2017
DOI: 10.1007/s11069-017-2922-3
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Meteotsunamis in the northeastern Gulf of Mexico and their possible link to El Niño Southern Oscillation

Abstract: Analysis of 20-year time series of water levels in the northeastern Gulf of Mexico has revealed that meteotsunamis are ubiquitous in this region. On average, 1-3 meteotsunamis with wave heights [0.5 m occur each year in this area. The probability of meteotsunami occurrence is highest during March-April and June-August. Meteotsunamis in the northeastern Gulf of Mexico can be triggered by winter and summer extra-tropical storms and by tropical cyclones. In northwestern Florida most of the events are triggered by… Show more

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Cited by 35 publications
(48 citation statements)
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“…The meteotsunami at Dayyer had the character of a solitary wave (''solitone''), typical for ''beach meteotsunamis''. Only one impulse-type oscillation is seen at this site, similar to the wave that was recorded at Panama City, Florida on 28 March 2014 (Olabarrieta et al 2017) and the wave which impacted Odessa beaches, Ukraine on 27 June 2014 (Š epić et al 2018b). At Asaluyeh, the initial soliton wave came into the harbour and generated seiches within the harbour.…”
Section: Spectral and Wavelet Analysessupporting
confidence: 65%
“…The meteotsunami at Dayyer had the character of a solitary wave (''solitone''), typical for ''beach meteotsunamis''. Only one impulse-type oscillation is seen at this site, similar to the wave that was recorded at Panama City, Florida on 28 March 2014 (Olabarrieta et al 2017) and the wave which impacted Odessa beaches, Ukraine on 27 June 2014 (Š epić et al 2018b). At Asaluyeh, the initial soliton wave came into the harbour and generated seiches within the harbour.…”
Section: Spectral and Wavelet Analysessupporting
confidence: 65%
“…The presence of meteotsunamis is defined as water level anomalies that exceed (in absolute value) six times the standard deviation of the water level anomaly. While this threshold is higher than the value suggested by Monserrat et al 8 , it is more conservative and appropriate for our specific study sites because it ensures the exclusion of waves triggered only by the inverted barometer effect 7 . For each TC, we computed the maximum water level anomalies within the Gulf of Mexico, Eastern Unites States, and Puerto Rico.…”
Section: Methodsmentioning
confidence: 83%
“…We used the Matlab toolbox by Grinsted et al 19 , to compute and plot normalized wavelet power spectra, using a Morlet wavelet (with a nondimensional frequency = 6) for the continuous wavelet transform. The cumulative distributions of the maximum meteotsunami elevation climatology were computed following the method proposed by Olabarrieta et al 7 , in which the Hilbert transform is used to estimate the envelope of the water level anomaly and from which each single meteotsunami event is extracted. We used the NEXRAD atmospheric radar reflectivity mosaics from NOAA to depict the spatial and temporal structure of the TC rainbands and to estimate their speed and direction of propagation.…”
Section: Methodsmentioning
confidence: 99%
See 1 more Smart Citation
“…During the past decade, meteorological tsunamis or meteotsunamis-destructive long waves in the tsunami frequency band generated by traveling atmospheric disturbances (Monserrat et al, 2006)-have become the object of an increasing number of studies all over the globe (Cho et al, 2013;Dusek et al, 2019;Masina et al, 2017;Okal et al, 2014;Olabarrieta et al, 2017;Pattiaratchi & Wijeratne, 2014;Pellikka et al, 2014;Šepić et al, 2012;Tanaka, 2010;Whitmore & White, 2014). These extreme events have the potential to produce substantial damages to houses, goods, and infrastructures (Hibiya & Kajiura, 1982;Linares et al, 2019;Salaree et al, 2018)-for example, not only more than seven million U.S. dollars have been lost in Vela Luka harbor, Croatia during the 21 June 1978 meteotsunami (Orlić et al, 2010;Vučetić et al, 2009), but human lives were also claimed.…”
Section: Introductionmentioning
confidence: 99%