Sec. 48.19 



WIND-WAVE AND SHIP-WAVE DATA 



185 



(56) "Ships and Waves," Proc. First Conf. on Ships and 

 Waves, Oct 1954, publ. by Council on Wave 

 Research and SNAME, 1955. 



48.19 Bibliography on Subsurface Waves. For 



the reader who wishes to pursue the study of 

 surface waves and the Hall Effect beyond the 

 brief discussion of Sec. 10.20, the following refer- 

 ences are available: 



(1) Lamb, H., liD, 1945, pp. 370-375; "On Waves due to 



a Travelling Disturbance, with an Application to 

 Waves in Superposed Fluids," Phil. Mag. (6), 

 1916, Vol. 31, p. 3S6ff 



(2) Froude, W., "Remarks on the Differential Wave in a 



Stratified Fluid," INA, 1863, Vol. 4, pp. 216-218 



(3) Stokes, G. G., Trans. Cambr. Phil. Soc., 1842-1849, 



Vol. 8, pp. 451-452 



(4) "The Mariner's Mirror," Apr 1943, Vol. 29, pp. 73-74 



(5) Eckman, V. W., "On Dead- Water," Norweg. North 



Pole Exp., 1893-1896, Sci. Results, Vol. V, Part XV, 

 Christiania (Oslo), 1906 



(6) Bjerknes, V., Solberg, H., Bjerknes, J., and Bergeron, 



T., "Physikalische Hydrodynamik mit Anwendung 

 auf die dynamische Meteorologie (Physical Hydro- 

 dynamics as Applied to Dynamic Meteorology)," 

 Springer, Berlin, 1933, and Edwards Bros., Ann 

 Arbor, 1943, pp. 387-391. This reference gives a 

 table of the maximum velocity of subsurface waves, 

 depending upon the thickness of the upper (lighter- 

 density) layer, and its sahnity content. 



(7) Milne-Thomson, L. M., TH, 1950, Art. 14.42, pp. 



367-368, entitled "Waves at an Interface" 



(8) Ippen, A. T., and Harlemen, D. R. F., "Steady-State 



Characteristics of Subsurface Flow," NBS Circ. 521, 

 June 1951 



(9) Sverdrup, H. U., Johnson, M. W., and Fleming, R. H., 



"The Oceans: Their Physics, Chemistry and 

 General Biology," Prentice-Hall, New York, 1952, 

 pp. 585-602, on "Internal Waves." 



