Meteotsunamis in the Great Lakes and Investigation into the May 27, 2012 Event on Lake Erie

Eric J Anderson, NOAA, Great Lakes Environmental Research Laboratory, Ann Arbor, MI, United States, Adam Bechle, University of Wisconsin - Madison, University of Wisconsin Sea Grant Institute, Madison, WI, United States, Chin H Wu, University of Wisconsin - Madison, Civil and Environmental Engineering, Madison, WI, United States, David J Schwab, University of Michigan, Water Center, Ann Arbor, MI, United States and Greg Mann, NOAA/NWS, WFO-Detroit, Detroit, MI, United States
Abstract:
Meteotsunami events have been documented in several countries around the world in the coastal ocean, semi-enclosed basins, and in the Great Lakes. In particular, investigations in the Great Lakes have raised the issue of dangers posed by enclosed basins due to the reflection and interaction of meteotsunami waves, in which the destructive waves can arrive several hours after the atmospheric disturbance has passed. This disassociation in time and space between the atmospheric disturbance and resultant meteotsunami wave can pose a significant threat to the public.

In a recent event on May 27, 2012, atmospheric conditions gave rise to two convective systems that generated a series of waves in the meteotsunami band on Lake Erie. The resulting waves swept three swimmers a half-mile offshore, inundated a marina, and may have led to a capsized boat along the southern shoreline. Examination of the observed conditions shows that these events occurred at a time between the arrivals of these two storm systems when atmospheric conditions were relatively calm but water level displacements were at their greatest.

In this work, we attempt to explain the processes that led to these conditions through a combination of atmospheric and hydrodynamic modeling and an analysis of the observed radial velocities associated with the meteotsunami-inducing front. Results from a high-resolution atmospheric model and hydrodynamic model reveal that the formation of these destructive waves resulted from a combination of wave reflection, focusing, and edge waves that impacted the southern shore of Lake Erie. This event illustrates the unique danger posed by temporal lags between the inducing atmospheric conditions and resulting dangerous nearshore wave conditions.