Page values for "Glossary:Slack water"
From Indian River Lagoon Project
"definition" values
1 row is stored for this pageTerm | slack water |
Definition | The state of a tidal current when its speed is near zero, especially the moment when a reversing current changes direction and its speed is zero. The term also is applied to the entire period of low speed near the time of turning of the current when it is too weak to be of any practical importance in navigation. The relation of the time of slack water to the tidal phases varies in different localities. For a perfect standing tidal wave, slack water occurs at the time of high and of low water, while for a perfect progressive tidal wave, slack water occurs midway between high and low water. See slack; ebb begins and slack; flood begins. |
SourceURL | https://shoreline.noaa.gov/glossary.html |
Type | noun |
Poster | Admin |
Postdate | 20191106102512 |
TermID | 20191106102512 |