Abstrakt: |
Currents, sea levels and weather were measured for a 60 d period at a number of sites in and near Britomart reef, Great Barrier Reef. The tidal currents were primarily semi-diurnal in character. The lowfrequency currents were due to a simple balance, in the longshore direction, between the wind stress and the bottom frictional stress, and, in the cross-shelf direction, between the bottom frictional stress and the pressure gradient generated by the passage of wind-driven continental shelf waves. The bottom friction coefficient, for the nonlinear drag law, is estimated to be of the order of 0.02. By contrast, the currents over the surrounding continental shelf are primarily controlled by continental shelf wave dynamics and are not dominated by friction. It thus appears that the water bodies in, respectively, the reef matrix and the Lagoon of the Great Barrier Reef are relatively uncoupled. Tidal and low-frequency currents contributed roughly equally to the flushing of Britomart reef lagoon with an estimated flushing time of the order of 4 d. |