22 research outputs found

    Enhancing the Scientific Value of Industry Remotely Operated Vehicles (ROVs) in Our Oceans

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    © Copyright © 2020 McLean, Parsons, Gates, Benfield, Bond, Booth, Bunce, Fowler, Harvey, Macreadie, Pattiaratchi, Rouse, Partridge, Thomson, Todd and Jones. Remotely operated vehicles (ROVs) are used extensively by the offshore oil and gas and renewables industries for inspection, maintenance, and repair of their infrastructure. With thousands of subsea structures monitored across the world’s oceans from the shallows to depths greater than 1,000 m, there is a great and underutilized opportunity for their scientific use. Through slight modifications of ROV operations, and by augmenting industry workclass ROVs with a range of scientific equipment, industry can fuel scientific discoveries, contribute to an understanding of the impact of artificial structures in our oceans, and collect biotic and abiotic data to support our understanding of how oceans and marine life are changing. Here, we identify and describe operationally feasible methods to adjust the way in which industry ROVs are operated to enhance the scientific value of data that they collect, without significantly impacting scheduling or adding to deployment costs. These include: rapid marine life survey protocols, imaging improvements, the addition of a range of scientific sensors, and collection of biological samples. By partnering with qualified and experienced research scientists, industry can improve the quality of their ROV-derived data, allowing the data to be analyzed robustly. Small changes by industry now could provide substantial benefits to scientific research in the long-term and improve the quality of scientific data in existence once the structures require decommissioning. Such changes also have the potential to enhance industry’s environmental stewardship by improving their environmental management and facilitating more informed engagement with a range of external stakeholders, including regulators and the public

    Numerical modelling of tide-induced beach water table fluctuations

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    Field studies have shown that the elevation of the beach groundwater table varies with the tide and such variations affect significantly beach erosion or accretion. In this paper, we present a BEM (Boundary Element Method) model for simulating the tidal fluctuation of the beach groundwater table. The model solves the two-dimensional flow equation subject to free and moving boundary conditions, including the seepage dynamics at the beach face. The simulated seepage faces were found to agree with the predictions of a simple model (Turner, 1993). The advantage of the present model is, however, that it can be used with little modification to simulate more complicated cases, e.g., surface recharge from rainfall and drainage in the aquifer may be included (the latter is related to beach dewatering technique). The model also simulated well the field data of Nielsen (1990). In particular, the model replicated three distinct features of local water table fluctuations: steep rising phase versus flat falling phase, amplitude attenuation and phase lagging

    BeachWin: modelling groundwater effects on swash sediment transport and beach profile changes

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    Field and laboratory observations have shown that a relatively low beach groundwater table enhances beach accretion. These observations have led to the beach dewatering technique (artificially lowering the beach water table) for combating beach erosion. Here we present a process-based numerical model that simulates the interacting wave motion on the beach. coastal groundwater flow, swash sediment transport and beach profile changes. Results of model simulations demonstrate that the model replicates accretionary effects of a low beach water table on beach profile changes and has the potential to become a tool for assessing the effectiveness of beach dewatering systems. (C) 2002 Elsevier Science Ltd. All rights reserved

    Sedimentation processes in a tectonically active environment: the Kerkyra-Kefalonia submarine valley system (NE Ionian Sea)

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    The Kerkyra-Kefalonia valley system is the northwestern extension of the Hellenic are-trench system, representing the collision zone of the Apulian Platform and the Hellenides. The system is distinguished by two different physiographic regions: the northern part, U-shaped, and oriented NNW-SSE, with relatively gentle slopes and a wide floor; and the southern part, oriented NE-SW, V-shaped, and with much steeper side walls and a narrow floor. Both parts are formed tectonically, with the former coinciding with a collision zone, and the latter being the morphometric expression of the Kefalonia strike-slip fault. Sediments recovered in the piston cores from the region consist of fine-grained material, deposited by a variety of sedimentation processes such as: gravity-driven mass movements, associated with seismic activity (i.e., slumping, sliding, debris flows, grain flows, turbidites-seismoturbidites); and, to a lesser extent, by hemipelagic deposition, Measured near-bed currents and their associated shear stresses indicate resuspension of the material, mainly within the northern part of the valley. Sub-bottom acoustic (seismic) profiling data reveal various sedimentary provinces, related to different mechanisms of sediment accumulation: (i) the i:astern margin of the Apulian Platform with hemipelagic sedimentation, together with possible advection of suspensates from; the Adriatic, in response localised to seabed erosion; (ii) the western Hellenic margin, with down-slope episodic sliding and slumping, induced primarily by earthquake activity, together with an input from hemipelagic settling; (iii) the collision zone, coinciding with the northern part of the Kerkyra-Kefalonia valley system, with deposition mostly from resuspension, the occurrence of local mass gravity flows and the advection of some material from the north; and (iv) the Kefalonia strike-slip fault region, where mass gravity flows are the dominant mechanisms, related to erosion/deposition from resuspension. Overall sedimentation within the tectonically-active Kerkyra-Kefalonia valley system is characterised by the coupling of the mass gravity-driven flows, which are the predominant mechanisms, with the near-bed current regime related with resuspension phenomena and the advection of suspensates. These latter mechanisms is likely more pronounced during the winter period, when dense water masses formed in the Adriatic inflowing into the Ionian Sea. (C) 1999 Elsevier Science B.V. All rights reserved

    Sea breezes drive currents on the inner continental shelf off southwest Western Australia

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    In southwest Western Australia, strong and persistent sea breezes are common between September and February. We hypothesized that on the inner continental shelf, in the absence of tidal forcing, the depth, magnitude, and lag times of the current speed and direction responses to sea breezes would vary though the water column as a function of the sea breeze intensity. To test this hypothesis, field data were used from four sites were that were in water depths of up to 13 m. Sites were located on the inner continental shelf and were on the open coast and in a semi-enclosed coastal embayment. The dominant spectral peak in currents at all sites indicated that the majority of the spectral energy contained in the currents was due to forcing by sea breezes. Currents were aligned with the local orientation of the shoreline. On a daily basis, the sea breezes resulted in increased current speeds and also changed the current directions through the water column. The correlation between wind–current speeds and directions with depth, and the lag time between the onset of the sea breeze and the response of currents, were dependent on the intensity of the sea breezes. A higher correlation between wind and current speeds occurred during strong sea breezes and was associated with shorter lag times for the response of the bottom currents. The lag times were validated with estimates of the vertical eddy viscosity. Solar heating caused the water column to stratify in summer and the sea breezes overcame this stratification. Sea breezes caused the mixed layer to deepen and the intensity of the stratification was correlated to the strength of the sea breezes. Weak sea breezes of <5 m?s?1 were associated with the strongest thermal stratification of the water column, up to 1°C between the surface and bottom layers (6 and 10 m below the surface). In comparison, strong sea breezes of >14 m?s?1 caused only slight thermal stratification up to 0.5°C. Apart from these effects on the vertical structure of water column, the sea breezes also influenced transport and mixing in the horizontal dimension. The sea breezes in southwest Western Australia rotated in an anticlockwise direction each day and this rotation was translated into the currents. This current rotation was more prominent in surface currents and in the coastal embayment compared to the open coast
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