Pink-tinted waves rolled onto a San Diego beach in Southern California
<https://www.sfgate.com/california/> on Jan. 20, offering anyone walking
along the beach an unlikely sight.

The Pepto Bismol-colored waters were seen at Torrey Pines State Beach and
Natural Reserve, where Scripps Institution of Oceanography
<https://scripps.ucsd.edu/news/pink-dye-experiment-reveal-mysteries-coastal-ocean-dynamics>
at
UC San Diego is conducting an experiment.

University researchers injected nontoxic pink dye into the water to observe
how freshwater from inland areas such as rivers and estuaries interacts
with the surf zone when it flows into the ocean.

Scripps said
<https://scripps.ucsd.edu/news/pink-dye-experiment-reveal-mysteries-coastal-ocean-dynamics>
in
a statement posted online that it's partnering with the University of
Washington for the experiment, which will continue into February. The first
dye release, on Jan. 20, is slated to be followed by two more, in late
January and early February.

In January and February of 2023 UC San Diego's Scripps Institution of
Oceanography and the University of Washington researchers conducted a
pink-hued dye experiment, titled Plumes in Nearshore Conditions, or PiNC,
to study how small freshwater outflows interact with the surfzone. (Erik
Jepsen, Scripps Institution/Erik Jepsen/UC San Diego)

When rivers and estuaries pour into the ocean, they carry sediments and
contaminants, and "little is known about how these plumes of more buoyant,
fresher water interact with the denser, saltier and often colder nearshore
ocean environment, particularly as the plumes encounter breaking waves,"
the institution said.

Researchers are pouring the pink dye into the freshwater within the
reserve's estuary, and it allows them to track and study the water as it
flows into the ocean.

“I'm excited because this research hasn't been done before and it's a
really unique experiment,” Scripps coastal oceanographer Sarah Giddings
<https://giddingslab.ucsd.edu/>, who is leading the study, said in a
statement. " ... We will combine results from this experiment with an older
field study and computer models that will allow us to make progress on
understanding how these plumes spread.” KR  IRS 27123

-- 
You received this message because you are subscribed to the Google Groups 
"Thatha_Patty" group.
To unsubscribe from this group and stop receiving emails from it, send an email 
to [email protected].
To view this discussion on the web visit 
https://groups.google.com/d/msgid/thatha_patty/CAL5XZor%3D3sq%3DiV%3DK%3Dc8YRUK-Ssu%3DkfhoCOvbF%3DWg4U%2B1B9WX-Q%40mail.gmail.com.

Reply via email to