Angele
Well-Known Member
That's very interesting - thanks.
I understand the blue tidal-range contours, but what are the red time ones saying?
Pete
Time of high water at springs (I think).
That's very interesting - thanks.
I understand the blue tidal-range contours, but what are the red time ones saying?
Pete
The red lines join points where high water occurs at the same time. It came from the French Bloc Marine Almanac.
I realise that, but I couldn't work out what the numbers on them meant.
Since it's French, perhaps it's hours after high water La Rochelle or somewhere similar? Is that the French equivalent to Dover as a reference?
Pete
Post #21.![]()
I found an explanation here: http://www.incois.gov.in/Tutor/IntroOc/notes/figures/fig11a5.html but it doesn't say what M2 isOh - as in 11h means 1100, 11am? I didn't think of that, I guess it's a more French way of writing it. I took it to mean "11 hours", and wondered "11 hours from when?"
Thanks.
Pete
I found an explanation here: http://www.incois.gov.in/Tutor/IntroOc/notes/figures/fig11a5.html but it doesn't say what M2 is
"...Red lines are co-phase lines of the M2 tide, labelled in hours after the moon's transit through the meridian of Greenwich. (There are thus only 25 minutes between the co-phase lines labelled 12 and 0.)..."
.... hours after the moon's transit through the meridian of Greenwich.
"Hours after ..... meridian of Greenwich". Just another way of saying "time".
Yes, but only useful if you know when the moon passes over Greenwich, which I don't.
It's obvious from the beginning that the red lines are something to do with time; we're trying to establish exactly what they mean.
Pete
At springs the moon, the Earth and the Sun are in line.