Estuaries
an estuary
dont no sorry bye
When saltwater meets and mixes with freshwater it is an estuary.
An estuary (what I believe you meant to ask about) is a partially enclosed body of water where freshwater meets and mixes with saltwater, such as a river meeting a sea.
The Mouth Of the River
lakes aren't connected to the ocean directly. Rivers may sometimes connect the two, but where the freshwater meets the saltwater it's then called brackish water.
estuary.
No, the Florida Everglades is a unique ecosystem known as a "river of grass" due to its slow-moving water flow and abundant vegetation. It is classified as a freshwater peatland marsh, not an estuary which is typically a semi-enclosed coastal body of water where freshwater from rivers meets and mixes with saltwater from the sea.
Coasts, by their very nature, do not have fresh water. A coastline is where the land meets the sea. However, along the southern coast of South Australia, east of the mouth of the Murray River, is a region known as the Coorong. Once known for both its saltwater and freshwater lagoons, the area is now predominantly saltwater.
An estuary is typically found where a river meets the sea, creating a unique habitat with a mixture of fresh and saltwater. Estuaries can be located along coastlines around the world.
The River Severn is technically neither a delta nor an estuary. The River Severn is a tidal river that flows into the Bristol Channel. It has characteristics of both a river and an estuary, where the freshwater river meets the saltwater of the sea.
When a river meets the sea and becomes influenced by tides, it is known as an estuary. Estuaries are transitional zones where freshwater from rivers mixes with saltwater from the sea, resulting in unique ecosystems that support diverse plants and animals.