Thames Estuary: Difference between revisions

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{{Short description|Estuary in which the River Thames meets the waters of the North Sea}}
{{Use dmy dates|date=October 2017}}
{{Use dmy dates|date=February 2023}}
{{Use British English|date=October 2017}}
{{Use British English|date=October 2017}}
[[File:Thames Estuary and Wind Farms from Space NASA.jpg|thumb|300px|The half of the estuary that lies east of its narrow [[Tideway]]-named part, by the [[Operational Land Imager]]]]
{{coord|51|30|N|0|35|E|display=title|region:GB_type:waterbody_source:GNS-en wiki}}
[[File:Thames Estuary and Wind Farms from Space NASA.jpg|thumb|Seen by the [[Operational Land Imager]]]]
[[File:To the Right Honourable the Master, Wardens, & Elder Bretham of the Trinity House, this chart of the entrances to The River Thames is ... dedicated (8250889146).jpg|thumb|Naval chart of the estuary, 1801]]
[[File:Thames estuary (aerial view).jpg|thumb|The [[Blackwater Estuary]], on the Essex coast, in the northern part of the Greater Thames Estuary. [[Mersea Island]] is on the right]]
[[File:Gravesendreach2.jpg|thumb|The upper part of the estuary from [[Tilbury]] to Mucking Creek looking north from [[Shorne]], which is {{convert|4|km|mi}} south of the river]]


The '''Thames Estuary''' is where the [[River Thames]] meets the waters of the [[North Sea]], in the south-east of [[Great Britain]].
The '''Thames Estuary''' is where the [[River Thames]] meets the waters of the [[North Sea]], in the south-east of [[Great Britain]].


==Limits==
The limits of the [[estuary]] have been defined in several ways:<ref>{{cite web|url=http://www.countryside.gov.uk/LAR/Landscape/CC/SEL/greater_thames_estuary.asp |title=81. Greater Thames Estuary |publisher=Countryside Agency |accessdate=2 March 2013 |url-status=dead |archiveurl=https://web.archive.org/web/20060227085558/http://www.countryside.gov.uk/LAR/Landscape/CC/SEL/greater_thames_estuary.asp |archivedate=27 February 2006 }}</ref>
An estuary can be defined according to different criteria (e.g. tidal, geographical, navigational or in terms of salinity). For this reason the limits of the Thames Estuary have been defined differently at different times and for different purposes.


===Western===
* Although physically the head of ''Sea Reach'' or the ''Kent / Essex Strait'', south of [[Canvey Island]] on the northern ([[Essex]]) shore presents a western boundary, the [[Tideway]] itself can be considered estuarine; it starts in south-west London at [[Teddington]]/[[Ham, London|Ham]].
This limit of the [[estuary]] has been defined in two main ways:<ref name=countryside>{{cite web|url=http://www.countryside.gov.uk/LAR/Landscape/CC/SEL/greater_thames_estuary.asp |title=81. Greater Thames Estuary |publisher=Countryside Agency |access-date=2 March 2013 |url-status=dead |archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20060227085558/http://www.countryside.gov.uk/LAR/Landscape/CC/SEL/greater_thames_estuary.asp |archive-date=27 February 2006 }}</ref>
* The [[Yantlet|Yantlet Line]] between the [[London Stone (riparian)|Crowstone]] in [[Chalkwell]] and the [[London Stone (riparian)|London Stone]] on the [[Isle of Grain]].
* [[Nore |The Nore]] sandbank between [[Havengore Island|Havengore Creek]], Essex, and [[Warden, Kent|Warden Point]], Kent.
* The eastern boundary of the estuary suggested in a Hydrological Survey of 1882-9 is a line drawn from [[North Foreland]], [[Margate]], [[Kent]] via the ''[[Kentish Knock (England)|Kentish Knock]] lighthouse'' to [[Harwich]] in Essex. It is to this line that the typical estuarine sandbanks extend.<ref>{{cite web|url=http://www.cruising.org.uk/almanac/Thames%20Estuary%20Passages.pdf |title=Thames Estuary Passages |publisher=the Cruising Almanac |accessdate=2 March 2013 |url-status=dead |archiveurl=https://web.archive.org/web/20080229133727/http://www.cruising.org.uk/almanac/Thames%20Estuary%20Passages.pdf |archivedate=29 February 2008 }}</ref> The estuary downstream of the [[Tideway]] has a [[tidal movement]] of 4 metres, moving at a speed of up to {{convert|2.6|knots}}.<ref>{{citation|publisher=Imray, Laurie, Norie & Wilson Ltd|title=2100.1 Thames Estuary South|place=St Ives|date=February 2018|type=chart}}. Tidal diamond "F" in West Swin</ref>
* A line from Warden Point on the Isle of Sheppey Kent via Sea Reach No. 1 buoys to [[Havengore Island|Havengore Head]] Essex.


* The narrow estuary is strongly tidal and is known as the [[Tideway]]. It starts in south-west London at [[Teddington Lock]] and weir, [[Teddington]]/[[Ham, London|Ham]]. This point is also mid-way between [[Richmond Lock]] which only keeps back a few miles of human-made [[head (hydrology)|head (stasis)]] of water during low tide and the extreme modern-era head at [[Thames Ditton Island]] on [[Kingston upon Thames|Kingston]] reach where slack water occurs at maximal high tide in times of rainfall-caused flooded banks. In terms of salinity the transition from freshwater to estuarine occurs around [[Battersea]];<ref>{{cite web |title=River Thames |url=https://www.britannica.com/place/River-Thames |website=Britannica |access-date=25 February 2022}}</ref> east of the [[Thames Barrier]] the water is of notable [[Brackish water|brackishness]] where fish, particularly in dry summers on the ''flood'' (the incoming) tide, are estuarine.
The estuary is one of the largest of 170 such inlets on the coast of [[Great Britain]]. It constitutes a major [[shipping route]]: its thousands of movements each year include large [[oil tanker]]s, [[container ship]]s, [[bulk carrier]]s and [[roll-on/roll-off]] (ro-ro) ferries entering the estuary for the [[Port of London]] and the [[Medway Ports]] of [[Sheerness]], [[Chatham, Medway|Chatham]] and [[Thamesport]].


* The head of ''Sea Reach''{{snd}}the ''Kent / Essex Strait''{{snd}}south of [[Canvey Island]] on the northern ([[Essex]]) shore. This reach and all more eastern zones (a mixture of channels and shoals) have a width that contributes to the large, archetypal, internal but mainly submerged sandbanks. These come from a combination of silt-borne [[fluvial processes|fluvial]] and [[tidal scour]]ing and deposition ([[silting]]).
The traditional [[Thames sailing barge]] worked in this area, designed to be suitable for the shallow waters in the smaller ports. More recently one of the largest [[wind farm]]s in the UK has been developed in the estuary, located 8.5&nbsp;km north of [[Herne Bay, Kent]]. The farm contains 30 wind turbines generating a total of 82.4MW of electricity. The much larger 630 MW [[London Array]] was inaugurated in 2013.


