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  2. Hurd's Deep - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Hurd's_Deep

    Hurd Deep running from bottom left to top right of an extract from a 1955 Admiralty Chart 1955 Admiralty Chart No 2649 showing Hurd Deep in the context of the English Channel. Hurd's Deep (or Hurd Deep) is an underwater valley in the English Channel, northwest of the Channel Islands. Its maximum depth is about 180 m (590 ft; 98 fathoms), making ...

  3. Thalweg - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Thalweg

    A thalweg is the center of the principal navigable channel of the waterway (which is presumed to be the deepest part). [8] If there are multiple navigable channels in a river, the one principally used for downstream travel (likely having the strongest current) is used. [8] The definition has been used in specific descriptions as well.

  4. Cascadia Channel - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Cascadia_Channel

    Cascadia Channel is the most extensive deep-sea channel currently known (as of 1969) of the Pacific Ocean. It extends across Cascadia Abyssal Plain , through the Blanco fracture zone , and into Tufts Abyssal Plain . [ 1 ]

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  6. Why are people crossing the English Channel and how ... - AOL

    www.aol.com/why-people-crossing-english-channel...

    With the topic of English Channel crossings high up the news agenda again after a flurry of arrivals, the PA news agency has looked at some of the key questions on the topic.

  7. Fisherman's Gat - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Fisherman's_Gat

    Fisherman's Gat is a much-deepened channel in the North Sea, between the final long line of shoals loosely associated with the Thames Estuary. [1] The channel cuts across Long Sand. In the west it opens onto the nominal cut-off point of Knock Deep (north) or the Princes Channel (south) which links to the Strait of Dover.

  8. Strait of Dover - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Strait_of_Dover

    Both floods cut massive flood channels in the dry bed of the English Channel, somewhat like the Channeled Scablands or the Wabash River in the USA. A further update in 2017 attributed a series of previously described underwater holes in the Channel floor, "100m deep" and in places "several kilometres in diameter", to lake water plunging over a ...

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