Analytical Solution for the Amplitude Ratio Method for Determining Mean High Water in Tidal Regions

2002 ◽  
Vol 128 (2) ◽  
pp. 61-75 ◽  
Author(s):  
Joshua Greenfeld
1980 ◽  
Vol 7 (1) ◽  
pp. 59-66 ◽  
Author(s):  
Rick A. Linthurst ◽  
Ernest D. Seneca

Spartina alterniflora is the dominant endemic saltmarsh angiosperm along the East and Gulf coasts of the United States. Dieback of S. alterniflora became evident through aerial surveys of the Lower Cape Fear Estuary of North Carolina. The areas affected varied in size, the largest being greater than 40 ha in areal extent. As S. alterniflora productivity losses can subsequently affect the productivity of the estuarine detritus-based food-web, studies were initiated in 1975 to examine the dieback phenomenon, follow successional trends, and determine the recolonization potential of S. alterniflora in dieback-affected salt-marshes.Three S. alterniflora dieback sites in the Lower Cape Fear Estuary were selected for study. Two of the sites, both above mean high-water, were recolonized by Salicornia europaea, Distichlis spicata, Scirpus robustus, Spartina patens, and S. alterniflora. At a third site, found to be below mean high-water, all volunteer plants were of S. alterniflora. Final stabilization of all three sites was mainly by S. alterniflora, with the living standing-crop biomass ranging from 341 to 1,565 g/m2 in September of 1978.Experimental plots within each of the three dieback sites were sprigged with S. alterniflora plants from three sources: (i) sandy dredge-material, (ii) volunteer plants within affected sites, and (iii) unaffected sites near the dieback areas. The success of these sprigs was strongly site-dependent. It is suggested that the plants used for revegetation of dieback sites should be obtained from areas similar to the site that is being transplanted and/or plants which have large rhizome systems.


Geofluids ◽  
2021 ◽  
Vol 2021 ◽  
pp. 1-11
Author(s):  
Xinyu Qiu ◽  
Botao Kang ◽  
Pengcheng Liu ◽  
Shengye Hao ◽  
Yanglei Zhou ◽  
...  

The hydraulic refracturing operations are often used to improve oil deliverability in the low-permeability reservoir. When the development of oilfields has entered a high water cut stage, oil deliverability can be promoted by refracturing reservoirs. The orientation of the new fracture formed by refracturing will be changed. The new formed fracture is called reorientation fracture. To calculate the oil deliverability of the refracture wells, a three-section fracture which includes reorientation fracture was established. The multiwell pressure drop superposition theory is used to derive the analytical solution of the refracture wells which includes the reorientation fracture. The numerical simulation was conducted to validate the results of the analytical solution. Comparing the refracture well deliverability of reorientation and nonreorientation, permeability, deflection angle, and the length of reorientation fracture will jointly control the productivity of refracture well. When the permeability in the direction of maximum principal stress is greater than the permeability in the direction of minimum principal stress, the capacity of reorientation fractures is relatively large. The deflection angles and the length of the reorientation fracture will directly affect the drainage area of the fracture, thus affecting productivity. The reorientation fractures generated by repeated fracturing have great potential for improving oil deliverability in the anisotropic low-permeability reservoirs.


1979 ◽  
Vol 30 (5) ◽  
pp. 653 ◽  
Author(s):  
DS Kettle ◽  
EJ Reye ◽  
PB Edwards

In soil samples flooded for 18 h C. molestus larvae were scarce in the top 0.5 cm, most dense in 0.5-1.5 cm and most numerous in 1.5-8.5 cm depth. They were recovered from mean high water springs to mean tide level but were concentrated (87.6%) in a narrow zone above mean tide level and including mean high water neaps. There was no evidence that their distribution was influenced by remoteness from the main body of tidal water. Higher density fluids than normal, e.g. syrup, specific gravity > 1.3, were required to extract larvae of C. molestus.


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