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A brief overview of tides in the Indonesian Seas

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Title A brief overview of tides in the Indonesian Seas
Names Ray, Richard D. (creator)
Egbert, Gary D. (creator)
Erofeeva, Svetlana Y. (creator)
Date Issued 2005 (iso8601)
Abstract Tidal phenomena in the Indonesian
seas are among the most complex in the
world. Complicated coastal geometries
with narrow straits and myriad small islands,
rugged bottom topography next to
wide shelves of shallow water, and large
quantities of tidal power input from the
adjoining Indian and Pacific Oceans—all
combine to form a complex system of
interfering three-dimensional waves.
The seas feature multiple amphidromes
(points in the sea where there is zero
tidal amplitude due to canceling of tidal
waves), strong tidal currents, residual
circulations, internal waves, and solitons.
Diurnal tides are unusually strong and
are dominant along some coastlines.
The tides are known to affect local mixing
and circulation, but the tidal energy
available for these processes is not yet reliably
determined. And while mapping of
the Indonesian tides has benefi ted markedly
by assimilating satellite altimeter
measurements into numerical models,
improvements to the energy budget will
likely require higher-resolution analyses
and a densified network of satellite tidal
measurements.
Genre Article
Identifier Egbert, G. D., Erofeeva, S. Y., and Ray, R. D., A brief overview of tides in the Indonesian Seas, Oceanography, 18(4), 2005.

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