The difference between "coastline" and tidal shoreline."
Coastline is defined as "ocean front"
Tidal shoreline is any water affected by tides. Such as sounds, bays,
coves, or some rivers such as the St. Johns which has tidal effect from its
headwaters (minimal) to the mouth (3-7 feet depending on moon and winds.).
If you wish to see a bit of the St. Johns. feel free to visit my website.
--
Capt. Frank
__c
\ _ | \_
__\_| oooo \_____
~~~~|______________/ ~~~~~
www.home.earthlink.net/~aartworks
"JGK" wrote in message
...
I started thinking about this and found another site:
http://www.flausa-media.com/Subcateg...%20Pages/ffrec
fct.htm
this is their facts:
Sand beaches, a Florida signature, account for 1,100 miles (1,770 km) of
the
state's 1,800 miles (2,898 km) of coastline. Actually, Florida has more
than
8,460 miles (13,620 km) of tidal shoreline, second only to Alaska in
that
category
Ok my question: What is the difference between "coastline" and "tidal
Shoreline"?
wrote in message
...
On Sat, 13 Mar 2004 22:22:50 -0500, "JGK"
wrote:
Don't know if the Keys are included...might just be the main land.
Coast Line of Florida
Atlantic Coast 399 Miles
Gulf Coast 798 Miles
Total Coast Line 1,197 miles
http://www.fhp.state.fl.us/html/floridafacts.html
Thanks for the info. I thought that Fla. might have even more than
that,
but, I think Fla's coastline is relatively straight. I just found out
on
the WWW that our neighbor, Maine, has a lot more miles of coastline:
"Maine's coastline is long, craggy and has many inlets. What looks
like
228
miles on a map, is 3,478 miles of tidal coastline in reality,
including
the
offshore islands."