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Chapter 14: Tides, Winds, and Currents. Tides, Winds, and Currents. Tidal heights and currents have a significant effect on navigationTides can affect where you can go and whenTides are a coastal phenomenonSeiches are found on the Great Lakes. What Causes Tides?. Influenced by a number of factorsGravitational pull of the moonCentrifugal forceSunEarth and moon spin as pair around a common point called a barycenterEarth orbits sun once per yearMoon orbits earth every 27 1/3 days.
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1. The Weekend Navigator Part II Copyright 2008 Coast Guard Auxiliary Association, Inc.
2. Chapter 14: Tides, Winds, and Currents
3. Tides, Winds, and Currents Tidal heights and currents have a significant effect on navigation
Tides can affect where you can go and when
Tides are a coastal phenomenon
Seiches are found on the Great Lakes
4. What Causes Tides? Influenced by a number of factors
Gravitational pull of the moon
Centrifugal force
Sun
Earth and moon spin as pair around a common point called a barycenter
Earth orbits sun once per year
Moon orbits earth every 27 1/3 days
5. What Causes Tides? Perigee – moon’s closest approach
Apogee – moon’s farthest remove
Tidal current tables are different every year
Astronomical pattern for sun and moon repeat every 18.6 years
Moon’s motion around the earth takes 24 hours and 50 minutes
Landmasses cause unique local patterns
6. Tidal Heights versus Tidal Currents Tides are only perceptible along shorelines
Heights of tides are accentuated by near coastal shoaling
Flooding or incoming
Ebbing or outgoing
Currents are most significant where there is a restriction to flow
7. Tidal Heights versus Tidal Currents Time of maximum flood current is between time of low water and high water
Maximum ebb is between high water and the following low
Greatest ebb and flood velocities are at sites where tides fill and depart from bays and rivers
8. Tidal Heights versus Tidal Currents You cannot predict tidal currents from tidal heights, requires current tables
Tidal heights are computed for harbors
Tidal currents are computed for more constricted areas where current is a factor
9. Spring and Neap Tides Tidal ranges vary by day, month, year
New moon – moon’s dark side is entirely toward earth (unlighted by sun)
Occurs once very 29 ˝ days
Gravitational effects of sun and moon are additive, resulting in spring tides
High tides are higher and low tides are lower
10. Spring and Neap Tides Full moon – halfway between new moons and moon is fully illuminated
Halfway between new moons and full moons is the first and third quarters
Sun and moon pull at right (90o) angles to each other
Their effects are partially cancelled out by one another
Neap tides or smaller tidal ranges result
11. Tidal Patterns Tides vary in cycle from high to low
Diurnal – daily
Semi-diurnal - twice daily
Semidiurnal or two tides daily
Two successive highs and lows are not equal in height
Continents block westward passage of tidal bulges and cause complex effects
12. Tidal Patterns Diurnal tides common in Gulf of Mexico
Incoming and outgoing tides cancel each other
Mixed tides common along the Pacific coast and parts of the Caribbean
Daily tides differ significantly
Diurnal tides common in Gulf of Mexico and coast of Alaska
13. Tidal Patterns Semi-diurnal tides common along Atlantic coast, most of Europe, and Africa
Semi-diurnal and mixed tides are found along South American coasts
14. Tidal Ranges and Vertical Datums Range of tide – difference between a high tide and following or preceding low
Cape Cod – 1.5 to 3 feet
Boston Harbor – 5.5 to 12 feet
Important to know the tidal ranges at your location for days and times of interest
15. Tidal Height and Tidal Current Information Primary reference stations – predict tides and tidal currents
Provided by National Ocean Service (NOS)
Tidal stations are located in harbors or along coast lines
16. Tidal Height and Tidal Current Information Tidal current stations are located at points of constricted flow
Subordinate stations are referenced to nearby reference station by a time difference and a ratio
17. Tidal Height and Tidal Current Information Tidal data can be displayed by:
Handheld GPS models
Chartplotters
Navigation software
WXTide32 (www.wxtide32.com)
Tideware by Eldridge
Tide Tool for handheld PDAs
18. Tidal Height and Tidal Current Information Printed tide tables
Simplified current diagrams with set and drift
Eldridge Tide and Pilot Book
US East Coast with emphasis on Northeast
19. Tidal Height and Tidal Current Information Reed’s Nautical Almanac
Covers east and west coasts of North America and the Caribbean
NOAA website
(http://co-ops.nos.noaa.gov)
20. Tidal Height and Tidal Current Information Tidal current arrows on nautical charts
Indicate direction of flood (incoming) and ebb (outgoing) currents
Usually a numeric value provides mean of peak currents in each direction
21. Adjusting for Tides and Tidal Currents Soundings and depth contours are based on vertical datum
Mean lower low water (MLLW) is used as datum
Minus tide – low tide that registers as a negative value (actual low tide is predicted to be below the tidal datum)
Mean low water (MLW) is less conservative than MLLW
22. Adjusting for Tides and Tidal Currents Charted soundings may have been taken years ago
Bottom conditions change constantly
23. Adjusting for Tides and Tidal Currents Tidal heights-using a subordinate station
Identify station of interest
Calculate time difference
Use factor for determining low and high tide heights
Convert times if difference is significant
Use the Rule of Twelfths method
24. Adjusting for Tides and Tidal Currents Rule of Twelfths – the tide level changes in increments of 1/12 to 3/12s of its total range in each of six (6) equal time periods
With diurnal tides, time intervals are a little more than two (2) hours each
Minimal in the Gulf of Mexico
The Rule of Twelfths is an estimate!
