SOUND (GEOGRAPHY)


Northern Øresund

Puget Sound and Mt. Rainier of Washington State, USA

A live oak on Knotts Island, North Carolina overlooks the Currituck Sound.

In geography a 'sound' is a large sea or ocean inlet larger than a bay, deeper than a bight, wider than a fjord, or it may identify a narrow sea or ocean channel between two bodies of land (see also strait).
There is little consistency in the use of 'sound' in English-language cartography.
Traditionally in northern European usage, ''the'' 'Sound' is the Øresund, the strait that separates Denmark (the outermost Danish island being Sjaelland) and Sweden, the narrow channel (2.5 miles or 4 kilometers wide) that connects the Kattegat with the Baltic Sea.
In the United States, Long Island Sound separates Long Island from the coast of Connecticut, but on the Atlantic Ocean side of Long Island, the body of water between the ocean and its barrier beaches is termed the Great South Bay. Pamlico Sound is a similar lagoon that lies between North Carolina and its barrier beaches, the Outer Banks, in a similar situation. The Mississippi Sound separates the Gulf of Mexico from the mainland along much of the gulf coasts of Mississippi and Alabama. On the West Coast, Puget Sound, by contrast, is a deep arm of the ocean.
A ''Sound'' is often formed by the sea flooding a river valley. This produces a long inlet where the sloping valley hillsides descend to sea-level and continue beneath the water to form a sloping sea floor. The Marlborough Sounds in New Zealand are a good example of this type of formation.
Sometimes a ''Sound'' is produced by a glacier carving out a valley on the coast then receding, or the sea invading a glacier valley. The glacier produces a ''sound'' that often has steep, near vertical, sides that extend deep under water. The sea floor is often flat and deeper at the landward end than the seaward end, due to glacial moraine deposits. This type of ''sound'' is more properly termed a ''fjord'' (or ''fiord''). The ''sounds'' in Fiordland, New Zealand, have been formed this way.
A sound generally connotes a protected anchorage.

Contents
Etymology
Bodies of water called sounds

Etymology


The word "sound" in this sense came from Anglo-Saxon or Old Norse ''sund'', which also means "swimming"; it may have originally meant "sea strait narrow enough for a man to swim across".

Bodies of water called sounds


===Australia===

Broad Sound near Clairview, Queensland

★ Camden Sound at Kuri Bay, Western Australia

★ Denham Sound, part of Shark Bay in Western Australia

King Sound at Derby, Western Australia

King George Sound at Albany, Western Australia

★ Montague Sound, Western Australia

★ York Sound, Western Australia
===Bahamas===

★ Exuma Sound, bordered by Eleuthera, Cat Island and Great Exuma, among others

★ Millars Sound, New Providence

★ Rock Sound, Eleuthera

★ The Sound, Bimini
===Bermuda===
Great Sound towards the archipelago's southwest end
===British Isles===
Calf Sound between Isle of Man and the Calf of Man
===British Virgin Islands===

★ North Sound, Virgin Gorda

★ South Sound, Virgin Gorda
===Canada===

Baynes Sound between Denman Island and Vancouver Island, British Columbia

Clayoquot Sound in Vancouver Island, British Columbia

Cumberland Sound in Baffin Island's east coast

Desolation Sound between the Discovery Islands and the coast of British Columbia.

★ Eclipse Sound between Baffin Island and Bylot Island in Nunavut

★ Eureka Sound between Ellesmere Island and Axel Heiberg Island in Nunavut

★ Hamilton Sound between Fogo Island and the Island of Newfoundland

Howe Sound, an inlet which forms the harbour of Vancouver, British Columbia

Jones Sound between Devon Island and Ellesmere Island in Nunavut

Kyuquot Sound, Barclay Sound and Nootka Sound on the west coast of Vancouver Island, British Columbia

Lancaster Sound between Devon Island and Baffin Island in Nunavut

★ Long Island Sound between Long Island in Nunavut, and Québec[1]

★ Massey Sound between Amund Ringnes Island and Axel Heiberg Island in Nunavut

★ Nansen Sound between Ellesmere Island and Axel Heiberg Island in Nunavut

Owen Sound in Ontario

Parry Sound in Ontario

★ Peel Sound between Prince of Wales Island and Somerset Island in Nunavut

Queen Charlotte Sound off British Columbia

Random Sound near Clarenville in Newfoundland and Labrador

★ Roes Welcome Sound between Southampton Island and Hudson Bay's west shore in Nunavut

Viscount Melville Sound between Banks Island and Melville Island in Nunavut
===Cayman Islands===

★ Frank Sound on Grand Cayman

★ North Sound on Grand Cayman
===Falkland Islands===

Adventure Sound in East Falkland

Berkeley Sound in East Falkland

Byron Sound in West Falkland

Choiseul Sound in East Falkland

Falkland Sound between East Falkland and West Falkland
===Mexico===

★ Campeche Sound in Campeche
===New Zealand===

Doubtful Sound in South Island

Dusky Sound in Fiordland National Park in South Island

Milford Sound in South Island
===Scandinavia===

★ The Sound, another name for Oresund, a body of water between Sweden and Denmark
===Solomon Islands===

New Georgia Sound
===United States===

Albemarle Sound in North Carolina

Block Island Sound between Long Island, New York, Connecticut and Rhode Island

Blying Sound in Alaska

Bogue Sound in North Carolina

Calibogue Sound in South Carolina

Core Sound in North Carolina

Croatan Sound in North Carolina

Currituck Sound in North Carolina

Kotzebue Sound in Alaska

Long Island Sound between Long Island, New York and Connecticut

Mississippi Sound in Mississippi and Alabama

Nantucket Sound off Nantucket, Massachusetts

Norton Sound in Alaska

Pamlico Sound in North Carolina

Pine Island Sound near Cape Coral, Florida

Prince William Sound in Alaska

Puget Sound in Washington

Rhode Island Sound off Rhode Island

Roanoke Sound in North Carolina

Somes Sound in Mount Desert Island, Maine (truly a fjord)

Suwanee Sound off Florida

Vineyard Sound off Martha's Vineyard, Massachusetts
===United States Virgin Islands===

★ Pillsbury Sound between Saint Thomas and Saint John

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