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Outfall siting with dye-buoy remote sensing of coastal circulationA dye-buoy remote sensing technique has been applied to estuarine siting problems that involve fine-scale circulation. Small hard cakes of sodium fluorescein and polyvinyl alcohol, in anchored buoys and low-windage current followers, dissolve to produce dye marks resolvable in 1:60,000 scale color and color infrared imagery. Lagrangian current vectors are determined from sequential photo coverage. Careful buoy placement reveals surface currents and submergence near fronts and convergence zones. The technique has been used in siting two sewage outfalls in Hampton Roads, Virginia: In case one, the outfall region during flood tide gathered floating materials in a convergence zone, which then acted as a secondary source during ebb; for better dispersion during ebb, the proposed outfall site was moved further offshore. In case two, flow during late flood was found to divide, with one half passing over shellfish beds; the proposed outfall site was consequently moved to keep effluent in the other half.
Document ID
19780037437
Acquisition Source
Legacy CDMS
Document Type
Reprint (Version printed in journal)
Authors
Munday, J. C., Jr.
(Virginia Inst. of Marine Science Gloucester Point, VA, United States)
Welch, C. S.
(Virginia Inst. of Marine Science Gloucester Point, VA, United States)
Gordon, H. H.
(Virginia Institute of Marine Science Gloucester Point, Va., United States)
Date Acquired
August 9, 2013
Publication Date
January 1, 1978
Publication Information
Publication: Photogrammetric Engineering and Remote Sensing
Volume: 44
Subject Category
Oceanography
Accession Number
78A21346
Funding Number(s)
CONTRACT_GRANT: NGL-47-022-005
Distribution Limits
Public
Copyright
Other

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