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Tides in the Bay of Fundy
The following activities will focus on tides and what causes them with a focus on the unusually high tides in the Bay of Fundy.
You may need to refresh your understanding of tides and
what causes them. Please open the site with the time lapse photography
of tides in the Bay
of Fundy and read the associated text. Also view the two images
located farther down the page. You can enlarge the images by clicking
on them. To return to the original location just use the back button
of the browser.
The sun, moon, and Earth exert a gravitational pull on each other. The pull of the sun is much greater than that of the moon because of its enormous size. However because the moon is much closer to the Earth, it actually exerts a greater gravitational pull on the Earth. The gravitational pull of the moon draws the water toward it. This causes the water to bulge. This bulge is called high tide. The moon also pulls the Earth towards it. This then causes another bulge, another high tide, on the opposite side of the Earth. Question 1 Please view the animated image that shows the relationship of the Earth, moon, and sun on tides. Pay special attention to where and when spring and neap tides occur. Why do you think the Spring tides are higher than the neap tides? Base your answer on the image you viewed. After you have written your opinion/hypothesis use the following sites to investigate and determine whether or not you were correct. http://www.sfgate.com/getoutside/1996/jun/tides.html http://fox.nstn.ca/~freshair/tides.html http://fox.nstn.ca/~carp/fundis2.html
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