A bolus is a vortex formed by an internal wave propagating upslope with the shoaling wave. The amount of sediment and biota transported by boluses travelling up the world's continental… Click to show full abstract
A bolus is a vortex formed by an internal wave propagating upslope with the shoaling wave. The amount of sediment and biota transported by boluses travelling up the world's continental slopes and onto the continental shelves has not been established but could be vital for maintaining nutrient‐rich coastal ecosystems. Previous laboratory experiments and simulations of shoaling boluses have considered a two‐layer density stratification or a linear density profile. We present experiments on bolus formation and propagation in a stratification with a density profile ρ(z) represented by a tanh‐profile, which describes many ocean pycnoclines. Our laboratory experiments examine pycnoclines with thicknesses varying from nearly zero (a two‐layer system) to large thicknesses where the density varies almost linearly with depth. The bolus volume, displacement upslope, and available potential energy are measured as a function of pycnocline thickness. Maximum upslope displacement is found to be twice that observed for a two‐layer stratification.
               
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