25. Adjusting for Tides and Tidal Currents GPS or computer for tide level
Marine units contain tidal data and buoy locations
Newer chartplotters contain tide levels
Local conditions may be different than electronic predictions.
26. Predicting Tidal Currents Tidal currents are driven by tides and have similar cycles
Incoming currents are called flood
Outgoing currents are called ebb
Slack water – interval of zero flow between flood and ebb
27. Predicting Tidal Currents Currents have a profound effect on your course over ground (COG)
Adjust your heading upcurrent to stay on course
Currents in narrow channels and rivers tend to flow along the axis of travel
May assist or retard your boat’s progress
28. Predicting Tidal Currents Tide rips – notorious systems of standing waves that look like river rapids at peak ebb or flood
Current tables express currents in terms of maximum flood (incoming) and maximum ebb (outgoing)
29. Predicting Tidal Currents Subordinate station tables provide time differences for each slack and each maximum, speed ratios, and current direction
The 50-90 rule can be used and is just as accurate
30. Predicting Tidal Currents Ebb/flood cycle
Slack to maximum flood
Maximum flood to slack
Slack to maximum ebb
Maximum ebb to slack
31. Using the 50-90 Rule Determine the actual duration of each phase from the current tables
Time interval between events is divided into equal thirds
50-90 rule is applied to those thirds
Follow the example presented in the textbook
32. Using a Computer or GPS for Tidal Current Information Chartplotters and computer digital charts provide access to tidal current information
The pop-up box provides tidal current curve and numeric data for:
Slacks
Floods
Ebbs
33. Ocean Currents Prevailing currents in each ocean basin have nothing to do with tides
In Northern Hemisphere, currents circulate clockwise around each ocean basin
In Southern Hemisphere they circulate counter-clockwise
34. Ocean Currents Examples include:
Gulf Stream
North Pacific Current
Pilot charts are an excellent source of information
MaxSea is a navigation software
35. Wind, Waves, and Other Unpredictable Effects Weather is a major unpredictable factor
Crosswinds can push a boat off course
Leeway – the angle between the intended course and actual track of the boat over ground
36. Wind, Waves, and Other Unpredictable Effects TIP – check your wake to see if you are being affected by the wind
Counter leeway as you would a current by adjusting into the wind
37. Wind, Waves, and Other Unpredictable Effects Yaw – movement of a boat as a result of wave action pushing the bow off course
Swells are caused by winds in distant weather systems
Wind waves or “chop” arise locally
38. Wind, Waves, and Other Unpredictable Effects Wavelength – distance between crests
The greater the wavelength, the faster a wave moves
Period – measure of how long it takes two successive crests to pass a stationary point
39. Wind, Waves, and Other Unpredictable Effects Wave height is dependent on the amount of wind operating on the water
Fetch – the distance over which the wind acts on the water
Combination of strong winds and a long fetch produce higher waves
40. Wind, Waves, and Other Unpredictable Effects Waves are affected by water depth
Breakers result from friction from the sea bottom causing the wave to “break over”
Chop tends to have shorter wavelengths
Yawing action is more of a problem in chop than in swells
41. Variable Currents and Seiches Wind and surface runoff from shore can affect currents
Seiches – found in fully enclosed bodies of water and is similar to the back-and-forth sloshing of water in a bath tub
Common on the Great Lakes or other enclosed large lakes