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Dried up.


Residents of Venice, Italy, rely on boats to navigate the city's crisscrossing canals. Last January, many of these gondolas were grounded when the canals' water levels dropped to the lowest depths in over a decade. Why the dip? A period of fair weather overlapped with a special time in the moon's orbit.

Every day, the water levels on Earth's shores rise and fall in tides because of gravity from the moon and sun. Because the moon is closest to Earth, its pulling force is stronger than the sun's. As the moon revolves around Earth, it tugs on the oceans, causing a watery wa·ter·y
adj.
1. Filled with, consisting of, or soaked with water; wet or soggy.

2. Secreting or discharging water or watery fluid, especially as a symptom of disease.
 bulge Bulge

A slang term used to describe a rapid advance in prices within the commodities market.

Notes:
A bulge is similar to a rally on equity exchanges.
See also: At The Market, Bear, Break, Bull, Buoyant, Congestion, Rally



Bulge
. Coasts that lie in the bulged area experience high water levels, or high tides. Coasts in bulge-free zones, however, get low tides.

On January 10, the moon's pull was stronger than usual because it was in perigee perigee (pĕr`ĭjē), point nearest the earth in the orbit of a body about the earth. See apsis.


See apogee.
, or the point in its orbit when it is closest to Earth. In addition, the sun and the moon were lined up, pulling in the same direction (see diagram, below). This heavy tug caused a higher-than-normal watery bulge and a bulge-free zone with superlow water levels. That situation is a spring tide.

Combined with the good weather, the low spring tide caused the water in Venitian canals to plunge 90 centimeters (35 inches) below the average level. Pierpaolo Camposrini of CORILA a research group studying the Venice lagoon lagoon

Area of relatively shallow, quiet water with access to the sea but separated from it by sandbars, barrier islands, or coral reefs. Coastal lagoons have low to moderate tides and constitute about 13% of the world's coastline.
 system, says: "Areas of the city became inaccessible inaccessible Surgery adjective Unreachable; referring to a lesion that unmanageable by standard surgical techniques–eg, lesions deep in the brain or adjacent to vital structures–ie, not accessible. See Accessible.  to larger boats."
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Title Annotation:Earth/Tides
Author:Norlander, Britt
Publication:Science World
Geographic Code:4EUIT
Date:Mar 28, 2005
Words:239
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