===Eastern===
This area has had several proposed sites for the building of [[Thames Estuary Airport|a new airport]] to supplement, or even to replace [[London Heathrow Airport|Heathrow]]/[[Gatwick Airport|Gatwick]]. In the 1960s [[Maplin Sands]] was a contender; in 2002 it was to be at [[Cliffe, Kent]]. The new airport would be built on a man-made island in the estuary north of [[Minster-in-Sheppey]] <ref>{{cite web|url=http://www.teaco.co.uk/siting.htm |title=The Thames Estuary Airport Ltd |publisher=Teaco.co.uk |date= |accessdate=2012-03-18}}</ref>
[[Image:London Stone, Yantlet 338.jpg|upright|thumb|London Stone, Yantlet Creek]]
There is also some discussion about the need for a [[Lower Thames Crossing]] in order to alleviate traffic congestion at Dartford.
The transition between the Thames Estuary and the North Sea has been located at various notional boundaries, including:<ref name=countryside/>
* The [[Yantlet|Yantlet Line]] between the [[London Stone (riparian)|Crow Stone (London Stone)]] on the northern foreshore at [[Chalkwell]], [[Westcliffe-on-Sea]] and another [[London Stone (riparian)|London Stone]] off the [[Isle of Grain]], to the south. (This marked the seaward limit of the river jurisdiction successively of the City of London and the Thames Conservancy).
* A line between [[Havengore Island|Havengore Creek]], Essex (to the north), and [[Warden, Kent|Warden Point]], east Sheppey, Kent (to the south), tallying with the easternmost hazardous point of the [[Nore]] sandbank. (This formed the seaward limit of the Port of London Authority on its establishment in 1908).<ref name="PLAct1968(2014)" />
* A line between [[North Foreland]], [[Margate]], [[Kent]] via the ''[[Kentish Knock (England)|Kentish Knock]] lighthouse'' to [[Harwich]] in Essex. Here begin sandbanks of the bight of this shallow sea. Per a Hydrological Survey of 1882&ndash;9.<ref>{{cite web|url=http://www.cruising.org.uk/almanac/Thames%20Estuary%20Passages.pdf |title=Thames Estuary Passages |publisher=the Cruising Almanac |access-date=2 March 2013 |url-status=dead |archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20080229133727/http://www.cruising.org.uk/almanac/Thames%20Estuary%20Passages.pdf |archive-date=29 February 2008 }}</ref> (This tallies with the eastern edge of the current seaward limit of the Port of London Authority as defined in 1964).<ref name="PLAct1968(2014)">{{cite web |title=Port of London Act 1968 (as amended) |url=http://www.pla.co.uk/assets/portoflondonact1968consolidationjan2014.pdf |website=Port of London Authority |access-date=25 February 2022}}</ref>


==Tides==
The Thames Estuary is the focal part of the 21st-century toponym, the "[[Thames Gateway]]", designated as one of the principal development areas in Southern England.
The estuary just east of the [[Tideway]] has a [[tidal movement|tidal range]] of 4 metres. Winds excluded, it moves at {{convert|2.6|knots}} in bi-monthly spring tides.<ref>{{citation|publisher=Imray, Laurie, Norie & Wilson Ltd|title=2100.1 Thames Estuary South|place=St Ives|date=February 2018|type=chart}}. Tidal diamond "F" in West Swin</ref>

==Economy==
===Shipping===
The estuary is one of the largest of 170 such inlets on the coast of [[Great Britain]]. It constitutes a major [[shipping route]], with thousands of movements each year, including: large [[oil tanker]]s, [[container ship]]s, [[bulk carrier]]s (of loose materials/liquids), and [[roll-on/roll-off]] (ro-ro) ferries. It is the accessway for the [[Port of London]] (including London Gateway, associated Tilbury and Purfleet) and the [[Medway Ports]] of [[Sheerness]], [[Chatham, Medway|Chatham]] and [[Thamesport]].

The traditional [[Thames sailing barge]] worked in this area, designed to be suitable for the shallow waters in the smaller ports.

===Wind farms===

[[File:London Array from Air 2019.jpg|thumb|Wind farms in the estuary, in this case the London Array.]]
A 2000s-decade-built [[wind farm]] is 8.5&nbsp;km north of [[Herne Bay, Kent]], on a shoal south-west of [[Kentish Knock (England)|Kentish Knock]]. It is 30 wind turbines generating typically 82.4MW of electricity.

The much larger 630 MW [[London Array]] was inaugurated in 2013.


==Greater Thames Estuary==
==Greater Thames Estuary==
[[File:Gravesendreach2.jpg|thumb|A western cross-section of the estuary. Background runs from [[Tilbury]] (left) to Mucking Creek: looking north from [[Shorne]], which is {{convert|4|km|mi}} south of the river]]
The appellation '''Greater Thames Estuary'''<ref>{{cite web|url=http://www.thamesweb.com |title=The Thames Estuary Partnership |publisher=Thamesweb.com |date=2012-02-07 |accessdate=2012-03-18}}</ref> applies to the coast and the low-lying lands bordering the estuary itself. These are characterised by the presence of mudflats, low-lying open beaches and [[salt marsh]]es, namely the [[North Kent Marshes]] and the Essex Marshes. Man-made embankments are backed by reclaimed wetland grazing areas, but [[Current sea level rise|rising sea levels]] may make it necessary to temporarily flood some of that land in places at [[spring tide]]s, to take the pressure off the defences.


The term '''Greater Thames Estuary'''<ref>{{cite web|url=http://www.thamesweb.com |title=The Thames Estuary Partnership |work=Thamesweb.com |date=7 February 2012 |access-date=18 March 2012}}</ref> applies to the coast and the low-lying lands bordering the estuary. These are characterised by the presence of mudflats, low-lying open beaches, and [[salt marsh]]es, namely the [[North Kent Marshes]] and the Essex Marshes. Human-made embankments are backed by reclaimed wetland grazing areas, but [[Current sea level rise|rising sea levels]] may make it necessary briefly to flood some of that land at [[spring tide]]s, to take the pressure off the defences and main watercourses.
There are many smaller estuaries in Essex, including the [[River Colne, Essex|Rivers Colne]], [[River Blackwater, Essex|Blackwater]] and [[River Crouch|Crouch]]. Small coastal villages depend on an economy of fishing, boat-building, and yachting.<ref>{{cite web|url=http://www.english-nature.org.uk/science/natural/NA_Details.asp?NA_ID=67 |title=English Nature and the Greater Thames Estuary |publisher=English-nature.org.uk |date= |accessdate=2012-03-18}}</ref> The [[Isle of Sheppey]], the [[Isle of Grain]], [[Canvey Island]], [[Two Tree Island]], [[Havengore Island]], [[New England Island]], [[Rushley Island]], [[Potton Island]], [[Foulness Island]] and [[Mersea Island]] are part of the coastline.<ref>Ordnance Survey, Landranger map 178: The Thames Estuary (2016)</ref>


