Bay of Fundy
The largest tides are in the Bay Of Fundy, with differences of as much as 48 feet between high and low tide
they swim to the bottom of the water in high tides\
The highest tides in the world are found in the Bay of Fundy, located between the provinces of New Brunswick and Nova Scotia in Canada. The tides in the Bay of Fundy can reach heights of over 50 feet (15 meters) during extreme variations.
Bay of Fundy
The highest tides in the world are found in Canada at the Bay of Fundy. During high tide, the difference between low and high tide can be as much as 53.5 feet.
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bay of fundy
The Bay of Fundy
The Bay of Fundy, in Eastern Canada, has the highest tidal range in the world, equalled only by Leaf Basin for Ungava Bay, north of Quebec. This means that the distance between high and low tide is 17 meters (55 feet). Why? Tides rise and fall from the gravitational pull of the moon and the sun. Every full moon and every new moon (that is, about every two weeks) the moon and the sun are in a line on one side of the earth. This produces spring tides (very high and very low). One week later we have neap tides, (not very high and not very low). Another factor might be the slope of the seabed and the funnelling effect of the bay.
Everywhere. Tides provide renewable energy all over the world. This energy is only captured in a few places, usually where there is a bay or a river mouth that forces the water to move at a high speed.
The highest and lowest tides occur in the Bay of Fundy off the coast of Nova Scotia. The tides range from 55 to nearly 60 feet between high and low tides. A tide of 71 fee was reached during a gale in 1869.