The tide
The rise and fall of the sea is known as the tide. The tides are caused by the moon's gravitational pull on earth. So, when the moon is facing a certain side of the earth, it literally pulls the water towards it.
The daily cycle of the rising and falling of the sea level is called the tide. The tide rises and falls about 4 times in 24 hours and the period in between cycles when the tide is neither rising or falling is called the slack tide.
The moon's gravitational pull affects tides. the tide will be high when the moon is visible because of its pull.
The daily rise and fall of the sea level at a particular coast is tidal. Tides are caused by the pull of the moon.
The predicted rise in sea level as a part of climate change is caused by the melting of ice caps and glaciers. Also as the oceans warm, they expand, and their level rises. Sea levels currently have slowed down to their lowest climb in several hundreds of years. Why the sea levels have not climbed as predicted is not know, but some do suggest it is due to the continued ice buildup in the Antarctic and the lack of predicted loss in many other portions of the world.
It Is Tide
(need it for bin weevils)
Because the moon's gravity pulls up the waves
the answer is nikka please get a hairline
That's called the tide.
moon
Tide
The tide
Tides are the rise and fall of ocean water. They are the combined effects of the gravitational forces exerted by the sun and moon on the rotation of the Earth.
The cyclical rise or fall of the waters of the ocean is called tide. The tides are caused by the attraction of gravities of the moon, sun, and Earth
The rise and fall of lake michigan's water, and any other lake or ocean is called a wake.
The cyclical rise or fall of the waters of the ocean is called tide. The tides are caused by the attraction of gravities of the moon, sun, and Earth
tides
tides
an area where rivers rise and fall with ocean tides
i think it is the tide
Tides
The rise and fall of the ocean's surface is called the tide. The tide is caused by the gravitational pull of the moon.
Tide.