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New York–New Jersey Harbor Estuary

The New York–New Jersey Harbor Estuary, also known as the Hudson-Raritan Estuary, is in the northeastern states of New Jersey and New York on the East Coast of the United States. The system of waterways of the Port of New York and New Jersey forms one of the most intricate natural harbors in the world[1][2] and one of the busiest ports of the United States. The harbor opens onto the New York Bight in the Atlantic Ocean to the southeast and Long Island Sound to the northeast.

A 2016 U.S. Army Corps of Engineers map showing New York–New Jersey Harbor Estuary's drainage divide and drainage basin
Harrisse/LOC copy of the Manatus Map of 1639
An 1866 map of New York–New Jersey Harbor Estuary
A 2011 NASA image of New York–New Jersey Harbor Estuary
Population density and elevation above sea level in the New York City metropolitan area as of 2010
An aerial view of New York–New Jersey Harbor Estuary

Although the overall form of the estuary remains unchanged from the time of Giovanni da Verrazzano's visit in 1524, all parts have changed at least a little, and some parts, such as Hell Gate and Ellis Island, have been almost completely altered. In the greatest hidden change, the navigational channels have been deepened from the natural 17 feet (5.2 m) depth to 45 feet (14 m). In some places this required blasting of bedrock.[3]

There is an extremely complex system of tides and currents. Both the Bight and the Sound are essentially marine bodies with tides and saltwater, but the Sound compared to the Atlantic is about 20–30% less saline (as an estuary), and the tide is about 3 hours later with as much as 70% more variation. Rivers add a fresher, non-tidal inflow although the tide and brackishness extend well up rivers[4] throughout the extended hydrologic system from Albany to Montauk Point to the Hudson Canyon region of the New York Bight. The New York Harbor Observing and Prediction System (NYHOPS)[5] utilizes information from sensors, weather forecasts, and environment models to provide real-time forecasts of meteorological and oceanographic conditions in the area.

Since the Ash Wednesday Storm of 1962 beaches along the shores of the East Coast have been regularly replenished with sand pumped in from off-shore.[6][7] The United States Army Corps of Engineers (USACE) coordinates the projects.[8][9]

In 2016, USACE and the Port Authority of New York and New Jersey produced a comprehensive restoration plan for the New York Harbor region, with proposals to mitigate the effects of sea level rise through projects to restore natural areas.[10] In September the USACE released the New York New Jersey Harbor and Tributaries Study (HATS).[11][12]

Features of the harbor estuary edit

 
1. Upper New York Bay
2. Lower New York Bay
3. Newark Bay
4. Hudson River
5. East River
6. Raritan Bay
7. Jamaica Bay
8. Long Island Sound
9. New York Bight-North Atlantic
10. Ambrose Channel
11. Mud Dump Site[13]
12. Hudson Canyon
A. Manhattan
B. Brooklyn
C. Staten Island
D. Queens
E. The Bronx
F. Bayonne-Jersey City
G. Newark
H. Raritan Bayshore
i. Rockaway Point
j. Sandy Hook
(This is not for navigation.)

The lists below includes features of the Port of New York and New Jersey with a waterborne emphasis, starting with natural features. Where possible the list proceeds from the Lower Bay entrance approximately clockwise around the Harbor. The alternative sorting is by jurisdiction.

Official references are the NOAA Coastal pilot,[14] NOAA nautical charts,[15] and USGS topographic maps.[16] Many jurisdictional issues appear in U.S. law.[17]

Rivers and streams edit

Bi-state

New Jersey

New York

Tidal straits edit

Inter-state

New York

Bays, inlets and coves edit

New York Bay

East River

Long Island Sound

Islands edit

Bi-state edit

New Jersey edit

New York edit

Land features edit

New Jersey

New York

Banks and shoals edit

Navigational channels edit

Port facilities edit

One of the many duties of the Port Authority of New York and New Jersey is to develop trade interests in the New York-New Jersey area. The Port Authority operates most of the containerized port facilities listed here, and also collaborates with the Army Corps of Engineers to maintain shipping channels in the harbor.

