- Arcachon Bay
Arcachon Bay, in French the Bassin d'Arcachon (the locals just call "le Bassin"), is a bay of the
Atlantic Ocean on thesouthwest sea shore ofFrance , situated as alandmark between theCôte d'Argent and theCôte des Landes , in the region ofAquitaine . The bay covers an area of 150 km² at hightide and 40 km² at low tide. Some of its geological features are natural preservation areas.The general shape of the Bassin d'Arcachon is that of an equilateral triangle pointing north, the southwest corner of which is opened and the access from the sea, between Cape Ferret and the town of
Arcachon (more specifically, its suburb Pyla-sur-Mer), through a 3 Km narrow channel (Les Passes). On the north shore is the town of Arès, thenAndernos-les-Bains on the northeast. Just south of the entrance isThe Great Dune of Pyla . Nearly in the middle of the bay is a very particular island: L'île aux Oiseaux (birds island).It is perhaps due to the Leyre river that runs water from the
Landes forest and has its mouth (Delta de l'Eyre) in its southeast corner, that the Bassin still has a link to the sea, which would otherwise be obstructed by the sandbanks brought about by the tides.For long ago, similar areas became lakes (called in French "lacs" or "étangs") nowadays filled with fresh water; from north (the
Gironde mouth) to south (theAdour river mouth), are the Lac d'Hourtin-Carcans, the Lac de Lacanau, the Étang de Cazaux et de Sanguinet, the Étang deBiscarrosse et de Parentis, the Étang d'Aureilhan, the Étang de Léon, the Étang de Soustons, the Étang Hardy, the Étang Blanc and the Étang de Garros. Arcachon Bay is the last water area that remains wide opened to the ocean.
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