Variations of Connecticut River Water Pathways and Its Water Age: A Coupled Modeling Study

Yan Jia and Michael M Whitney, University of Connecticut, Marine Sciences, Groton, CT, United States
Abstract:
As the largest freshwater source to the east-west oriented Long Island Sound (LIS), the Connecticut River (CR) delivers water on the north shore near the sound’s mouth. The pathways the river water follows through LIS are impacted by river discharge, tides, winds, and complex topography. Using the Coupled-Ocean-Atmosphere-Wave-Sediment Transport (COAWST) Modeling System, with passive dyes and age tracers, the main routes of CR water through the estuary and onto the shelf are determined with their corresponding time scales.

During a high discharge period, the CR plume occupies the northern half of eastern LIS and extends farther west than during average discharge conditions. Most of the river water inside the central LIS is transported through this surface plume. After being mixed to deeper depths and farther offshore, the river water that is still within LIS is transported westward. During periods of low discharge, freshwater is initially more prevalent between the CR and the LIS mouth. Later, CR water mixed to depths still moves westward, reaching the estuary’s head in approximately 3 weeks. Neap tide allows more CR water to quickly escape to the open shelf through Block Island Sound (BIS) while spring tide allows more CR water back into the central LIS at depth.

BIS has a uniform water age ranging from 40 to 50 days throughout the water column. Lower discharge leads to older age in BIS. In western LIS, CR water age at depth increases from 50 to 75 days as discharge decreases and is several days younger than water closer to the surface. These results suggest a bottom-in/surface-out transport pattern exists for CR water in LIS for at least part of the year.