[[File:Thames estuary (aerial view).jpg|thumb|The [[Blackwater Estuary]], on the Essex coast, in the northern part of the Greater Thames Estuary. [[Mersea Island]] is on the right.]]
Where higher land reaches the coast there are some larger settlements, such as [[Clacton-on-Sea]] to the north in Essex, [[Herne Bay, Kent]], and the [[Southend-on-Sea]] area within the narrower part of the estuary.
There are many smaller estuaries in Essex, including the [[River Colne, Essex|rivers Colne]], [[River Blackwater, Essex|Blackwater]] and [[River Crouch|Crouch]]. Small coastal villages depend on an economy of fishing, boat-building, and yachting.<ref>{{cite web|url=http://www.english-nature.org.uk/science/natural/NA_Details.asp?NA_ID=67 |title=English Nature and the Greater Thames Estuary |work=English-nature.org.uk |access-date=18 March 2012}}</ref> The [[Isle of Sheppey]], the [[Isle of Grain]], [[Canvey Island]], [[Two Tree Island]], [[Havengore Island]], [[New England Island]], [[Rushley Island]], [[Potton Island]], [[Foulness Island]] and [[Mersea Island]] are part of the coastline.<ref>''Ordnance Survey, Landranger map 178: The Thames Estuary'' (2016)</ref>

Where higher land reaches the coast, there are some larger settlements, such as [[Clacton-on-Sea]] to the north in Essex, [[Herne Bay, Kent]], and the [[Southend-on-Sea]] area within the narrower part of the estuary.

The Thames Estuary is the focal part of the 21st-century toponym, the "[[Thames Gateway]]", designated as one of the principal development areas in Southern England.

The [https://www.gov.uk/government/publications/thames-estuary-2050-growth-commission-report Thames Estuary 2050 Growth Commission] report published in June 2018 identified the economic potential of the region. In 2020 the [https://thamesestuary.org.uk/ Thames Estuary Growth Board]<ref>{{Cite web|title=Home|url=https://thamesestuary.org.uk/|access-date=4 June 2021|website=Thames Estuary}}</ref> was appointed, led by government-appointed Envoy Kate Willard OBE, to unlock the potential of the UK's number one green growth opportunity.

Entrepreneurs and investors have looked at the greater estuary as a possible place for [[Thames Estuary Airport|a new airport]],<ref>{{cite web|url=http://www.teaco.co.uk/siting.htm |title=The Thames Estuary Airport Ltd |publisher=Teaco.co.uk |access-date=18 March 2012}}</ref> and have expanded [[Southend Airport]] in the 2010s, which has a rail link to [[Liverpool Street station]], [[London]] among others.


==Salinity==
==Salinity==
Line 38: Line 60:
| designation1_offname = Thames Estuary and Marshes
| designation1_offname = Thames Estuary and Marshes
| designation1_date = 5 May 2000
| designation1_date = 5 May 2000
| designation1_number = 1025<ref>{{Cite web|title=Thames Estuary and Marshes|website=[[Ramsar Convention|Ramsar]] Sites Information Service|url=https://rsis.ramsar.org/ris/1025|accessdate=25 April 2018}}</ref>
| designation1_number = 1025<ref>{{Cite web|title=Thames Estuary and Marshes|website=[[Ramsar Convention|Ramsar]] Sites Information Service|url=https://rsis.ramsar.org/ris/1025|access-date=25 April 2018}}</ref>
}}
}}
The [[River Thames]] flowing through [[London]] is a classic river estuary, with [[Sedimentary depositional environment|sedimentary deposition]] restricted through manmade embankments. The district of [[Teddington]] a few miles south-west of London's centre marks the boundary between the tidal and non-tidal parts of the Thames, although it is still considered a freshwater river about as far east as [[Battersea]] insofar as the average salinity is very low and the fish fauna consists predominantly of freshwater species such as [[Rutilus|roach]], [[Common dace|dace]], [[carp]], [[perch]], and [[pike (fish)|pike]]. The Thames Estuary becomes brackish between Battersea and [[Gravesend, Kent|Gravesend]], and the diversity of freshwater fish species present is smaller, primarily roach and dace, [[euryhaline]] marine species such as [[flounder]], [[European seabass]], [[mullet (fish)|mullet]], and [[Smelt (fish)|smelt]] become much more common. Further east, the salinity increases and the freshwater fish species are completely replaced by euryhaline marine ones, until the river reaches Gravesend, at which point conditions become fully marine and the fish fauna resembles that of the adjacent [[North Sea]] and includes both euryhaline and [[stenohaline]] marine species. A similar pattern of replacement can be observed with the aquatic plants and invertebrates living in the river.<ref>[http://www.the-river-thames.co.uk/thames.htm The River Thames - its geology, geography and vital statistics from source to sea], The-River-Thames.co.uk</ref><ref>[http://www.the-river-thames.co.uk/wildlife.htm The River Thames - its natural history] The-River-Thames.co.uk</ref>
The [[River Thames|Thames]] flowing through [[London]] is an archetypal, well-developed economy urban, upper river estuary with its [[Sedimentary depositional environment|sedimentary deposition]] restricted through manmade embankments and occasional dredging of parts. It is mainly a freshwater river about as far east as [[Battersea]], insofar as the average salinity is very low and the fish fauna consists predominantly of freshwater species such as [[Rutilus|roach]], [[Common dace|dace]], [[carp]], [[perch]], and [[pike (fish)|pike]]. It becomes brackish between Battersea and [[Gravesend, Kent|Gravesend]], and the diversity of freshwater fish is smaller, primarily roach and dace. [[Euryhaline]] species then dominate, such as [[flounder]], [[European seabass]], [[mullet (fish)|mullet]], and [[Smelt (fish)|smelt]]. Further east salinity increases and conditions become fully marine and the fish fauna resemble that of the adjacent [[North Sea]], a spectrum of euryhaline and [[stenohaline]] types. An alike pattern of zones applies to the aquatic plants and invertebrates.<ref>[http://www.the-river-thames.co.uk/thames.htm The River Thames its geology, geography and vital statistics from source to sea] {{Webarchive|url=https://web.archive.org/web/20100516000937/http://www.the-river-thames.co.uk/thames.htm |date=16 May 2010 }}, The-River-Thames.co.uk</ref><ref>[http://www.the-river-thames.co.uk/wildlife.htm The River Thames its natural history] {{Webarchive|url=https://web.archive.org/web/20060818220921/http://www.the-river-thames.co.uk/wildlife.htm |date=18 August 2006 }} The-River-Thames.co.uk</ref>


==Cultural references==
==Cultural references==
[[Joseph Conrad]] lived in [[Stanford-le-Hope]] close to the Essex marshes. His ''[[Joseph Conrad bibliography|The Mirror of the Sea]]'' (1906) contains a memorable description of the area as seen from the Thames. It is also described in the first pages of Conrad's [[Heart of Darkness]], as both the launching place of England's great ships of exploration and colonization and, in ancient times, the site of colonization of the British Isles by the Roman Empire.
[[Joseph Conrad]] lived in [[Stanford-le-Hope]] close to the Essex marshes. His ''[[Joseph Conrad bibliography|The Mirror of the Sea]]'' (1906) contains a memorable description of the area as seen from the Thames. He refers to this area in the first pages of his novel ''[[Heart of Darkness]]'', describing it as both the launching place of England's great ships of exploration and colonization and, in ancient times, the site of colonization of the British Isles by the Roman Empire.


