Synthetic Aperture Radar (SAR) images of the Malin Shelf break area on Augu
st 20th and 21st 1995 separated by 24 hours show nearly identical internal
wave signatures, with small spatial displacements between the two images. T
he coincidence of these patterns, imaged at similar times in the tidal cycl
e, suggests that the waves are tidally generated. These SAR images are here
related to in situ data obtained during the coincident NERC Shelf Edge Stu
dy (SES) and the SES Acoustic Measuring Experiment (SESAME). Internal waves
were observed propagating either up-slope or on-shelf, with little evidenc
e of off-shelf propagation. The waves seen over the continental slope have
been tracked between, the SAR images, and towed thermistor chain records, u
sing the assumption that the internal wave is regenerated every tidal cycle
. The resulting calculations of phase speed validate this assumption, and i
ndicate that the waves propagate towards the shelf from a distant, deep sou
rce and separate into non-linear solutions. The waves are large amplitude,
causing displacements of the seasonal thermocline of up to 50 m. Detailed a
nalysis of the thermistor chain data showed that the leading soliton is wel
l described by first-order Korteweg de Vries theory, despite the large ampl
itude of the wave. Further, the soliton includes contributions from the fir
st three vertical modes, the first mode creating large displacements at dep
ths around 100 m, and the second and third modes significantly displacing t
he near-surface layers. Another SAR image on 5th September shows similar fe
atures on the Continental slope, also shown in coincident current-meter dat
a. Predictions of soliton amplitude and phase speed from their length scale
s on SAR using the KdV soliton relationships are compared with the in-situ
data for the two periods. The results that the phase speeds are reasonably
well predicted, to within 10 cm s(-1) (10-20% of the value) while amplitude
s are predicted to at least within a factor of two (when compared to the th
ermistor chain data). Errors and uncertainty may be incurred due to the lim
it of the SAR geolocation precision, the difficulty of measuring exact inte
rnal wave length scales from SAR, and the natural variability of internal w
ave amplitude along its wavefront, (C) 1999 Elsevier Science Ltd. All right
s reserved.