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Feb ’79 Portland flood Huge Atlantic swell
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by Philip Eden
Sea conditions are the product of the behaviour of the wind, not just in the immediate vicinity, but also at a distance – sometimes a great distance – from your location. Those wave trains generated by a storm maybe half an ocean away are known as swell.
There was damage elsewhere along the English Channel coast. Vessels were torn from their moorings, sea walls damaged, and breaches of sea-defences were also reported in France, Spain and Portugal. Subsequent analysis showed that this unprecedentedly powerful swell was generated by high winds in the circulation of an intense depression which was centred near Newfoundland three days earlier. The longer the wave period (that is, the time between each passing crest) the faster the waves travel; on this occasion the Atlantic depression travelled at about the same speed and in the same direction as the long-period swell, and therefore continued to add energy to the swell system. Although the depression was weakening by the morning of the 13th, a data buoy in the Southwest Approaches registered swell waves 7 to 8m high with a period of 18 seconds. So, watching the Shipping Forecast does not tell the weekend sailor everything he needs to know. Powerful swells may seem to arrive from nowhere, but as we have seen they always come from somewhere. |