;Accent
;Accent
{{main|Estuary English}}
{{Main|Estuary English}}
{{see_also|English in southern England}}
{{See also|English in southern England}}
The form of speech of many of the people of the area, principally the accents of those from Kent and Essex, is often known as [[Estuary English]]. The term is a term for a milder variety of the "London Accent". The spread of Estuary English extends many hundreds of miles outside London and all of the neighbouring home counties around London have residents who moved from London and brought their version of London accents with them leading to [[language transfer|interference]] with the established local accents. The term ''London Accent'' is generally avoided as it can have many meanings. Forms of "Estuary English" as a hybrid between [[Received pronunciation]] and various London accents can be heard in all of the New Towns, all of the coastal resorts and in the larger cities and towns along the Thames Estuary.
The form of speech of many of the people of the area, principally the accents of those from Kent and Essex, is often known as [[Estuary English]]. The term is a term for a milder variety of the "London Accent". The spread of Estuary English extends many hundreds of miles outside London, and all of the neighbouring home counties around London have residents who moved from London and brought their version of London accents with them, leading to [[language transfer|interference]] with the established local accents. The term ''London Accent'' is generally avoided, as it can have many meanings. Forms of "Estuary English", as a hybrid between [[Received pronunciation]] and various London accents, can be heard in all of the New Towns, all of the coastal resorts, and in the larger cities and towns along the Thames Estuary.


== Channels==
== Channels==
[[File:28_of_%27Our_Seamarks;_a_plain_account_of_the_Lighthouses,_..._Buoys,_and_Fog-signals_maintained_on_our_Coasts._..._With_..._illustrations%27_(11285891284).jpg|thumb|Simplified naval chart of 1884]]
For commercial shipping approaching the [[Nore]] and thus London, main deep-water routes were the Princes Channel, the Queens Channel and the South Channel to the south, to a lesser extent the Kings Channel and the [[Swin (Thames)|Swin]] to the north. The Swin was used by barges and leisure craft from the Essex rivers, and coasters and colliers from the north east. These channels were made up of natural troughs; [[Yantlet|Yantlet Channel]] (Sea Reach), Oaze Deep, Knock John Channel, [[Black Deep]] Channel which have been extensively marked. These are separated by slow moving sandbanks with names such as the East and West Barrows, the Nob, the Knock, the John, the Sunk, the Girdler, and the Long sands. <ref>{{cite web |last1=Eade |first1=John |title=Estuary - WHERE THAMES SMOOTH WATERS GLIDE |url=http://thames.me.uk/s00004.htm |website=thames.me.uk |accessdate=27 June 2018}}</ref>
For commercial shipping rounding the [[Nore]] sandbank and thus accessing Greater London, main deep-water routes were the Princes-Queens Channel and the South Channel to the south, to a lesser extent the Kings Channel and the [[Swin (Thames)|Swin]] to the north. The Swin was used by barges and leisure craft from the Essex rivers, and coasters and colliers from the north east. These channels were made up of natural troughs; [[Yantlet|Yantlet Channel]] (Sea Reach), Oaze Deep, Knock John Channel, Black Deep/[[Black Deep]] Channel which have been much-marked. These are separated by slow-moving sandbanks with names such as the East and West Barrows, the Nob, the Knock, [[Kentish Knock (England)|Kentish Knock]], the John, the Sunk, the Girdler, and Long Sand/the Long Sands.<ref>{{cite web |last1=Eade |first1=John |title=Estuary Where Thames Smooth Waters Glide |url=http://thames.me.uk/s00004.htm |website=thames.me.uk |access-date=27 June 2018}}</ref>


The shallow bottomed barges and coasters would navigate the [[List of nautical terminology#S|swatchway]]s at flood tide, and would cross the sand banks at spitways, points where the water was least shallow, and just deep enough at that point of the tide. If they missed the moment they would heave to and wait for the next tide.
Shallow-bottomed barges and coasters would navigate the [[List of nautical terminology#S|swatchway]]s at flood tide, and would cross the sand banks at spitways, points where the water was least shallow, and just deep enough at that point of the tide. If they missed the moment they would heave to (lay anchor) and wait for the next tide.


Recreational craft are expected use channels most suited to the size of their vessel.
Recreational craft are expected use channels most suited to the size of their vessel.
Their main guide says to use when navigating to or from:
When navigating to or from the north they should use the Middle Deep, Swin and Warp. Barrow Deep and Warp.
*the north: the Middle Deep, Swin, Warp and Barrow Deep.<ref name=ruguide/>
When navigating to or from the south, they should use the Horse and Gore and Four Fathom Channels.
*the south/due east: the Horse and Gore and Four Fathom Channels.<ref name=ruguide/>


To cross the estuary large vessels used [[Fisherman's Gat]], and small vessels to were expected to use [[London Array|Foulger's Gat]].<ref>{{cite web |title=Recreational Users Guide |url=http://www.bluestarsurveys.co.uk/THAMES_recreational_users_guide.pdf |accessdate=27 June 2018}}</ref>
To cross the south-east quarter of the estuary large vessels use [[Fisherman's Gat]], and small vessels to were expected to use [[London Array|Foulger's Gat]].<ref name=ruguide>{{cite web |title=Recreational Users Guide |url=http://www.bluestarsurveys.co.uk/THAMES_recreational_users_guide.pdf |access-date=27 June 2018}}</ref>


== Navigational marks ==
== Navigational marks ==
===History===
[[File:To the right Worpll the Master and Wardens of the Trinity House of Deptford Stroud this mapp is most humbly dedicatd and presented by Capt Gr. Collins RMG L1184-001.tiff|300px|thumb|right|'Mapp' of the Thames Estuary by Capt. [[Greenvile Collins]], 1698. (North is to the right; [[rhumb lines]] are shown. London is beyond the top left of the chart).]]
Provision of [[buoys]] and [[beacons]] for the purpose of navigation came relatively late to England (compared to the Netherlands, for example).<ref name="Naish1985" /> Instead, coastal navigators and [[Maritime pilot|pilots]] relied on the use of [[Navigational transit|transits]] (the alignment of prominent structures or natural features on land) for guidance. In 1566 [[Trinity House]] of [[Deptford]] (which oversaw pilotage on the Thames) was empowered to 'make, erect and set up [...] beacons, marks and signs for the sea' (albeit at its own expense).<ref name="THHistory">{{cite web |title=History of the Corporation |url=https://www.trinityhouse.co.uk/about-us/history-of-trinity-house/th500 |website=Trinity House |access-date=26 February 2022}}</ref> Not long afterwards, the decay of the steeple of Margate Church (an important landmark for negotiating 'the Narrows', a complex route between sandbanks used by vessels sailing to or from London along the North Kent coast) led to Trinity House marking the Narrows with buoys in the late 16th century.<ref name="Naish1985">{{cite book |last1=Naish |first1=John |title=Seamarks: their History and Development |date=1985 |publisher=Stanford Maritime |location=London}}</ref>

