- Tidal range
The tidal range is the vertical difference between the highest
high tide and the lowestlow tide . In other words, it is the difference in height between high and low tides. The most extreme tidal range will occur around the time of the full ornew moon s, when gravity of both theSun andMoon are pulling the same way (new moon ), or exact opposite way (full). This type of tide is known as aspring tide . Duringneap tide s, when the Moon and Sun's vectors make a right angle at theEarth , the difference between high and low tides is smaller. Neap tides occur during the firsts and lasts quarter moons.Geography
The typical tidal range in the open ocean is about 0.6 meters (2 feet). As you get closer to the coast, however, this range gets much greater. Coastal tidal ranges vary globally and can differ anywhere from 1.8 meters to 3 meters (6–10 feet). The world's biggest tidal differential occurs in the
Bay of Fundy inEastern Canada , where the sea level changes by up to 17 meters (55 feet) during the day.Ungava Bay in NorthernQuebec , north easternCanada , is believed by some experts to have higher tidal ranges than the Bay of Fundy (about 17 metres or 56 ft), but it is free ofpack ice for only about four months every year, whereas the Bay of Fundy rarely freezes. What is generally regarded as the next highest tidal range occurs in theBristol Channel in theUK , where sea levels change by some 15 meters (49 feet). The smallest tidal ranges occur in the Mediterranean, Baltic, andCaribbean Sea s. A point within a tidal system where the tidal range is almost zero is called anamphidromic point .See also
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Tide External links
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