Home

tidebreaks

Tidebreaks is a term encountered in some discussions of coastal and tidal dynamics to describe short-lived interruptions or reductions in the progression of a tidal wave or current within a coastal, estuarine, or harbor setting. The phrase is not standard in peer‑reviewed oceanography, and its exact meaning can vary by context.

In practice, tidebreaks may refer to one or more of the following phenomena: a temporary stagnation or

Detection and study of tidebreaks rely on time series data from tide gauges and current meters, as

See also: tide, tidal current, estuary dynamics, tidal bore, coastal engineering.

reversal
of
tidal
currents
caused
by
local
bathymetry
such
as
channels,
sills,
or
headlands;
a
phase
within
a
tidal
cycle
where
the
observed
water
level
change
slows
or
pauses
due
to
interference
between
tidal
constituents
or
resonance
with
the
local
bottom
topography;
or
disruptions
in
wave
coherence
in
situations
like
tidal
bores
or
variable
channel
depths
near
shore.
Human-made
structures
such
as
breakwaters,
sea
walls,
or
dredged
channels
can
also
produce
tidebreak-like
effects
by
altering
flow
paths
and
hydraulic
gradients.
well
as
hydrographic
surveys
and
numerical
models.
They
are
of
interest
in
navigation,
harbor
management,
sediment
transport,
and
the
design
of
tidal
energy
installations,
where
localized
reductions
in
flow
or
irregular
tidal
behavior
can
impact
operations.