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Whipped Cream Ocean in Australia...is this true?

 
 
mismi
 
Reply Tue 27 Nov, 2007 01:12 pm
Whipped Cream Ocean

Can anyone tell me (Dutchy?) is this true? Unbelievable amounts of foam! I have never seen anything like it! (pictures - see link)

Whipped Cream Ocean

Suddenly the shoreline north of Sydney were transfromed into the Cappuccino Coast. Foam swallowed an entire beach and half of the nearby buildings, including the local lifeguards' centre, in a freak display of nature at Yamba in New South Wales. One minute a group of teenage surfers were waiting to catch a wave, the next they were swallowed up in a giant bubble bath. The foam was so light that they could puff it out of their hands and watch it float away.



Boy in the bubble bath: Tom Woods, 12 emerges from the clouds of foam after deciding that surfing was not an option. It stretched for 30 miles out into the Pacific in a phenomenon not seen at the beach for more than three decades. Scientists explain that the foam is created by impurities in the ocean, such as salts, chemicals, dead plants, decomposed fish and excretions from seaweed. All are churned up together by powerful currents which cause the water to form bubbles. These bubbles stick to each other as they are carried below the surface by the current towards the shore. As a wave starts to form on the surface, the motion of the water causes the bubbles to swirl upwards and, massed together, they become foam. The foam "surfs" towards shore until the wave "crashes," tossing the foam into the air.



Whitewash: The foam was so thick it came all the way up to the surf club. "It's the same effect you get when you whip up a milkshake in a blender," explains a marine expert. "The more powerful the swirl, the more foam you create on the surface and the lighter it becomes." In this case, storms off the New South Wales Coast and further north off Queensland had created a huge disturbance in the ocean, hitting a stretch of water where there was a particularly high amount of the substances which form into bubbles. As for 12-year-old beachgoer Tom Woods, who has been surfing since he was two, riding a wave was out of the question. "Me and my mates just spent the afternoon leaping about in that stuff," he said. "It was quite cool to touch and it was really weird. It was like clouds of air -you could hardly feel it."
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contrex
 
  1  
Reply Tue 27 Nov, 2007 01:43 pm
I have seen this in Spain.
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dadpad
 
  1  
Reply Tue 27 Nov, 2007 03:25 pm
I've seen similar in rivers around here. Nothing on that scale though. Many eucalypt leaves contain a compound that will cause foam. The phenomena is common, although not to the extent shown, after an extended dry period followed by major rain fall.
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Dutchy
 
  1  
Reply Tue 27 Nov, 2007 04:32 pm
I have never seen the phenomena described in your article mismi40 but can verify it is true! http://viv.id.au/blog/?p=871

Sydney is on the east coast of Australia and I live on the south coast. Have witnessed foam on top of the waves here extending out to sea for a couple of hundreds yards but not anything like that as shown on the photographs off the coast of New South Wales.
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mismi
 
  1  
Reply Tue 27 Nov, 2007 04:39 pm
I have seen foam at the Gulf (of Mexico) at Gulf Shores but nothing near this extent...we are talking little tufts of foam here and there! That is just flooring to me to see that much foam!

Thank contrex, dadpad and Dutchy! :wink: 'preciate the verification.
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vikorr
 
  1  
Reply Fri 21 Dec, 2007 04:50 pm
That photo is real. It happened sometime over the last two years, but I can't remember exactly when or where.

I remember the photo being published in my local paper. I've personally seen similar looking foam, but only about a half foot deep.
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Builder
 
  1  
Reply Wed 9 Jan, 2008 10:02 pm
I happilly played in the foam a week ago. It covered the whole beach in places, and was deep enough to cover us completely.

I heard that this happens when the ocean is full of coral spawn, which usually has quite an odour, and the massive swells we had churned the stuff into foam.

Gross. Confused
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Montana
 
  1  
Reply Wed 9 Jan, 2008 10:08 pm
I've even seen that kind of foam here on the coast, but nothing to that extent Shocked
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