Hurricane Sandy has created
three open breaches in the
barrier island system along the
south shore of Long Island, N.Y. In response, the
National Park Service has sought assistance from the
U.S. Geological Survey (USGS) New York Water Science Center (NYWSC) to help evaluate the open breach condition in Federal Wilderness near the Old Inlet area of Fire Island National Seashore, N.Y. The NYWSC evaluation is initially focusing on two activities:
measurement of water velocities and depths within the Wilderness breach, and collection of water levels within Great South Bay (GSB) adjacent to the breach.
Measurement of water velocities and depths within the Wilderness breach is being done with a Sontek
1 M9 acoustic Doppler current profiler and an Oceanscience
1 remotely operated Q-boat 1800P. Water velocities are being collected at a rate of 3.0 and/or 1.0 MHz depending on flow conditions with an accuracy of 0.25% of measured velocity and resolution of 0.001 m/s; water depths are being collected at the same frequency as velocity with a vertical accuracy of 1% and resolution of 0.001 m. Approximately 3 to 5 sections perpendicular to the channel axis are being collected within the breach and geo-referenced using Real Time Kinematic Global Positioning System (RTK GPS) mapping. Another section is being collected perpendicular to the flood tidal channel(s) bayward of the former GSB shoreline. An additional section is being collected roughly parallel and seaward of the former ocean shoreline, as conditions permit. For each deployment, these sections are being measured once during the last 2-3 hours of the incoming ocean tide and a second time during the last 2-3 hours of the outgoing ocean tide. Velocity and
depth measurements are being imported into a geographic information system (GIS) and exported as one or more geo-referenced shapefiles. Instantaneous discharge also is being computed from at least one of the breach sections for
incoming and
outgoing tide conditions.
Collection of water levels within GSB adjacent to the breach generally is being be done with a modified USGS storm-tide sensor. This sensor, which normally collects 7 days of 30-second-interval data, has been reprogrammed to collect about 2 months of routine (6-minute-interval) tide-gage observations. In most cases, two sensors were installed to help ensure that at least one would remain fully operational through the planned, 2-month deployment.