New Jersey (numerous privately operated bulk facilities, especially petroleum, are not listed)

New York

Lights and lighthouses edit

For lists see[23] and.[24] Active unless noted.

New Jersey

New York

Waterfront jurisdictions edit

Government and other agencies edit

State, county, municipal edit

New Jersey

New York

See also edit

References edit

  1. ^ "Hudson-Raritan Estuary". National Geographic Society. 14 November 2016. Retrieved 28 March 2017.[dead link]
  2. ^ "Urban Core". Retrieved 28 March 2017.
  3. ^ http://www.harborestuary.org/watersweshare/pdfs/CRP/2_Existing_Conditions.pdf [bare URL PDF]
  4. ^ NOAA Tides and Current web site FAQ page. See discussion of hydraulic currents.
  5. ^ NYHOPS
  6. ^ Muka, Samantha (August 11, 2015). "Building Beaches: Beach Nourishment in the United States". Retrieved 10 April 2017. New York State has the longest history of nourishment in the country. The first beach nourishment project was the construction and expansion of the shoreline off of Coney Island and Brighton Beach.
  7. ^ Seabrook, John (July 22, 2013). "The Beach Builders". The New Yorker. Retrieved 18 April 2017.
  8. ^ "NY District Coastal Storm Risk Reduction Projects and Studies Map". USACE. Retrieved 19 April 2017.
  9. ^ Anderson, Jenny (May 18, 2013). "Rebuilding the Coastline, but at What Cost?". The New York Times. Retrieved 19 April 2017.
  10. ^ Hudson=Raritan Estuary Comprehensive Restoration Plan (PDF) (Report). USACE. June 1, 2016. Retrieved 19 April 2017.
  11. ^ New York New Jersey Harbor and Tributaries Study (Report). USACE. 2022.
  12. ^ Barnard, Anne (September 26, 2022). "A $52 Billion Proposal Aims to Protect New York Harbor From Storm Surges". The New York Times. Retrieved October 29, 2022.
  13. ^ "62 FR 46142 - Simultaneous De-designation and Termination of the Mud Dump Site and Designation of the Historic Area Remediation Site". Retrieved 28 March 2017.
  14. ^ Chapter 11, New York Harbor and Approaches, Coast Pilot 2, 35th Edition, 2006, Office of Coast Survey, NOAA.
  15. ^ NOAA nautical charts New York Harbor (1:40,000 scale), Sandy Hook to Little Egg, Jamaica Bay and Rockaway Inlet, , New York Lower Bay, Raritan Bay and southern part of Arthur Kill, Raritan River, Kill van Kull and northern part of Arthur Kill, New York Harbor (Upper Bay and Narrows, , , , 12341 2007-09-26 at the Wayback Machine, 12339 2007-09-26 at the Wayback Machine, 12366 2007-09-26 at the Wayback Machine Long Island Sound and East River, found on page Nautical charts Atlantic Coast charts online 2006-09-02 at the Wayback Machine, Office of Coast Survey, NOAA.
  16. ^ USGS topographic maps, 1:24,000 scale, listed from west to east (in a row), then north to south:
    • Yonkers, Mount Vernon, Mamaroneck;
    • Orange, Weehawken, Central Park Flushing, Seacliff;
    • Elizabeth, Jersey City, Brooklyn, Jamaica, Lynbrook;
    • Perth Amboy, Arthur Kill The Narrows, Coney Island, Far Rockaway;
    • South Amboy, Keyport, Sandy Hook West, Sandy Hook East.
  17. ^ Title 33. Navigation and Navigable Waters 2006-09-26 at the Wayback Machine USC. See Section 59.
  18. ^ a b c All of the landfill portion of Ellis Island beyond its 1834 waterfront is in Hudson County, NJ. All water surrounding Liberty and Ellis Islands is in Hudson County.
  19. ^ "Intent to Prepare a Draft Environmental Impact Statement (DEIS) for the New York and New Jersey Harbor Navigation Study: Feasibility Phase". Federal Register Volume 63. Government Printing Office. March 24, 1998. Retrieved 2014-08-31.
  20. ^ Reports of Channel Conditions 2008-10-29 at the Wayback Machine, USACE, Nov. 2004: "Partial Anchorage Channel: Starts approximately 3,990 Ft. seaward of Red Gas #2; Ends approximately 1,660 Ft. landward of Red Light & Bell #21. Authorized project: Width: 2000 ft, Length: 2.34 nmiles, Depth 45 ft.... Shoaling exists and begins approximately 2,230 Ft. seaward of Red Gas #2 and proceeds landward with a length of approximately 600 Ft. and a width of approximately 60 Ft."
  21. ^ Hearing Notice for Department of the Army Corps of Engineers, N.Y.S. Department of Environmental Conservation 21/1/2004.
  22. ^ Simplified map Bayonne Peninsula Chap. 6, CPIP Toolkit, PANYNJ.
  23. ^ Inventory of Historic Light Stations: New Jersey Lighthouses and Inventory of Historic Light Stations: New York Lighthouses NPS lists.
  24. ^ New York Lighthouses and New York Lighthouses Lighthouse Friends 2001-2005.
  25. ^ Boundaries extend to mid-Hudson on the west, into the Upper Harbor south of Governors Island, to the far pierhead line of the East River, Harlem River and Spuyten Duyvil. The exceptions are the additional areas of Marble Hill section included north of the Harlem River (bounded approximately by Johnson Avenue, West 230 Street) and Liberty and Ellis Islands to their original 1834 waterfront. River

