Pregled bibliografske jedinice broj: 1249296
Sub-hourly sea level quality-controlled dataset to quantify extreme sea levels along the European coasts
Sub-hourly sea level quality-controlled dataset to quantify extreme sea levels along the European coasts // EGU General Assembly 2022
Beč, Austrija; online: Copernicus Publications, 2022. str. 1-1 doi:10.5194/egusphere-egu22-12063 (poster, recenziran, sažetak, znanstveni)
CROSBI ID: 1249296 Za ispravke kontaktirajte CROSBI podršku putem web obrasca
Naslov
Sub-hourly sea level quality-controlled dataset to
quantify extreme sea levels along the European
coasts
Autori
Balić, Marijana ; Šepić, Jadranka ; Ćatipović, Leon ; Čupić, Srđan ; Kim, Jihwan ; Međugorac, Iva ; Omira, Rachid ; Pellikka, Havu ; Ruić, Krešimir ; Vilibić, Ivica ; Zemunik, Petra
Vrsta, podvrsta i kategorija rada
Sažeci sa skupova, sažetak, znanstveni
Skup
EGU General Assembly 2022
Mjesto i datum
Beč, Austrija; online, 23.05.2022. - 27.05.2022
Vrsta sudjelovanja
Poster
Vrsta recenzije
Recenziran
Ključne riječi
sea level, extreme sea level, sub-hourly
Sažetak
Extreme sea levels can lead to floods that cause significant damage to coastal infrastructure and put people's lives in danger. These floods are a result of physical processes occurring at various time and space scales, including sub-hourly scales. To estimate the contribution of sub-hourly sea level oscillations to extreme sea levels, raw sea level data from about 300 tide gauge stations along the European coasts, with a sampling resolution of less than 20 minutes, were collected. The data were obtained from: (1) the IOC-SLSMF website (290 stations) ; (2) National agencies (Portugal, Finland, Croatia –24 stations). Portions of the raw dataset had various data quality issues (i.e., spikes, shifts, drifts) hence quality control procedure was required. Out of range values, values with a 50 cm difference from one neighbouring value or a 30 cm difference from both neighbouring values, were automatically removed. The automatic spike detection procedure was carried out by removing values that differed by three standard deviations from a spline fitted with the least squares method. Following the automatic quality control, all remaining data were visually examined and spurious data were removed manually. The resulting data set contains sea level data from 2007. to 2021., with an average record length of approximately 7 years, however the length varies from a few months at some stations to 13 years at others. Tide gauges with longer records (>10 years) are based in the Baltic region, France and Spain, whereas the ones with shorter records (<3 years) are mostly based in the Eastern Mediterranean. The Western Mediterranean and western Europe have a high station coverage with records of various lengths. Tide gauges mostly provide data with a one-minute sampling frequency, however, some of them still record on a multi- minute scale (i.e., United Kingdom with 15 minutes and Norway and the Netherlands with 10 minutes sampling frequency). Preliminary statistical analyses were done, resulting with spatial and temporal distribution of contribution of high-frequency sea level oscillations to total sea level extremes along the European coasts.
Izvorni jezik
Engleski
POVEZANOST RADA
Profili:
Leon Ćatipović
(autor)
Ivica Vilibić
(autor)
Jadranka Šepić
(autor)
Iva Međugorac
(autor)
Krešimir Ruić
(autor)
Marijana Balić
(autor)
Petra Zemunik
(autor)