TOTTEN INLET
'Totten Inlet' lies in the southern end of Puget Sound in the U.S. state of Washington. The inlet extends 9 miles southwest from the western end of Squaxin Passage, and much of the county line between Mason and Thurston counties runs down the center of it. A spit extends west for about 300 feet from Steamboat Island. The inlet shoals gradually to near Burns Point, 100 feet high, on the south shore, where it bares at low tide.
Totten Inlet splits into two smaller inlets, Oyster Bay and Skookum Inlet. Oyster Bay, located south of Burns Point, is an extensive mudflat. Oysters are grown in this area, and there are log booms. Totten Inlet is one of Washington's most productive areas for growing oysters. Oysters grow extremely fast in the inlet's algae-rich water.
Totten Inlet was named by Charles Wilkes during the Wilkes Expedition of 1838-1842, to honor George M. Totten, one of the expedition's midshipmen.[1]
1. Washington State Place Names, , James W., Phillips, University of Washington Press, 1971,
★ Totten Inlet map
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Totten Inlet splits into two smaller inlets, Oyster Bay and Skookum Inlet. Oyster Bay, located south of Burns Point, is an extensive mudflat. Oysters are grown in this area, and there are log booms. Totten Inlet is one of Washington's most productive areas for growing oysters. Oysters grow extremely fast in the inlet's algae-rich water.
Totten Inlet was named by Charles Wilkes during the Wilkes Expedition of 1838-1842, to honor George M. Totten, one of the expedition's midshipmen.[1]
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References
1. Washington State Place Names, , James W., Phillips, University of Washington Press, 1971,
External links
★ Totten Inlet map
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