40°31′00″N 74°02′59″W / 40.51667°N 74.04972°W / 40.51667; -74.04972

External links edit

  • New York-New Jersey Harbor Estuary Program, partnership to protect and restore the Harbor Estuary
  • New York and New Jersey Harbor, US Army Corps of Engineers
  • PANJNY Coastal Ecosystems Initiatives
  • "How the Earth Was Made". © 1996–2011, A&E Television Networks, LLC. All Rights Reserved. Retrieved 2011-09-19. Video explaining formation of estuary
  • EPA Water Quality
  • New York–New Jersey Harbor/Urban Core

york, jersey, harbor, estuary, also, known, hudson, raritan, estuary, northeastern, states, jersey, york, east, coast, united, states, system, waterways, port, york, jersey, forms, most, intricate, natural, harbors, world, busiest, ports, united, states, harbo. The New York New Jersey Harbor Estuary also known as the Hudson Raritan Estuary is in the northeastern states of New Jersey and New York on the East Coast of the United States The system of waterways of the Port of New York and New Jersey forms one of the most intricate natural harbors in the world 1 2 and one of the busiest ports of the United States The harbor opens onto the New York Bight in the Atlantic Ocean to the southeast and Long Island Sound to the northeast A 2016 U S Army Corps of Engineers map showing New York New Jersey Harbor Estuary s drainage divide and drainage basin Harrisse LOC copy of the Manatus Map of 1639 An 1866 map of New York New Jersey Harbor Estuary A 2011 NASA image of New York New Jersey Harbor Estuary Population density and elevation above sea level in the New York City metropolitan area as of 2010 An aerial view of New York New Jersey Harbor Estuary Although the overall form of the estuary remains unchanged from the time of Giovanni da Verrazzano s visit in 1524 all parts have changed at least a little and some parts such as Hell Gate and Ellis Island have been almost completely altered In the greatest hidden change the navigational channels have been deepened from the natural 17 feet 5 2 m depth to 45 feet 14 m In some places this required blasting of bedrock 3 There is an extremely complex system of tides and currents Both the Bight and the Sound are essentially marine bodies with tides and saltwater but the Sound compared to the Atlantic is about 20 30 less saline as an estuary and the tide is about 3 hours later with as much as 70 more variation Rivers add a fresher non tidal inflow although the tide and brackishness extend well up rivers 4 throughout the extended hydrologic system from Albany to Montauk Point to the Hudson Canyon region of the New York Bight The New York Harbor Observing and Prediction System NYHOPS 5 utilizes information from sensors weather forecasts and environment models to provide real time forecasts of meteorological and oceanographic conditions in the area Since the Ash Wednesday Storm of 1962 beaches along the shores of the East Coast have been regularly replenished with sand pumped in from off shore 6 7 The United States Army Corps of Engineers USACE coordinates the projects 8 9 In 2016 USACE and the Port Authority of New York and New Jersey produced a comprehensive restoration plan for the New York Harbor region with proposals to mitigate the effects of sea level rise through projects to restore natural areas 10 In September the USACE released the New York New Jersey Harbor and Tributaries Study HATS 11 12 Contents 1 Features of the harbor estuary 2 Rivers and streams 3 Tidal straits 4 Bays inlets and coves 