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A spit (cognate with the word for a rotisserie bar) or sandspit is a deposition bar or beach landform off coasts or lake shores. It develops in places where re-entrance occurs, such as at a cove's headlands , by the process of longshore drift by longshore currents.
Toronto Islands (former spit, now detached), Toronto, Ontario; Leslie Street Spit, man-made spit created as part of new harbour project; Long Point, Ontario; Point Pelee, Ontario on Lake Erie; Rondeau Provincial Park - a crescentric sand spit on Lake Erie; Blackie Spit (east section of the Crescent Beach), South Surrey, British Columbia
Spit – Coastal bar or beach landform deposited by longshore drift; Strait – Naturally formed, narrow, typically navigable waterway that connects two larger bodies of water; Strandflat – Type of landform found in high-latitude areas; Stack – Geological landform consisting of a steep and often vertical column or columns of rock, and stump
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Tombolo – Deposition landform in which an island is connected to the mainland by a sandy isthmus; The Point of Sangomar – Sand spit located on the Atlantic Ocean at the mouth of the Saloum Delta; Adam's Bridge – Chain of shoals between India and Sri Lanka; List of shoals and sandbanks in the southern North Sea
Spit (archaeology), a term for a unit of archaeological excavation; Spit (landform), a section of land that extends into a body of water; Spit or rotisserie, a rotating device used for cooking by roasting over an open fire; Spit, another word for saliva. Spitting, the act of forcibly expelling saliva from the mouth
Tied islands, or land-tied islands as they are often known, are landforms consisting of an island that is connected to the mainland or another island only by a tombolo: a spit of beach materials connected to land at both ends.
The Kaitorete Spit in Canterbury, New Zealand, is a barrier/spit system (which generally falls under the definition of barrier, as both ends of the landform are attached to land, but has been named a spit) that has existed below Banks Peninsula for the last 8,000 years. [10]