Tides are the same, but the same type of tide could or could not be happening in another place.
No. Tides vary depending on the position of the moon and any weather system that might create a change in the size of the tides.
Yes.
You only get high tides along ocean coastlines.
The sun and the moon's gravity pull in the same direction .
Tides are a global phenomenon. Any place with an ocean shore all over the world will see the same number of tides. The size of the nearest ocean, and the shape of the coastline will determine the height of the tides. Some places, it's hardly worth mentioning.
dogs
They are both affected by the moons gravitional pull, but from different extremes.
All coastlines in existence constantly erode as a product of the tides slowly destroying them by fractional increments.
high waves thrashing and large sea levels.
You only get high tides along ocean coastlines.
Tides are the rise and fall of the sea level caused by the combined effects of the gravitational forces exerted by the Moon and the Sun and the rotation of the Earth. The heights of tides vary from seasons to seasons. So no, they are not all the same.
If there were no tides, Earth wouldn't be the same
Yes, Aruba has Caribbean coastlines.Specifically, Aruba is an island in the southernmost Caribbean Sea. Coastlines therefore make up all of Aruba's borders. All of the coastlines front the Caribbean.
same
Twice a day. Same as high tides.
Yes, in fact there are coastlines all around the country except at the south where it borders England.
Not really. The major influence on the magnitude of the tides is topography; the arrangement of the seafloor and coastlines. So there are higher tides in places like the Bay of Fundy (between Canada and Maine) or in the Bristol channel on the west coast of England.
The sun and the moon's gravity pull in the same direction .
No