5 Islands 5 1 Bi state 5 2 New Jersey 5 3 New York 6 Land features 7 Banks and shoals 8 Navigational channels 9 Port facilities 10 Lights and lighthouses 11 Waterfront jurisdictions 11 1 Government and other agencies 11 2 State county municipal 12 See also 13 References 14 External linksFeatures of the harbor estuary edit nbsp 1 Upper New York Bay 2 Lower New York Bay 3 Newark Bay 4 Hudson River 5 East River 6 Raritan Bay 7 Jamaica Bay 8 Long Island Sound 9 New York Bight North Atlantic 10 Ambrose Channel 11 Mud Dump Site 13 12 Hudson Canyon A Manhattan B Brooklyn C Staten Island D Queens E The Bronx F Bayonne Jersey City G Newark H Raritan Bayshore i Rockaway Point j Sandy Hook This is not for navigation The lists below includes features of the Port of New York and New Jersey with a waterborne emphasis starting with natural features Where possible the list proceeds from the Lower Bay entrance approximately clockwise around the Harbor The alternative sorting is by jurisdiction Official references are the NOAA Coastal pilot 14 NOAA nautical charts 15 and USGS topographic maps 16 Many jurisdictional issues appear in U S law 17 Rivers and streams editBi state Hackensack River Hudson River lowest section also called the North River New Jersey Berrys Creek Dwars Kill Elizabeth River Overpeck Creek Navesink River Passaic River First River a k a Mill Brook Second River Third River Rahway River Raritan River Shrewsbury River Morses Creek Piles Creek Woodbridge River New York Alley Creek Bronx River Byram River Coney Island Creek Flushing River Fresh Kills Gerritsen Creek Gowanus Canal formerly Gowanus Creek Hawtree Creek Hook Creek Hutchinson River Luyster Creek Main Creek Mamaroneck River Mianus River Newtown Creek Dutch Kills English Kills Maspeth Creek Whale Creek Nissequogue River Richmond Creek Sherman Creek Smith Creek Springville Creek Tibbetts BrookTidal straits editInter state Arthur Kill Kill Van Kull Long Island Sound New York Bronx Kill Buttermilk Channel East River Grass Hassock Channel Harlem River Hell Gate The Narrows Pumpkin Patch Channel Rockaway Inlet Spuyten DuyvilBays inlets and coves editNew York Bay Lower New York Bay Gravesend Bay Great Hills Harbor Jamaica Bay Bergen Basin Fresh Creek Basin Grassy Bay Head of Bay Thurston Basin Mill Basin Norton Basin Paerdegat Basin Leonardo Harbor Prince s Bay Raritan Bay Sandy Hook Bay Rockaway Inlet Dead Horse Bay Sheepshead Bay Upper New York Bay New York Harbor Atlantic Basin Communipaw Erie Basin Gowanus Bay Harsimus Cove John s Cove Long Canal Morris Canal Basin Newark Bay Weehawken Cove East River Bowery Bay Bushwick Inlet Flushing Bay Little Bay Hallets Cove Newtown Creek Powell s Cove Wallabout Bay Navy Yard Basin Westchester Creek Long Island Sound City Island Harbor Eastchester Bay Hempstead Harbor Little Neck Bay Manhasset Bay Pelham Bay Port Chester HarborIslands editBi state edit Ellis Island All of the landfill portion of Ellis Island beyond its 1834 waterfront is in Jersey City New Jersey as is all water surrounding Liberty and Ellis Islands The original island is an exclave in New York State 18 Liberty Island exclave of New York within surrounding waters of Jersey City Shooters Island at head of Kill Van Kull in Newark Bay part in New Jersey and part in New York New Jersey edit Plum Island Sandy Hook Bay Robbins Reef New York edit Bronx County Pelham Islands The Blauzes Chimney Sweeps Islands City Island Hart Island High Island Hunters Island Rat Island Travers