Salinity Calculations in the Jupiter Inlet - Loxahatchee River System, FL: Difference between revisions
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The Loxahatchee River is a 7.6-mile-long river near the southeast coast of Florida. Freshwater meanders through the river’s three main forks, the North Fork, the Northwest Fork and the Southwest Fork, into the brackish estuary and then flows out the Jupiter Inlet into the Atlantic Ocean (Figure 1). The estuary entrance is protected by dual jetties from ocean waves. Momentum transfer, diffusive process and spatial distributions of salinity in the Jupiter Inlet-Loxahatchee River system are dominated by tides, wind, and freshwater inflows. | The Loxahatchee River is a 7.6-mile-long river near the southeast coast of Florida. Freshwater meanders through the river’s three main forks, the North Fork, the Northwest Fork and the Southwest Fork, into the brackish estuary and then flows out the Jupiter Inlet into the Atlantic Ocean (Figure 1). The estuary entrance is protected by dual jetties from ocean waves. Momentum transfer, diffusive process and spatial distributions of salinity in the Jupiter Inlet-Loxahatchee River system are dominated by tides, wind, and freshwater inflows. | ||
[[Image: | [[Image:Slide2.jpg|thumb|center|550px|Figure 1. The Jupiter Inlet - Loxahatchee River system, FL. Arrows are designated for freshwater inflow locations.]] |
Revision as of 22:53, 13 January 2011
The Loxahatchee River is a 7.6-mile-long river near the southeast coast of Florida. Freshwater meanders through the river’s three main forks, the North Fork, the Northwest Fork and the Southwest Fork, into the brackish estuary and then flows out the Jupiter Inlet into the Atlantic Ocean (Figure 1). The estuary entrance is protected by dual jetties from ocean waves. Momentum transfer, diffusive process and spatial distributions of salinity in the Jupiter Inlet-Loxahatchee River system are dominated by tides, wind, and freshwater inflows.