Sound (geography)

From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

Jump to: navigation, search

Contents

Image:CurrituckSoundLiveOak.wmg.jpg
A live oak on Knotts Island, North Carolina overlooks the Currituck Sound.

In geography a sound is a large sea or ocean inlet larger than a bay, deeper than a bight, wider than a fjord, or it may identify a narrow sea or ocean channel between two bodies of land (see also strait).

There is little consistency in the use of 'sound' in English-language cartography.

Traditionally in northern European usage, the Sound is the Øresund, the strait that separates Denmark (the outermost Danish island being Sjælland) and Sweden, the narrow channel (2.5 miles or 4 kilometers wide) that connects the Kattegat with the Baltic Sea.

In the United States, Long Island Sound separates Long Island from the coast of Connecticut, but on the Atlantic Ocean side of Long Island, the body of water between the ocean and its barrier beaches is termed the Great South Bay. Pamlico Sound is a similar lagoon that lies between North Carolina and its barrier beaches, the Outer Banks, in a similar situation. The Mississippi Sound separates the Gulf of Mexico from the mainland along much of the gulf coasts of Mississippi and Alabama. On the West Coast, Puget Sound, by contrast, is a deep arm of the ocean.

A Sound is often formed by the sea flooding a river valley. This produces a long inlet where the sloping valley hillsides descend to sea-level and continue beneath the water to form a sloping sea floor. The Marlborough Sounds in New Zealand are a good example of this type of formation.

Sometimes a Sound is produced by a glacier carving out a valley on the coast then receding, or the sea invading a glacier valley. The glacier produces a sound that often has steep, near vertical, sides that extend deep under water. The sea floor is often flat and deeper at the landward end than the seaward end, due to glacial moraine deposits. This type of sound is more properly termed a fjord (or fiord). The sounds in Fiordland, New Zealand, have been formed this way.

A sound generally connotes a protected anchorage.


Image:Puget Sound from Space Needle High Rex.jpg
Puget Sound taken from the Space Needle.


[edit] Etymology

The word "sound" in this sense came from Anglo-Saxon or Old Norse sund, which also means "swimming"; it may have originally meant "sea strait narrow enough for a man to swim across".

[edit] Bodies of water called sounds

[edit] Australia

[edit] Bahamas

[edit] Bermuda

Great Sound towards the archipelago's southwest end

[edit] British Isles

Calf Sound between Isle of Man and the Calf of Man

[edit] British Virgin Islands

[edit] Canada

[edit] Cayman Islands

[edit] Falkland Islands

[edit] Mexico

[edit] New Zealand

[edit] Scandinavia

[edit] Solomon Islands

[edit] United States

[edit] United States Virgin Islands

de:Meerenge no:Sund (farvann)

Views
Personal tools

Toolbox