Island Twin Island North Brother Island South Brother Island Rikers Island Kings County Long Island Jamaica Bay islands The Canarsie Pol Ruffle Bar New York County Manhattan Upper Bay islands Ellis Island 18 Governors Island Liberty Island East River islands Mill Rock Island Randalls and Wards Islands Roosevelt Island U Thant Island Queens County Long Island Jamaica Bay islands Rulers Bar Hassock Richmond County Staten Island Hoffman Island formerly Orchard Shoals Isle of Meadows Prall s Island Shooters Island Swinburne Island Westchester County Pelham Islands Davids Island Goose IslandLand features editNew Jersey Bergen Neck Bergen Point Constable Hook Droyer s Point Kearny Point New Barbadoes Neck Paulus Hook Sandy Hook New York Coney Island formerly an island Fort Washington Point Red Hook Rockaway Point Rodman s Neck Throgs Neck Ward s Point Willets PointBanks and shoals editLower Bay East Bank False Hook Flynns Knoll Old Orchard Shoal Romer Shoal West Bank Upper Bay Bay Ridge Flats Dimond Reef Gowanus Flats Jersey Flats East River College Point Reef Hog Back Holmes Rock Lawrence Point Ledge Mill Rock Rhinelander Reef South Brother Ledge Ways ReefNavigational channels editLower Bay Ambrose Channel Atlantic Highland Anchorage Chapel Hill South Channel Coney Island Channel Gravesend Bay Anchorage Raritan Bay East Reach Rockaway Inlet Sandy Hook Channel Swash Channel Terminal Channel Raritan Bay Red Bank Reach Great Beds Reach Raritan Bay West Reach Raritan River Cutoff Perth Amboy Anchorage South Amboy Reach Seguine Point Bend Ward Point Bend East amp West Ward Point Secondary Channel Jamaica Bay Beach Channel Island Channel Runway Channel Arthur Kill Fresh Kills Reach Elizabeth Port Reach Gulfport Reach Outerbridge Reach Port Reading Reach Port Socony Reach Pralls Island Reach South of Shooters Island Reach Tremley Point Reach Newark Bay Elizabeth Channel Newark Bay Middle Reach Newark Bay North Reach Newark Bay South Reach North of Shooters Island Reach Port Newark Branch Channel Port Newark Pierhead Channel South Elizabeth Channel Kill van Kull Bergen East Point Reach Bergen West Point Reach Constable Hook Reach Upper Bay 19 Anchorage Channel 20 21 22 Bayridge Channel Buttermilk Channel Claremont Terminal Channel Port Jersey Channel Greenville Channel Pierhead Channel Red Hook Channel Red Hook Flats Anchorage Hudson River Weehawken Edgewater Channel East River East Channel South Brother Channel West ChannelPort facilities editOne of the many duties of the Port Authority of New York and New Jersey is to develop trade interests in the New York New Jersey area The Port Authority operates most of the containerized port facilities listed here and also collaborates with the Army Corps of Engineers to maintain shipping channels in the harbor New Jersey numerous privately operated bulk facilities especially petroleum are not listed Auto Marine Terminal Bayonne and Jersey City Port Authority Global Marine Terminal Jersey City privately operated Port Jersey Port Newark Elizabeth Marine Terminal Newark and Elizabeth Port Authority New York Brooklyn Red Hook Container Terminal Port Authority South Brooklyn Marine Terminal City of New York Staten Island Howland Hook Marine Terminal Port AuthorityLights and lighthouses editFor lists see 23 and 24 Active unless noted New Jersey Conover Beacon Chapel Hill Front Range Great Beds Light Old Orchard Shoal Light Robbins Reef Light Romer Shoal Light Sandy Hook Light West Bank Light Range Front New