IN-SITU CHARACTERISTICS OF SUSPENDED PARTICLES AS DETERMINED BY THE FLOC CAMERA ASSEMBLY FCA

Citation
Jpm. Syvitski et Ewh. Hutton, IN-SITU CHARACTERISTICS OF SUSPENDED PARTICLES AS DETERMINED BY THE FLOC CAMERA ASSEMBLY FCA, Journal of sea research, 36(1-2), 1996, pp. 131-142
Citations number
14
Categorie Soggetti
Oceanografhy,"Marine & Freshwater Biology
Journal title
ISSN journal
13851101
Volume
36
Issue
1-2
Year of publication
1996
Pages
131 - 142
Database
ISI
SICI code
1385-1101(1996)36:1-2<131:ICOSPA>2.0.ZU;2-P
Abstract
The Flee Camera Assembly, or FCA, provides for the in situ size, shape , concentration and settling velocity of marine particles. Through use of floc-attribute theory, FCA data also provide approximations of the in situ excess-density, porosity and mass of flocs, their population characteristics, and aggregation and sedimentation rate. Image analysi s using photoCD transfer routines and recently developed image-analysi s techniques make possible daily interpretation of hundreds of digital FCA images. FCA studies have demonstrated a wide variety of suspended sediment characteristics and transport phenomena. The character of ma rine snow is found to vary at a variety of time-scales: near-instantan eous, daily and seasonally. For example a floc's excess density also v aries with flee size, but the relationship for flocs within a coastal water mass may change daily. In mid-latitude coastal basins, small flo cs form when primary production is low and river input is high; conver sely large flocs form when river input is very low. In Antarctic ice m argins, flocculation fronts are identified beneath cold water tongues emanating out from glacier margins. In Greenland, an intermediate neph loid layer is identified, filled with large flocs formed from sediment released from melting icebergs. In the Gulf of St. Lawrence, boundary -layer turbulence near the seafloor is shown to break up flocs after t heir long descent through the water column and create a 50 m thick bot tom turbid zone.