In his coastal survey of 1682-93, [[Greenvile Collins]] records five buoys around the Narrows, just north of [[Reculver]], on the southern approach to the Thames. The Swin (the northern approach) was marked with buoys at the easternmost points of the Gunfleet, Middle and Buxey sands, and by beacons on the Whitaker, Shoe and Blacktail spits. A buoy marked the easternmost point of the [[Nore]] sandbank at this time, and three more buoys marked sandbanks in the middle part of the estuary (Spaniard, Red Sand and the Oaze).<ref name="Naish1985" />

The [[Nore Lightship]], the world's first [[lightvessel]], was established in the Estuary as a private venture in 1732 to mark the 'best position for entering the Thames and Medway, and to clear the Nore Sand'.<ref name="RC1861a">{{cite web | title = Lighthouse management : the report of the Royal Commissioners on Lights, Buoys, and Beacons, 1861, examined and refuted Vol. 2 | year = 1861 | pages = 116–119 | url = https://archive.org/stream/lighthousemanage02blak#page/116/mode/1up }}</ref> The [[Short-sea shipping|coastwise]] approach from the north was aided by the establishment of the Sunk lightvessel in 1802 'to mark the north-east entrance to East Swin, and to guide vessels round Long Sand'. Later, the Swin channel was further marked by lightvessels at Swin Middle (1837) and Mouse (1838), and by [[screw-pile lighthouse]]s on the [[Maplin Sands]] (1841) and at [[Gunfleet Lighthouse|Gunfleet]] (1856).<ref name="RC1861b">{{cite web | title = Lighthouse management : the report of the Royal Commissioners on Lights, Buoys, and Beacons, 1861, examined and refuted Vol. 2 | year = 1861 | pages = 77–78 | url = https://archive.org/stream/lighthousemanage02blak#page/77/mode/1up }}</ref> Meanwhile, one of the outlying sandbanks of the Estuary was marked by a lightvessel at Kentish Knock (in 1840); and in due course the southern approach was marked by lightvessels at the Tongue (1847) and Girdler (1848) sands, with another being added (between these two) in the Princes Channel (1856). In 1851 two more [[screw-pile lighthouse]]s were built further upriver, on the northern foreshore of Sea Reach: at [[Mucking]] and on the Chapman sands (just off [[Canvey Island]]).

Prior to 1684 beacons were set up on the mudflats north of the Swin channel, to help vessels approaching the Thames from the north to navigate the sands. Pan-sand Beacon was set up by Trinity House in 1774 to mark a dangerous sandbank on the southern approach.<ref name="RC1861c" /> Similar [[daymark]]s were set up on other nearby sandbanks in later years, including on Margate Hook (1843), Middle Ground (1844) and Shingles (1846).<ref name="RC1861c">{{cite web | title = Lighthouse management : the report of the Royal Commissioners on Lights, Buoys, and Beacons, 1861, examined and refuted Vol. 2 | year = 1861 | pages = 133–135 | url = https://archive.org/stream/lighthousemanage02blak#page/133/mode/1up }}</ref> Trinity House also maintained beacons further upriver, including at Broadness (established in 1821), Stoneness (1839), Erith (1830) and Tripcock (1832).

In 1864 responsibility for maintaining the navigation lights of the River Thames between London Bridge and [[Yantlet]] was transferred by Act of Parliament from the [[Thames Conservancy]] to the [[Corporation of Trinity House]]; responsibility for buoyage was transferred likewise in 1878.<ref>{{cite book |title=Report of the Royal Commission on Lighthouse Administration |date=1908 |publisher=Wyman & Sons |location=London |page=202}}</ref> In 1885 the beacons at Broadness and Stoneness were replaced with iron-frame experimental lighthouses, each lit by a novel system which would allow the light to function unattended (except for a twice-weekly visit by a boatman for cleaning and maintenance). Broadness was lit by [[Pintsch gas]], and Stoneness by a Lindberg light (which burned [[petroleum naphtha]]).<ref name="Ayres1888">{{cite journal |last1=Ayres |first1=Arthur |title=Compressed Oil-Gas and its applications |date=10 April 1888 |volume=XCIII |pages=306–310}}</ref> At the same time Trinity House began experimenting with the application of lamps to buoys, using Pintsch's oil-gas system, beginning with three in the Thames Estuary (East Oaze, Ovens and Sheerness Middle); the experiment was deemed a success and subsequently further buoys and beacons were lit by Trinity House using the same system, in the Estuary and beyond.<ref name="Ayres1888" />

Today the Port of London Authority's Thames Navigation Service (established in 1959) is responsible for buoyage, beaconage and bridge lights on the Tideway.<ref>{{cite book |last1=Stone |first1=Peter |title=The History of the Port of London: A Vast Emporium of All Nations |date=2017 |publisher=Pen & Sword Books Ltd |location=Barnsley, S. Yorks.}}</ref> Trinity House remains responsible for aids to navigation in the wider estuary (and beyond).

===Thames estuary navigation marks===
{{GeoGroupTemplate}}
{{GeoGroupTemplate}}
This table shows, from west to east, the principal navigation lights, buoys and other marks to the north (port) and south (starboard) of the main deep-water channels of the River Thames from Gallions Reach to the Sunk Light Float.<ref>Admiralty Chart 2484 - River Thames Hole Haven to London Bridge (2013)</ref><ref>Admiralty Chart 1185 - River Thames Sea Reach (2017)</ref><ref>Admiralty Chart 1183 - Thames Estuary (2017)</ref><ref>Crossing the Thames Estuary by Roger Gaspar (Imray)</ref><ref>{{Cite web|url=https://www.pla.co.uk/assets/passageplanningguide2013-3.pdf|title=Mariners' passage planning and routeing guide}}</ref> The Thames is in [[Lateral_mark#Region_A|IALA region A]] so port buoys are red and starboard buoys are green.
This table shows, from west to east, the principal navigation lights, buoys and other marks to the north (port) and south (starboard) of the main deep-water channels of the River Thames from Gallions Reach to the Sunk Light Float.<ref>Admiralty Chart 2484 - River Thames Hole Haven to London Bridge (2013)</ref><ref>Admiralty Chart 1185 - River Thames Sea Reach (2017)</ref><ref>Admiralty Chart 1183 - Thames Estuary (2017)</ref><ref>Crossing the Thames Estuary by Roger Gaspar (Imray)</ref><ref>{{Cite web|url=https://www.pla.co.uk/assets/passageplanningguide2013-3.pdf|title=Mariners' passage planning and routeing guide}}</ref> The Thames is in [[Lateral mark#Region A|IALA region A]] so port buoys are red and starboard buoys are green.


