When the moon tugs at the tides here in Cook Inlet, Alaska, a gravitational event known as a bore tide occurs, pushing waves up against the current and creating a watery playground for stand-up paddleboarders. The bore tide here in Turnagain Arm, near Anchorage, is one of the biggest in the world, sometimes creating waves 10 feet tall. The biggest waves occur after an extremely low tide, as that’s when the largest amount of seawater comes rushing back into the narrow bay. Surf’s up, Alaskans!
Riding the bore tide at Turnagain Arm, Cook Inlet, Alaska
Today in History
More Desktop Wallpapers:
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Celebrating Yi Peng
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75th anniversary of the Spruce Goose
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National Moth Week
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Bridge of Hillsborough County
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Rock River Falls, Upper Peninsula, Michigan
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Womens History Month
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Vietnam’s new bridge deserves a big hand
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Native American Heritage Day
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World Penguin Day
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Cedar Mesa, Utah, for Indigenous Peoples Day
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Happy St. Patrick’s Day!
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I am the walrus
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I ll call for pen and ink
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A traboule in Lyon, France
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Celebrating all things Austen
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Celebrating women in science
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Fiddlehead fern fronds
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Memorial Day
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A fortress in the sky
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Native American Heritage Month
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On this shore, history was made
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Bay Marker Lookout, Sydney Olympic Park, Australia
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Sea Otter Awareness Week
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Longtailed widowbird at Rietvlei Nature Reserve, South Africa
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Autumn’s swan song
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North Cascades National Park at 50
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‘The mountains are calling’
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The crossroads of empires
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Kendwa village, Zanzibar, Tanzania
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Native American Heritage Month
Bing Wallpaper Gallery

