Estuary
coastal feature
estuary, partly enclosed coastal body of water in which river water is mixed with seawater. In a general sense, the estuarine environment is defined by salinity boundaries rather than by geographic boundaries. The term estuary is derived from the Latin words aestus (“the tide”) and aestuo (“boil”), indicating the effect generated when tidal flow and river flow meet.
Estuaries are places where rivers meet the sea and may be defined as areas where salt water is measurably diluted with fresh water. On average, estuaries are biologically more productive than either the adjacent river or the sea, because they have a special kind of water circulation that traps plant nutrients and stimulates primary production. Fresh water, being lighter than salt water, tends to form a distinct layer that floats at the surface of the estuary. At the boundary between fresh and salt water, there is a certain amount of mixing caused by the flow of fresh water over salt and by the ebb and flow of tides. Additional mixing may be caused from time to time by strong winds and by internal waves that are propagated along the interface between fresh and salt water.
Many coastal features that are designated by other names are in fact estuaries. For example, various coastal embayments, such as Chesapeake Bay and Galveston Bay in the United States, also are estuaries, because fresh and salt water undergo considerable mixing. Moreover, most of the world’s submerged fjord systems (such as Scoresby Sund, Greenland) and large semi-enclosed tidal flat regions and coastal marshes (such as the Waddenzee area of The Netherlands) are estuaries. In addition, estuaries include river mouths (as in the case of the Mississippi River, Louisiana), structural basins (San Francisco Bay, California), and the bodies of water behind spits (Hurst Castle spit, England) and barrier beaches (Ninety Mile Beach, Australia). In the case of spits and barrier beaches, the definitions of lagoons and estuaries overlap.
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