Like many urban harbors, San Diego's modern bayfront in no way follows the original shoreline of mud flats, salt pans, low energy beaches, and estuarine marsh, having been dredged and filled into new shapes that make building ports, developing land easier, and parking aircraft carriers easier. The resulting edge is steep and extends into deeper water, so the reclaimed land will erode if left to its own.
Puget Sound Beaches ... not really just gravel, but sand, broken shell, and occasionally a boulder the size of a large truck.
Saturday, November 16, 2013
San Diego Bay
Like many urban harbors, San Diego's modern bayfront in no way follows the original shoreline of mud flats, salt pans, low energy beaches, and estuarine marsh, having been dredged and filled into new shapes that make building ports, developing land easier, and parking aircraft carriers easier. The resulting edge is steep and extends into deeper water, so the reclaimed land will erode if left to its own.
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