Thames estuary navigation marks
{| class="wikitable"
{| class="wikitable"
! rowspan="2" |Name of navigational mark
! rowspan="2" |Name of navigational mark
Line 81: Line 119:
|Margaretness Point (or Tripcock Ness) Light
|Margaretness Point (or Tripcock Ness) Light
|[[Lighthouse]]
|[[Lighthouse]]
|Group flashing (2) white 5s
|Group flashing (2) white 5{{abbreviation|s|every ... seconds}}
|{{Coord|51|30.662|N|0|05.766|E|display=inline|name=Margaretness Point}}
|{{Coord|51|30.662|N|0|05.766|E|display=inline|name=Margaretness Point}}
|Gallions Reach / Barking Reach
|Gallions Reach / Barking Reach
Line 147: Line 185:
|The Lower Hope
|The Lower Hope
|Quick flashing green
|Quick flashing green
|
|{{Coord|51| 27.493|N|0|26.355|E|display=inline|name=The Lower Hope}}
|{{Coord|51| 27.493|N|0|26.355|E|display=inline|name=The Lower Hope}}
|-
|-
Line 167: Line 206:
|{{Coord|51|30.30|N|0|28.20|E|display=inline|name=Sea Reach}}
|{{Coord|51|30.30|N|0|28.20|E|display=inline|name=Sea Reach}}
|-
|-
|Sea Reach No. 7
|Sea Reach 7
|Port buoy
|Port buoy


Line 178: Line 217:
|{{Coord|51|30.206|N|0|36.938|E|display=inline|name=Sea Reach No. 7 starboard}}
|{{Coord|51|30.206|N|0|36.938|E|display=inline|name=Sea Reach No. 7 starboard}}
|-
|-
|Sea Reach No. 6
|Sea Reach 6
|Port buoy
|Port buoy
|Flashing red 5s
|Flashing red 5s
Line 186: Line 225:
|{{Coord|51|30.126|N|0| 39.867|E|display=inline|name=Sea Reach No. 6 starboard}}
|{{Coord|51|30.126|N|0| 39.867|E|display=inline|name=Sea Reach No. 6 starboard}}
|-
|-
|Sea Reach No. 5
|Sea Reach 5
|Port buoy
|Port buoy
|Very quick flashing red
|Very quick flashing red
Line 194: Line 233:
|{{Coord|51|30.041|N| 0|41.473|E|display=inline|name=Sea Reach No. 5 starboard}}
|{{Coord|51|30.041|N| 0|41.473|E|display=inline|name=Sea Reach No. 5 starboard}}
|-
|-
|Sea Reach No. 4
|Sea Reach 4
|Port buoy
|Port buoy
|Group flashing (2) red 5s
|Group flashing (2) red 5s
Line 202: Line 241:
|{{Coord|51|29.694|N | 0| 44.193|E|display=inline|name=Sea Reach No. 4 starboard}}
|{{Coord|51|29.694|N | 0| 44.193|E|display=inline|name=Sea Reach No. 4 starboard}}
|-
|-
|Sea Reach No. 3
|Sea Reach 3
|Port buoy
|Port buoy
|Quick flashing red
|Quick flashing red
Line 210: Line 249:
|{{Coord|51|29.410|N|0|47.061|E|display=inline|name=Sea Reach No. 3 starboard}}
|{{Coord|51|29.410|N|0|47.061|E|display=inline|name=Sea Reach No. 3 starboard}}
|-
|-
|Sea Reach No. 2
|Sea Reach 2
|Port buoy
|Port buoy
|Flashing red 5s
|Flashing red 5s
Line 218: Line 257:
|{{Coord|51|29.493|N|0|49.726|E|display=inline|name=Sea Reach No. 2 starboard}}
|{{Coord|51|29.493|N|0|49.726|E|display=inline|name=Sea Reach No. 2 starboard}}
|-
|-
|Sea Reach No. 1
|Sea Reach 1
|Port buoy
|Port buoy
|Flashing red 2.5s
|Flashing red 2.5s
Line 241: Line 280:
|Starboard buoy
|Starboard buoy
|Quick flashing green
|Quick flashing green
|
|
Line 285: Line 324:
|
|
|-
|-
|Knock John No. 7
|Knock John 7
Line 294: Line 333:
|{{Coord|51|31.956|N|1|06.406|E|display=inline|name=Knock John No. 7}}
|{{Coord|51|31.956|N|1|06.406|E|display=inline|name=Knock John No. 7}}
|-
|-
|Knock John No. 5
|Knock John 5
Line 302: Line 341:
|{{Coord|51| 32.490|N|1|07.750|E|display=inline|name=Knock John No. 5}}
|{{Coord|51| 32.490|N|1|07.750|E|display=inline|name=Knock John No. 5}}
|-
|-
|Knock John No. 4
|Knock John 4
|Port buoy
|Port buoy
|Group flashing (3) red 10s
|Group flashing (3) red 10s
|{{Coord|51|32.323|N|1|07.906|E|display=inline|name=Knock John No. 4}}
|{{Coord|51|32.323|N|1|07.906|E|display=inline|name=Knock John No. 4}}
Line 310: Line 349:
|-
|-
|Knock John No. 3
|Knock John 3
Line 316: Line 355:
|Starboard buoy
|Starboard buoy
|Flashing green 5s
|Flashing green 5s
|{{Coord|51|33.278|N|1|09.692|E|display=inline|name=Knock John No. 3}}
|{{Coord|51|33.278|N|1|09.692|E|display=inline|name=Knock John No. 3 starboard}}
|-
|-
|Knock John No. 2
|Knock John 2
|Port buoy
|Port buoy
|Flashing red 5s
|Flashing red 5s
|{{Coord|51|33.112|N|1|09.847|E|display=inline|name=Knock John No. 2}}
|{{Coord|51|33.112|N|1|09.847|E|display=inline|name=Knock John No. 2 port}}
|-
|-
|Knock John No. 1
|Knock John 1
Line 335: Line 374:
|-
|-
|[[Maunsell Forts|Knock John]]
|[[Maunsell Forts|Knock John]]
|Port buoy
|Port buoy
|Group flashing (2) red 5s
|Group flashing (2) red 5s
|{{Coord|51|33.661|N|1|11.357|E|display=inline|name=Knock John No. 1 Port}}
|{{Coord|51|33.661|N|1|11.357|E|display=inline|name=Knock John No. 1 Port}}
Line 342: Line 381:
|-
|-
|Black Deep No. 12
|Black Deep 12
|Port buoy
|Port buoy
|Group flashing (4) red 15s
|Group flashing (4) red 15s
|{{Coord|51|33.661|N|1|13.511|E|display=inline|name=Black Deep No. 12}}
|{{Coord|51|33.661|N|1|13.511|E|display=inline|name=Black Deep No. 12}}
| rowspan="21" |The Black Deep Channel
| rowspan="21" |The Black Deep Channel
Line 351: Line 390:
|-
|-
|Black Deep No. 11
|Black Deep 11
Line 359: Line 398:
|{{Coord|51|34.250|N|1|13.475|E|display=inline|name=Black Deep No. 11}}
|{{Coord|51|34.250|N|1|13.475|E|display=inline|name=Black Deep No. 11}}
|-
|-
|Black Deep No. 10
|Black Deep 10
|Port buoy
|Port buoy
|Group flashing (3) red 10s
|Group flashing (3) red 10s
|
|
Line 367: Line 406:
|-
|-
|Black Deep No. 9
|Black Deep 9
Line 376: Line 415:
|-
|-
|Inner Fisherman
|Inner Fisherman
|Port buoy
|Port buoy
|Quick flashing red
|Quick flashing red
|
|
Line 383: Line 422:
|-
|-
|Black Deep No. 7
|Black Deep 7
Line 391: Line 430:
|
|
|-
|-
|Black Deep No. 8
|Black Deep 8
Line 407: Line 446:
|-
|-
|Black Deep No. 6
|Black Deep 6
|Port buoy
|Port buoy
|Flashing red 2.5s
|Flashing red 2.5s
|
|
Line 415: Line 454:
|-
|-
|Black Deep No. 5
|Black Deep 5
Line 423: Line 462:
|
|
|-
|-
|Black Deep No. 4
|Black Deep 4
|Port buoy
|Port buoy
|Group flashing (2) red 5s
|Group flashing (2) red 5s
|
|
Line 439: Line 478:
|-
|-
|Black Deep No. 3
|Black Deep 3
Line 447: Line 486:
|
|
|-
|-
|Black Deep No. 1
|Black Deep 1
Line 455: Line 494:
|
|
|-
|-
|Black Deep No. 2
|Black Deep 2
|Port buoy
|Port buoy
|Group flashing (4) red 15s
|Group flashing (4) red 15s
|
|
Line 464: Line 503:
|-
|-
|SHM
|SHM
|Yellow pillar buoy (mid-channel) yellow ‘X’ topmark [[Radar beacon|Racon]] T
|Yellow pillar buoy (mid-channel) yellow ‘X’ topmark [[Radar beacon|Racon]] T
|Flashing yellow 2.5s
|Flashing yellow 2.5s
|{{Coord|51|46.050|N|1|31.540|E|display=inline|name=SHM}}
|{{Coord|51|46.050|N|1|31.540|E|display=inline|name=SHM}}
Line 480: Line 519:
|-
|-
|Black Deep
|Black Deep
|Port buoy
|Port buoy
|Quick flashing red
|Quick flashing red
|{{Coord|51|48.10|N|1|36.60|E|display=inline|name=Black Deep}}
|{{Coord|51|48.10|N|1|36.60|E|display=inline|name=Black Deep}}
Line 488: Line 527:
|-
|-
|Trinity
|Trinity
|[[Cardinal mark|South cardinal buoy]]
|[[Cardinal mark|South cardinal buoy]]
|Quick flashing (6) + long flash 15s
|Quick flashing (6) + long flash 15s
|
|
Line 514: Line 553:
==References==
==References==
'''Notes'''
'''Notes'''
{{reflist}}
{{Reflist}}


