Great Egg Harbor Inlet

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Great Egg Harbor Inlet
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Great Egg Harbor Inlet
LocationCounties of Atlantic and Cape May in New Jersey
Coordinates 39°17′59″N74°32′44″W / 39.29972°N 74.54556°W / 39.29972; -74.54556 Coordinates: 39°17′59″N74°32′44″W / 39.29972°N 74.54556°W / 39.29972; -74.54556
Type Inlet

Great Egg Harbor Inlet is an inlet connecting Great Egg Harbor Bay with the Atlantic Ocean in New Jersey, forming a part of the boundary between Atlantic and Cape May Counties.

Contents

Geography

Great Egg Harbor Inlet separates Absecon Island from Pecks Beach, and connects Great Egg Harbor Bay with the Atlantic Ocean.

Great Egg Harbor Inlet was described in 1878, viz.,

Great Egg Harbor Inlet is a considerable channel leading into Great Egg Harbor Bay, and is the outlet for the waters of Great Egg Harbor and Tuckahoe Rivers and the streams that flow into them. It is about a mile wide, and has seven feet water on its bar at low water. Vessels of considerable size can enter here, and quite a commerce is carried on out of this inlet from the towns on the rivers that flow into the bay; formerly much more than at present. The Bay and Tuckahoe River constitute the division line between Atlantic and Cape May Counties. [1]

See also

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Absecon Island Island on the Jersey Shore of the Atlantic Ocean

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Great Egg Harbor Bay

Great Egg Harbor Bay is a bay between Atlantic and Cape May counties along the southern New Jersey coast. The name derives from Dutch explorer Cornelius Jacobsen May's description of the plentiful birds laying eggs, naming the waters Eyren Haven, which translates to Egg Harbor in English. The bay has a total area of 8.5 sq mi (22 km2). Its depth ranges from shallow waters in the southern extension, called Peck Bay, to a 33 ft (10 m) deep channel.

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Pecks Beach or Peck's Beach is a barrier island located on the Jersey Shore in Cape May County, New Jersey.

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References

  1. Historical and Biographical Atlas of the New Jersey Coast, Woolman and Rose, Philadelphia, 1878