Channel (geography)
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- This article is about a geographical feature. For other uses, see channel.
A channel is also the natural or man-made deeper course through a reef, bar, bay, or any shallow body of water. It is especially used as a Nautical term to mean the dredged and marked (See: Buoy) lane of safe travel which a cognizant governmental entity guarantees to have a minimum depth across its specified minimum width to all vessels transiting a body of water. The term not only includes the deep-dredged ship-navigable parts of an estuary or river leading to port facilities, but also to lesser channels accessing boat port-facilities such as marinas. When dredged channels traverse bay mud or sandy bottoms, repeated dredging is often necessary because of the unstable subsequent movement of benthic soils.
- Which government entitity is responsible for maintaining which regions of a navigation path to ports may vary, as does what agency actually performs the work to maintain it in navigable condition despite storms and sea-states. In the United States, channels frequented by ships are generally maintained by the United States Department of the Interior, and monitored and policed by the United States Coast Guard, despite such a channel may lead well inland to such ports like Saint Louis hundreds or thousands of miles inland. Lesser channels are maintained by the various states, or local governments. See also: Ship canal.
See also
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