<!--spacing-->
<!--spacing-->

==External links==
==External links==
*[https://www.legislation.gov.uk/uksi/2014/577/pdfs/uksiem_20140577_en.pdf Locations of deeps and shallows and buoys in the Thames estuary]
*[https://www.legislation.gov.uk/uksi/2014/577/pdfs/uksiem_20140577_en.pdf Locations of deeps and shallows and buoys in the Thames estuary]

{{River Thames}}
{{River Thames}}
{{Authority control}}

{{Coord|51|30|N|0|35|E|display=title|region:GB_type:waterbody_source:GNS-en wiki}}


[[Category:Thames Estuary| ]]
[[Category:Thames Estuary| ]]

Latest revision as of 10:33, 9 September 2023

The half of the estuary that lies east of its narrow Tideway-named part, by the Operational Land Imager

The Thames Estuary is where the River Thames meets the waters of the North Sea, in the south-east of Great Britain.

Limits[edit]

An estuary can be defined according to different criteria (e.g. tidal, geographical, navigational or in terms of salinity). For this reason the limits of the Thames Estuary have been defined differently at different times and for different purposes.

Western[edit]

This limit of the estuary has been defined in two main ways:[1]

  • The narrow estuary is strongly tidal and is known as the Tideway. It starts in south-west London at Teddington Lock and weir, Teddington/Ham. This point is also mid-way between Richmond Lock which only keeps back a few miles of human-made head (stasis) of water during low tide and the extreme modern-era head at Thames Ditton Island on Kingston reach where slack water occurs at maximal high tide in times of rainfall-caused flooded banks. In terms of salinity the transition from freshwater to estuarine occurs around Battersea;[2] east of the Thames Barrier the water is of notable brackishness where fish, particularly in dry summers on the flood (the incoming) tide, are estuarine.
  • The head of Sea Reach – the Kent / Essex Strait – south of Canvey Island on the northern (Essex) shore. This reach and all more eastern zones (a mixture of channels and shoals) have a width that contributes to the large, archetypal, internal but mainly submerged sandbanks. These come from a combination of silt-borne fluvial and tidal scouring and deposition (silting).

Eastern[edit]

London Stone, Yantlet Creek

The transition between the Thames Estuary and the North Sea has been located at various notional boundaries, including:[1]

  • The Yantlet Line between the Crow Stone (London Stone) on the northern foreshore at Chalkwell, Westcliffe-on-Sea and another London Stone off the Isle of Grain, to the south. (This marked the seaward limit of the river jurisdiction successively of the City of London and the Thames Conservancy).
  • A line between Havengore Creek, Essex (to the north), and Warden Point, east Sheppey, Kent (to the south), tallying with the easternmost hazardous point of the Nore sandbank. (This formed the seaward limit of the Port of London Authority on its establishment in 1908).[3]
  • A line between North Foreland, Margate, Kent via the Kentish Knock lighthouse to Harwich in Essex. Here begin sandbanks of the bight of this shallow sea. Per a Hydrological Survey of 1882–9.[4] (This tallies with the eastern edge of the current seaward limit of the Port of London Authority as defined in 1964).[3]

Tides[edit]

The estuary just east of the Tideway has a tidal range of 4 metres. Winds excluded, it moves at 2.6 knots (4.8 km/h; 3.0 mph) in bi-monthly spring tides.[5]

Economy[edit]

Shipping[edit]

The estuary is one of the largest of 170 such inlets on the coast of Great Britain. It constitutes a major shipping route, with thousands of movements each year, including: large oil tankers, container ships, bulk carriers (of loose materials/liquids), and roll-on/roll-off (ro-ro) ferries. It is the accessway for the Port of London (including London Gateway, associated Tilbury and Purfleet) and the Medway Ports of Sheerness, Chatham and Thamesport.

The traditional Thames sailing barge worked in this area, designed to be suitable for the shallow waters in the smaller ports.

Wind farms[edit]

Wind farms in the estuary, in this case the London Array.

A 2000s-decade-built wind farm is 8.5 km north of Herne Bay, Kent, on a shoal south-west of Kentish Knock. It is 30 wind turbines generating typically 82.4MW of electricity.

The much larger 630 MW London Array was inaugurated in 2013.

