Phenomena

Fish-Scale Tides

On 31 July 2022, an unusual tidal phenomenon, a fish-scale tide, took place on the Qiantang River’s estuary in Zhejiang Province, China. Here are a couple videos. I’ve not found any explanations for it thus far, so I’m assembling my own. The Qiantang River and its estuary, Hangzhou Bay, are home to the world’s largest tidal bores, reaching 9 meters in places. That means the area regularly sees trains of large waves moving upstream against the normal current.

The area is also known to have rotating currents, meaning that the tide does not simply move inland and then smoothly reverse direction. Instead, a rotating current can change its direction of flow over the course of a tidal cycle without changing its speed. Taken together, this makes the Qiantang River region perfect for winding up with groups of waves colliding at oblique angles, similar to a cross sea. I believe that’s what’s going on here with the fish-scale tide. Two sets of tidal-bore-induced waves are colliding at an angle, creating some gnarly conditions and a very cool pattern. (Image credit: VCG; submitted by Antony B.)

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