Fort Minor The Rising Tide Zip
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The phases of the moon correspond directly to the tides and the amount of water rushing to and from the sea. When the moon is full, there is an increased amount of tidal water that comes in during the rising tide. Extra water can be great if you're an angler who's looking to land a big one.
Many professional and recreational users of tide and tidal current information have a "rule of thumb" to assume a relationship between the times of high/low tides and the times of the currents: that the times of slack water will be at the same time as the high and low tides, and that the flood and ebb current will occur between the high and low tides. Unfortunately, this assumed "rule of thumb" does not hold for most locations.
True tides, changes in water level caused by the gravitational forces of the sun and moon, do occur in a semi-diurnal pattern on the Great Lakes. The investigations of the U.S. Coast and Geodetic Survey indicate that the spring tide, the largest tides caused by the combined forces of the sun and moon, is less than 2 inches (5 cm) in height. These minor variations are masked by the greater fluctuations in lake levels produced by wind and barometric pressure changes. Consequently, the Great Lakes are considered to be non-tidal.
High-tide flooding impedes the use of roads and increases wear and tear on stormwater and wastewater systems. The impact can seem minor, but as the frequency increases, these seemingly inconvenient flood days can have long-lasting impacts.
He is watching the Sisters, as always. Like the fools who live in this foolish town, the fools of San Tortuga, he is convinced that the Sisters hold the key to the secret of the turtles, the secret of why, early every summer, hundreds, thousands of giant sea turtles crawl out of the ocean, crawl up the beach beyond the high-tide mark, and lie in the sun to die. Each day the Sisters, the three naked Oriental women, move among the turtles, touch them, caress their shells, stroke their thickskinned, sagging telescope heads. They go out into the surf to guide the incoming turtles, they frolic among them in the foam of the sea and catch in their cupped hands the tiny waterfalls that rush from the backs of the rising turtles. 2b1af7f3a8