Galway Bay Tidal Atlas

Published by Marine Institute

A tidal atlas or a tidal stream atlas is used to predict the direction and speed of tidal currents. A tidal atlas usually consists of a set of 12 or 13 diagrams, one for each hour of the tidal cycle, for a coastal region. Each diagram uses arrows to indicate the direction of the flow at that time. A spring tide is a tide just after a new or full moon, when there is the greatest difference between high and low water. A neap tide is a tide just after the first or third quarters of the moon when there is least difference between high and low water. This tidal atlas covers Galway Bay which is situated on the west coast of Ireland. The data used to create the Galway Bay tidal atlas was derived from the output of an operational hydrodynamic model of Galway Bay. The Galway Bay tidal atlas is managed by Oceanographic Services within Ocean Science and Information Services section of the Marine Institute (Ireland).

Tags

atlantic ocean environment galway bay geoscientificinformation high tide water hydrosphere north atlantic ocean north-east atlantic ocean oceanographic geographical features oceanography oceans physical oceanography sea level tidal water tide water science

Data Resources

WMS GetCapabilities

Format: WMS

available as WMS

Download WMS View on data.gov.ie →

Download JSON

Format: JSON

available as json

Download JSON View on data.gov.ie →

Additional Information

License Creative Commons Attribution 4.0
Created 2018-12-07
Last Updated 2024-02-26
View this dataset on data.gov.ie →