Sediment resuspension and transport in Lake Michigan during the unstratified period |
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Authors: | Nathan Hawley & Chang-Hee Lee |
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Institution: | Great Lakes Environmental Research Laboratory (E-mail:;), Cooperative Institute for Limnology and Ecosystems Research, 2205 Commonwealth Blvd, Ann Arbor, MI 48105, USA |
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Abstract: | Instrumented moorings were deployed during the winter of 1994–95 at three depths (28, 58 and 101 m) in southern Lake Michigan. Storms during the observation period were not unusually severe, so the processes observed are typical of those that occur during an average winter. Time series observations of water temperature, beam attenuation coefficient (a measure of water transparency) and current velocity show that local resuspension of bottom sediment occurred frequently after the breakdown of the thermocline. Resuspension was most frequent close to the shore but was also observed at the 58 m station. Local resuspension did not occur at the 101 m station, but advection to the site of material resuspended at shallower sites was observed. These observations do not support the hypothesis proposed by previous investigators that local resuspension at depths of 100 m or greater occurs during the unstratified period. It is more likely that fine-grained material resuspended by storm action in intermediate water depths (≈ 30–60 m) is transported into the deeper parts of the lake by the general lake circulation. |
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Keywords: | Bottom currents Lake Michigan limnology resuspension sediment transport surface waves |
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