York Ambrose Light Lightship Ambrose to Scotland Station NJ 1933 decommissioned 1968 Blackwell Island Light decommissioned 1934 Coney Island Light Nortons Point Execution Rocks Light Fort Wadsworth Light decommissioned 1965 Jeffreys Hook Light Kings Point Light New Dorp Light Swash Channel Range Rear decommissioned 1964 Prince s Bay Light decommissioned 1922 Staten Island Range Light Statue of Liberty discontinued 1902 Stepping Stones Light Throgs Neck Light Whitestone Point LightWaterfront jurisdictions editGovernment and other agencies edit Immigration and Customs Enforcement National Park Service New Jersey Meadowlands Commission Port Authority of New York and New Jersey United States Army Corps of Engineers United States Coast Guard U S Customs and Border Protection United States Park Police Waterfront Commission of New York Harbor State county municipal edit New Jersey Monmouth County Waterwitch Highlands Atlantic Highlands Leonardo Belford Port Monmouth Keansburg Port Comfort Union Beach Keyport Middlesex County Laurence Harbor Morgan South Amboy Perth Amboy Sewaren Port Reading Chrome Carteret Union County Tremley Point Grasselli Linden Elizabeth Elizabethport Essex County Newark Hudson County Bayonne Port Johnson Liberty State Park Jersey City Hoboken Weehawken West New York North Bergen Edgewater New York New York City Manhattan New York County 18 25 Brooklyn Kings County Floyd Bennett Field Manhattan Beach Brighton Beach Coney Island Gravesend Bensonhurst Fort Hamilton Bath Beach Bay Ridge Red Hook South Brooklyn Brooklyn Heights Queens Queens County Lower Bay Far Rockaway Rockaway Point Breezy Point East River Flushing Willets Point La Guardia Airport The Bronx Bronx County City Island Staten Island Richmond County Port Richmond Elm Park Mariners Harbor West New Brighton Sailors Snug Harbor New Brighton Tottenville Charleston Port Socony Travis Chelsea St George TompkinsvilleSee also edit nbsp New Jersey portal nbsp New York state portal Marine life of New York New Jersey Harbor Estuary New York Harbor Storm Surge Barrier Newark BasinReferences edit Hudson Raritan Estuary National Geographic Society 14 November 2016 Retrieved 28 March 2017 dead link Urban Core Retrieved 28 March 2017 http www harborestuary org watersweshare pdfs CRP 2 Existing Conditions pdf bare URL PDF NOAA Tides and Current web site FAQ page See discussion of hydraulic currents NYHOPS Muka Samantha August 11 2015 Building Beaches Beach Nourishment in the United States Retrieved 10 April 2017 New York State has the longest history of nourishment in the country The first beach nourishment project was the construction and expansion of the shoreline off of Coney Island and Brighton Beach Seabrook John July 22 2013 The Beach Builders The New Yorker Retrieved 18 April 2017 NY District Coastal Storm Risk Reduction Projects and Studies Map USACE Retrieved 19 April 2017 Anderson Jenny May 18 2013 Rebuilding the Coastline but at What Cost The New York Times Retrieved 19 April 2017 Hudson Raritan Estuary Comprehensive Restoration Plan PDF Report USACE June 1 2016 Retrieved 19 April 2017 New York New Jersey Harbor and Tributaries Study Report USACE 2022 Barnard Anne September 26 2022 A 52 Billion Proposal Aims to Protect New York Harbor From Storm Surges The New York Times Retrieved October 29 2022 62 FR 46142 Simultaneous De designation and Termination of the Mud Dump Site and Designation of the Historic Area Remediation Site Retrieved 28 March 2017 Chapter 11 New