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See also: North See also: Atlantic, separating New See also: Brunswick from Nova Scotia
.
It is 145 M. long and 48 m. wide at the mouth, but gradually narrows towards the See also: head, where it divides into Chignecto See also: Bay to the north, which sub-divides into Shepody Bay and See also: Cumberland See also: Basin (the French Beaubassin), and See also: Minas Channel, leading into Minas Basin, to the See also: east and See also: south
.
Off its western See also: shore opens See also: Passamaquoddy Bay, a magnificent See also: sheet of deep See also: water with See also: good anchorage,receiving the See also: waters of the St Croix See also: river and forming See also: part of the boundary between New Brunswick and the See also: state of Maine, The Bay of See also: Fundy is remarkable for the See also: great rise and fall of the See also: tide, which at the head of the bay has been known to reach 62 ft
.
In Passamaquoddy Bay the rise and fall is about 25 ft., which gradually increases toward the narrow upper reaches
.
At spring tides the water in the Bay of Fundy is 19 ft. higher than it is in Bay Verte, in See also: Northumberland Strait, only 15 M. distant
.
Though the bay is deep, navigation is rendered dangerous by the violence and rapidity of the tide, and in summer by frequent fogs
.
At low tide, at such points as See also: Moncton or Amherst, only an expanse of red mud can be seen, and the tide rushes in a See also: bore or crest from 3 to 6 ft. in height
.
Large areas of fertile marshes are situated at the head of the bay, and the remains of a submerged See also: forest show that the See also: land has subsided in the latest See also: geological See also: period at least 40 ft
.
The bay receives the waters of the St Croix and St See also: John
See also: rivers, and has numerous harbours, of which the chief are St Andrews (on Passamaquoddy Bay) and St John in New Brunswick, and Digby and See also: Annapolis (on an inlet known as Annapolis Basin) in Nova Scotia
.
It was first explored by the Sieur de Monts (d. c
.
1628) in 1604 and named by him La Baye Francaise
.
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