salt water. The
size of estuaries depends on the volume of water transported by the river,
the strength of the tidal cycle, the local geology, and the rate of sediment
deposition.
The picture below, taken from an airplane, shows the boundary between
two water masses in the ocean just north of Winyah Bay, South Carolina.
Winyah Bay is located near Georgetown, SC, and receives fresh water from both
the Pee Dee and Waccamaw rivers. The reddish water is from Winyah Bay,
while the greenish water is from the coastal Atlantic Ocean.
Estuaries tend to be highly productive areas, where the larvae of many
fish species spend their first part of their life cycle. Furthermore, estuaries
frequently have high concentrations of organisms that are utilized by fish
for food, such as shrimp. Estuaries can also have numerous bottom-dwelling
(or benthic) organisms such as oysters, crabs, clams, and scallops.
These crustaceans and molluscs, many of which are called filter-feeders
because they filter the water of the estuary to remove digestible particles.
Thus, pollutants in the particles can be concentrated in their tissues.
Because these organisms are frequently food for other marine organisms (or
humans) pollutants in these sediments can be transferred up the food chain.
Another interesting aspect of estuaries is their chemical behavior.
As fresh water mixes with salt water, dissolved metals (particularly iron)
will form microscopic particles called flocculants, or flocs. Because
they have a large surface area due to their diffuse "fluffy" nature, flocs
can also adsorb pollutants. As they settle, they will also take harmful
materials with them into the sediments. Thus, estuaries can act as filters
for water entering the sea, but these areas will therefore be particularly
sensitive to many types of pollution discharged into rivers.
Estuaries are usually quite shallow, tend to have very turbid water,
and are surrounded by land. Most estuaries thus pose difficult problems for
ocean color data acquisition. However, they are also highly productive areas,
which makes them of significant interest to biological oceanographers. In
most images of estuaries, such as numerous CZCS images of the Chesapeake Bay,
the algorithm that calculates the pigment concentration fails due to a
combination of productivity, suspended sediments, and shallow water. So
most estuaries appear red on the CZCS false color scale, indicating high
pigment concentrations, which may or may not be true. (In the CZCS image
of the Po River plume, the reflectivity of the sediments was so high that
the data processing algorithm interpreted part of the plume as land, which
appears black in the image.)
Scientists who study ocean optics have classified water into
two basic optical types: Case 1 and Case 2, as defined by Morel and
Prieur. Case 1 waters are usually in the
open ocean, are very clear, and have low primary productivity. Case 2
waters are usually found near the shore, and have highly variable clarity
due to a combination of higher productivity and suspended particulates.
Determining accurate measurements of photosynthetic pigments in Case 2 waters
is a significant challenge to ocean color scientists. Another aspect of
Case 2 waters is the water depth, as light reflecting off the bottom in
shallow water creates an optically-bright area. Because of these factors,
extracting the pigment (and chlorophyll) signal in Case 2 waters is a
complex problem. Due to the higher productivity in coastal areas, it is
an important problem to solve.
If the volume of a river is particularly large, for rivers such as
the Mississippi or Amazon, turbid sediment plumes can be transported long
distances before dissipating. After the 1993 floods in Iowa and
Missouri, the plume of sediment disgorged from the Mississippi River could
be observed from space using data from the Advanced Very High Resolution
Radiometer (AVHRR). The plume of sediment extended almost 300 km from
the Mississippi River delta in Louisiana. Ocean color data could be
used to observe similar phenomena.
References and related sites
Chapter 11: From Radiation to Imagery
Chapter 9: The Agulhas Retroflection
Index: Classic CZCS scenes
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