York Harbor and Approaches Coast Pilot 2 35th Edition 2006 Office of Coast Survey NOAA NOAA nautical charts 12327 New York Harbor 1 40 000 scale 12324 Sandy Hook to Little Egg 12350 Jamaica Bay and Rockaway Inlet 12402 12401 New York Lower Bay 12331 Raritan Bay and southern part of Arthur Kill 12332 Raritan River 12333 Kill van Kull and northern part of Arthur Kill 12334 New York Harbor Upper Bay and Narrows 12337 12335 12338 12341 Archived 2007 09 26 at the Wayback Machine 12339 Archived 2007 09 26 at the Wayback Machine 12366 Archived 2007 09 26 at the Wayback Machine Long Island Sound and East River found on page Nautical charts Atlantic Coast charts online Archived 2006 09 02 at the Wayback Machine Office of Coast Survey NOAA USGS topographic maps 1 24 000 scale listed from west to east in a row then north to south Yonkers Mount Vernon Mamaroneck Orange Weehawken Central Park Flushing Seacliff Elizabeth Jersey City Brooklyn Jamaica Lynbrook Perth Amboy Arthur Kill The Narrows Coney Island Far Rockaway South Amboy Keyport Sandy Hook West Sandy Hook East Title 33 Navigation and Navigable Waters Archived 2006 09 26 at the Wayback Machine USC See Section 59 a b c All of the landfill portion of Ellis Island beyond its 1834 waterfront is in Hudson County NJ All water surrounding Liberty and Ellis Islands is in Hudson County Intent to Prepare a Draft Environmental Impact Statement DEIS for the New York and New Jersey Harbor Navigation Study Feasibility Phase Federal Register Volume 63 Government Printing Office March 24 1998 Retrieved 2014 08 31 Reports of Channel Conditions Archived 2008 10 29 at the Wayback Machine USACE Nov 2004 Partial Anchorage Channel Starts approximately 3 990 Ft seaward of Red Gas 2 Ends approximately 1 660 Ft landward of Red Light amp Bell 21 Authorized project Width 2000 ft Length 2 34 nmiles Depth 45 ft Shoaling exists and begins approximately 2 230 Ft seaward of Red Gas 2 and proceeds landward with a length of approximately 600 Ft and a width of approximately 60 Ft Hearing Notice for Department of the Army Corps of Engineers N Y S Department of Environmental Conservation 21 1 2004 Simplified map Bayonne Peninsula Chap 6 CPIP Toolkit PANYNJ Inventory of Historic Light Stations New Jersey Lighthouses and Inventory of Historic Light Stations New York Lighthouses NPS lists New York Lighthouses and New York Lighthouses Lighthouse Friends 2001 2005 Boundaries extend to mid Hudson on the west into the Upper Harbor south of Governors Island to the far pierhead line of the East River Harlem River and Spuyten Duyvil The exceptions are the additional areas of Marble Hill section included north of the Harlem River bounded approximately by Johnson Avenue West 230 Street and Liberty and Ellis Islands to their original 1834 waterfront River 40 31 00 N 74 02 59 W 40 51667 N 74 04972 W 40 51667 74 04972External links editNew York New Jersey Harbor Estuary Program partnership to protect and restore the Harbor Estuary New York and New Jersey Harbor US Army Corps of Engineers PANJNY Coastal Ecosystems Initiatives How the Earth Was Made c 1996 2011 A amp E Television Networks LLC All Rights Reserved Retrieved 2011 09 19 Video explaining formation of estuary EPA Water Quality New York New Jersey Harbor Urban Core Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title New York New Jersey Harbor Estuary amp oldid 1186573271, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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