A | B |
tsunami | a huge wave caused by an underwater earthquake or volcano |
temperate | areas of Earth that have seasons with different ranges of temperatures; cold or mild winters and hot or warm summers |
inlet | narrow strip of water going into land; a small bay |
crest | The peak (top) of a wave. |
spring tide | higher than usual tide that occurs during the full moon and new moon phases as a result of the sun, moon, and earth being in a straight line |
trough | The bottom part of the wave |
neap tide | A lower high tide that occurs when the sun pulls on the Earth at right angles to |
fetch | the distance over which a wave travels |
wavelength | The horizontal distance from one wave crest to another wave crest. |
generated | produced or made by a physical or chemical change |
shallow | not deep; something that is not very deep (as in water) |
tides | The periodic rise and fall of the sea level under the gravitational pull of the |
bulge | A part that extends |
gravitational | an adjective describing the force by which any two bodies attract each other |
energy | waves are caused by the transfer of this from the wind to the water |
equatorial | existing near or relating to the equator; warm all year round |
climate | The weather in some location averaged over some long period of time. |