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Thank you, Chris!If you mean the picture of the White Sea, it can be seen.
Quote from: Yusup Hizirov on 09/08/2018 16:06:32Thank you, Chris!If you mean the picture of the White Sea, it can be seen.I beg to differ! If it was totally obvious to me then I wouldn't have asked you for clarification!
How to explain the fact that in south-western Australia in the port of Fremantle, tides for half a year disappear..Once a year in the delta of the Northern Dvina, the tides mysteriously disappear for several days, sometimes for a week, and this is considered one of the mysteries of nature (the White Sea).
Answer:The water vortex disappears.
Quote from: Yusup Hizirov on 15/08/2018 15:36:07Answer:The water vortex disappears.Wrong answer
Quote from: Colin2B on 15/08/2018 18:17:06Quote from: Yusup Hizirov on 15/08/2018 15:36:07Answer:The water vortex disappears.Wrong answerAnd what disappears, ocean or gravity?
But until the tides stop corresponding to the position of the moon, nobody is going to believe any suggestion that the tides are not driven mainly by the moon.
Quote from: Bored chemist on 10/08/2018 18:13:18But until the tides stop corresponding to the position of the moon, nobody is going to believe any suggestion that the tides are not driven mainly by the moon.October 3, 1869, the amplitude of the tide in the Bay of Fundy was 5 meters.October 4, 1869 amplitude of the tide in the Bay of Fundy was 21 meters, once in the history of observation.For one day in the Bay of Fundy, the amplitude of the tides increased from 5 to 21 meters, 4 times.Question: What happened in the Bay of Fundy in one day (gravity, coastline or the inclination of the lunar orbit have changed).
Quote from: Yusup Hizirov on 21/08/2018 21:38:38Quote from: Bored chemist on 10/08/2018 18:13:18But until the tides stop corresponding to the position of the moon, nobody is going to believe any suggestion that the tides are not driven mainly by the moon. October 3, 1869, the amplitude of the tide in the Bay of Fundy was 5 meters.October 4, 1869 amplitude of the tide in the Bay of Fundy was 21 meters (Once in the history of observation).For one day in the Bay of Fundy, the amplitude of the tides increased from 5 to 21 meters, 4-fold.Question. What has changed in the Bay of Fundy in one day.1. Gravitation.2. The coastline3. Inclination of the moon.4. Rotational speed of the whirlpool.https://en.m.wikipedia.org/wiki/1869_Saxby_GaleHave you heard of weather?https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/North_Sea_flood_of_1953
Quote from: Bored chemist on 10/08/2018 18:13:18But until the tides stop corresponding to the position of the moon, nobody is going to believe any suggestion that the tides are not driven mainly by the moon. October 3, 1869, the amplitude of the tide in the Bay of Fundy was 5 meters.October 4, 1869 amplitude of the tide in the Bay of Fundy was 21 meters (Once in the history of observation).For one day in the Bay of Fundy, the amplitude of the tides increased from 5 to 21 meters, 4-fold.Question. What has changed in the Bay of Fundy in one day.1. Gravitation.2. The coastline3. Inclination of the moon.4. Rotational speed of the whirlpool.https://en.m.wikipedia.org/wiki/1869_Saxby_Gale
The amplitude of the tides does not increase the wind, the wind raises the sea level.
Air pressure actually leads to a slight change in sea level, but this does not affect the amplitude of the tides.
Air pressure in the UK has varied between about 950 to 1050 hPa so the range is about a metre.What's more interesting is when a bulge in the sea caused by air pressure is driven into a bay of some sort- that's when you get serious changes in water level.
I did not know this