2010
DOI: 10.1029/2009jc006085
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Wetland‐estuarine‐shelf interactions in the Plum Island Sound and Merrimack River in the Massachusetts coast

Abstract: [1] Wetland-estuarine-shelf interaction processes in the Plum Island Sound and Merrimack River system in the Massachusetts coast are examined using the high-resolution unstructured grid, finite volume, primitive equations, coastal ocean model. The computational domain covers the estuarine and entire intertidal area with a horizontal resolution of 10-200 m. Driven by five tidal constituents forcing at the open boundary on the inner shelf of the eastern coast of the Gulf of Maine, the model has successfully simu… Show more

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Cited by 54 publications
(38 citation statements)
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“…Numerical models of estuarine hydrodynamics have expanded from tidally averaged one-dimensional models (Hansen and Rattray 1965) to fully three-dimensional (3D) models that can resolve wetting and drying, wave-current interaction, and sediment transport (e.g. Warner et al 2005; Zhao et al 2010; Olabarrieta et al 2011). Numerical models emerged as heuristic tools for understanding ecosystem structure and function in the 1970s (e.g., Patten 1971; Di Toro et al 1971; Odum 1971; Kremer and Nixon 1978), and their utility as management tools grew in the 1980s (e.g., HydroQual 1987).…”
Section: Models As Essential Tools In Estuarine Sciencementioning
confidence: 99%
“…Numerical models of estuarine hydrodynamics have expanded from tidally averaged one-dimensional models (Hansen and Rattray 1965) to fully three-dimensional (3D) models that can resolve wetting and drying, wave-current interaction, and sediment transport (e.g. Warner et al 2005; Zhao et al 2010; Olabarrieta et al 2011). Numerical models emerged as heuristic tools for understanding ecosystem structure and function in the 1970s (e.g., Patten 1971; Di Toro et al 1971; Odum 1971; Kremer and Nixon 1978), and their utility as management tools grew in the 1980s (e.g., HydroQual 1987).…”
Section: Models As Essential Tools In Estuarine Sciencementioning
confidence: 99%
“…The Gulf model was developed using unstructured grid Finite Volume Coastal Ocean Model (FVCOM) (Chen et al 2003). With the merit of an unstructured grid for ideal geometrical fitting Tian and Chen 2006;Xue et al 2009), FVCOM has gained its popularity in research and applications to estuaries and coastal oceans (Weisberg and Zheng 2006;Chen et al 2008;Cowles et al 2008;Zhao et al 2010;Xue et al 2011;Beardsley et al 2013;Chen et al 2014). The horizontal resolution of the model grid varies from ;3 km near the coast to ;5 km in the offshore region of the Gulf and gradually decreases to 10-15 km close to the open boundary (Fig.…”
Section: A Modelmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…The estuary experiences semidiurnal tides with a mean range of 2.7 m. Salinity ranges from 0 to 32 and varies in space and time depending on relative inputs from freshwater and tidal sources. Temperature ranges from −1°C in the winter to 28°C in the summer (Zhao et al 2010).…”
Section: Site Descriptionmentioning
confidence: 99%