Those would be oceanographers.
A Hydrologist studies the movement, distribution, and quality of water on Earth and an Oceanographer studies the ocean, either of whom might find themselves contributing to studies of waves and currents.
An oceanographer.
A Oceanographer. We study waves and currents, geology, chemistry and Biology.
Physical oceanography is the special area of oceanography that deals with currents and waves. It is the study of physical attributes of the ocean.
The category of oceanographer called a physical oceanographer
Oceanography.
waves and currents make the shore bigger
Charles B. Chesnutt has written: 'Laboratory effects in beach studies' -- subject(s): Water waves, Ocean currents 'Scour of simulated Gulf Coast sand beaches due to wave action in front of sea walls and dune barriers' -- subject(s): Scour (Hydraulic engineering), Ocean waves, Sea-walls 'Laboratory effects in beach studies' -- subject(s): Water waves, Ocean currents 'Laboratory effects in beach studies' -- subject(s): Water waves
It has to be Lotic, because of waves and currents.
Currents are a small source of water moving and waves are a bigger source of water moving. The waves are control (more or less made) by the wind where as the waves control and create the currents which is pretty strange. Currents are the one associated with the movement of water where as Waves carry only Energy i.e. NO mass transport
The concept of waves influences ocean currents by transferring energy and momentum. Waves can cause surface currents to form, which can affect the movement of water in the ocean. The interaction between waves and currents can impact the behavior of ocean circulation patterns.
you get waves not tidal waves or tsunami's! You just get waves. how big they get would depend on air currents and storms