Somes Sound
Somes Sound is a fjard,[1] a body of water running deep into Mount Desert Island, the main site of Acadia National Park in Maine, United States. Its deepest point is approximately 175 feet (50 m), and it is over 100 feet (30 m) deep in several places. The sound almost splits the island in two.
While often described as the "only fjord on the East Coast",[2] it lacks the extreme vertical relief and anoxic sediments associated with Norwegian fjords, and is now called a fjard by officials[3][4] — a smaller drowned glacial embayment.
Somes Sound was named for Abraham Somes, who was one of the first settlers on the island and had a home at the end of the sound in Somesville, the first village on the island.
Gallery
- Entrance of Somes Sound,
Mount Desert Island, Maine (1855)
by Fitz Hugh Lane - Stereoscopic image of Valley Cove, Somes Sound. (1870s)
gollark: Fortunately, that doesn't matter because they don't mean anything and can just be ignored arbitrarily by judges.
gollark: Contracts for some things say "we can arbitrarily rewrite this and you can't do anything about it muahahaha", and despite those being really apious you have to agree to those too.
gollark: It sort of holds together, but not in an elegant, consistent or comprehensible way.
gollark: And law/regulation never seems to decrease in complexity. Ever.
gollark: no.
References
- Notes
- Ultimate Acadia: 50 Reasons to Visit Maine's National Park. Down East Books. 2013. p. 99. ISBN 978-1-60893-224-5.
- Debbie Harmsen (2008). Maine Coast. Random House. p. 248. Retrieved 2010-07-25.
- "Somes Sound, Mount Desert Island". Maine Geological Survey. November 1998. Retrieved 2010-07-25.
- "The Story of Glaciers" (PDF), EarthCache Program, National Park Service, retrieved 2010-07-25
- Source
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