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Meteotsunamis in the northeastern Gulf of Mexico and their possible link to El Niño Southern Oscillation
Authors:Maitane Olabarrieta  Arnoldo Valle-Levinson  Christopher J Martinez  Charitha Pattiaratchi  Luming Shi
Institution:1.Civil and Coastal Engineering Department, ESSIE,University of Florida,Gainesville,USA;2.Agricultural and Biological Engineering, IFAS,University of Florida,Gainesville,USA;3.Civil, Environmental and Mining Engineering,University of Western Australia (M015),Crawley,Australia
Abstract:Analysis of 20-year time series of water levels in the northeastern Gulf of Mexico has revealed that meteotsunamis are ubiquitous in this region. On average, 1–3 meteotsunamis with wave heights >0.5 m occur each year in this area. The probability of meteotsunami occurrence is highest during March–April and June–August. Meteotsunamis in the northeastern Gulf of Mexico can be triggered by winter and summer extra-tropical storms and by tropical cyclones. In northwestern Florida most of the events are triggered by winter storms, while in west and southwest Florida they appear both in winter and summer. Atmospheric pressure and wind anomalies (periods <6 h) associated with the passage of squalls originated the majority of the observed meteotsunami events. The most intense meteotsunamigenic periods took place during El Niño periods (1997–1998, 2009–2010 and 2015–2016). Meteotsunamis were also active in 2005, a year characterized by exceptionally intense tropical cyclone activity. Meteotsunami incidence varied yearly and at periods between 2 and 5 years. Results from cross-wavelet analysis suggested that El Niño and meteotsunami activity are correlated at annual and longer-period bands.
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