Greater Thames Estuary[edit]

A western cross-section of the estuary. Background runs from Tilbury (left) to Mucking Creek: looking north from Shorne, which is 4 kilometres (2.5 mi) south of the river

The term Greater Thames Estuary[6] applies to the coast and the low-lying lands bordering the estuary. These are characterised by the presence of mudflats, low-lying open beaches, and salt marshes, namely the North Kent Marshes and the Essex Marshes. Human-made embankments are backed by reclaimed wetland grazing areas, but rising sea levels may make it necessary briefly to flood some of that land at spring tides, to take the pressure off the defences and main watercourses.

The Blackwater Estuary, on the Essex coast, in the northern part of the Greater Thames Estuary. Mersea Island is on the right.

There are many smaller estuaries in Essex, including the rivers Colne, Blackwater and Crouch. Small coastal villages depend on an economy of fishing, boat-building, and yachting.[7] The Isle of Sheppey, the Isle of Grain, Canvey Island, Two Tree Island, Havengore Island, New England Island, Rushley Island, Potton Island, Foulness Island and Mersea Island are part of the coastline.[8]

Where higher land reaches the coast, there are some larger settlements, such as Clacton-on-Sea to the north in Essex, Herne Bay, Kent, and the Southend-on-Sea area within the narrower part of the estuary.

The Thames Estuary is the focal part of the 21st-century toponym, the "Thames Gateway", designated as one of the principal development areas in Southern England.

The Thames Estuary 2050 Growth Commission report published in June 2018 identified the economic potential of the region. In 2020 the Thames Estuary Growth Board[9] was appointed, led by government-appointed Envoy Kate Willard OBE, to unlock the potential of the UK's number one green growth opportunity.

Entrepreneurs and investors have looked at the greater estuary as a possible place for a new airport,[10] and have expanded Southend Airport in the 2010s, which has a rail link to Liverpool Street station, London among others.

Salinity[edit]

Designations
Official nameThames Estuary and Marshes
Designated5 May 2000
Reference no.1025[11]

The Thames flowing through London is an archetypal, well-developed economy urban, upper river estuary with its sedimentary deposition restricted through manmade embankments and occasional dredging of parts. It is mainly a freshwater river about as far east as Battersea, insofar as the average salinity is very low and the fish fauna consists predominantly of freshwater species such as roach, dace, carp, perch, and pike. It becomes brackish between Battersea and Gravesend, and the diversity of freshwater fish is smaller, primarily roach and dace. Euryhaline species then dominate, such as flounder, European seabass, mullet, and smelt. Further east salinity increases and conditions become fully marine and the fish fauna resemble that of the adjacent North Sea, a spectrum of euryhaline and stenohaline types. An alike pattern of zones applies to the aquatic plants and invertebrates.[12][13]

Cultural references[edit]

Joseph Conrad lived in Stanford-le-Hope close to the Essex marshes. His The Mirror of the Sea (1906) contains a memorable description of the area as seen from the Thames. He refers to this area in the first pages of his novel Heart of Darkness, describing it as both the launching place of England's great ships of exploration and colonization and, in ancient times, the site of colonization of the British Isles by the Roman Empire.

Accent

The form of speech of many of the people of the area, principally the accents of those from Kent and Essex, is often known as Estuary English. The term is a term for a milder variety of the "London Accent". The spread of Estuary English extends many hundreds of miles outside London, and all of the neighbouring home counties around London have residents who moved from London and brought their version of London accents with them, leading to interference with the established local accents. The term London Accent is generally avoided, as it can have many meanings. Forms of "Estuary English", as a hybrid between Received pronunciation and various London accents, can be heard in all of the New Towns, all of the coastal resorts, and in the larger cities and towns along the Thames Estuary.

Channels[edit]

Simplified naval chart of 1884

For commercial shipping rounding the Nore sandbank and thus accessing Greater London, main deep-water routes were the Princes-Queens Channel and the South Channel to the south, to a lesser extent the Kings Channel and the Swin to the north. The Swin was used by barges and leisure craft from the Essex rivers, and coasters and colliers from the north east. These channels were made up of natural troughs; Yantlet Channel (Sea Reach), Oaze Deep, Knock John Channel, Black Deep/Black Deep Channel which have been much-marked. These are separated by slow-moving sandbanks with names such as the East and West Barrows, the Nob, the Knock, Kentish Knock, the John, the Sunk, the Girdler, and Long Sand/the Long Sands.[14]

Shallow-bottomed barges and coasters would navigate the swatchways at flood tide, and would cross the sand banks at spitways, points where the water was least shallow, and just deep enough at that point of the tide. If they missed the moment they would heave to (lay anchor) and wait for the next tide.

Recreational craft are expected use channels most suited to the size of their vessel. Their main guide says to use when navigating to or from:

  • the north: the Middle Deep, Swin, Warp and Barrow Deep.[15]
  • the south/due east: the Horse and Gore and Four Fathom Channels.[15]

To cross the south-east quarter of the estuary large vessels use Fisherman's Gat, and small vessels to were expected to use Foulger's Gat.[15]

Navigational marks[edit]

History[edit]

'Mapp' of the Thames Estuary by Capt. Greenvile Collins, 1698. (North is to the right; rhumb lines are shown. London is beyond the top left of the chart).

Provision of buoys and beacons for the purpose of navigation came relatively late to England (compared to the Netherlands, for example).[16] Instead, coastal navigators and pilots relied on the use of transits (the alignment of prominent structures or natural features on land) for guidance. In 1566 Trinity House of Deptford (which oversaw pilotage on the Thames) was empowered to 'make, erect and set up [...] beacons, marks and signs for the sea' (albeit at its own expense).[17] Not long afterwards, the decay of the steeple of Margate Church (an important landmark for negotiating 'the Narrows', a complex route between sandbanks used by vessels sailing to or from London along the North Kent coast) led to Trinity House marking the Narrows with buoys in the late 16th century.[16]

In his coastal survey of 1682-93, Greenvile Collins records five buoys around the Narrows, just north of Reculver, on the southern approach to the Thames. The Swin (the northern approach) was marked with buoys at the easternmost points of the Gunfleet, Middle and Buxey sands, and by beacons on the Whitaker, Shoe and Blacktail spits. A buoy marked the easternmost point of the Nore sandbank at this time, and three more buoys marked sandbanks in the middle part of the estuary (Spaniard, Red Sand and the Oaze).[16]

The Nore Lightship, the world's first lightvessel, was established in the Estuary as a private venture in 1732 to mark the 'best position for entering the Thames and Medway, and to clear the Nore Sand'.[18] The coastwise approach from the north was aided by the establishment of the Sunk lightvessel in 1802 'to mark the north-east entrance to East Swin, and to guide vessels round Long Sand'. Later, the Swin channel was further marked by lightvessels at Swin Middle (1837) and Mouse (1838), and by screw-pile lighthouses on the Maplin Sands (1841) and at Gunfleet (1856).[19] Meanwhile, one of the outlying sandbanks of the Estuary was marked by a lightvessel at Kentish Knock (in 1840); and in due course the southern approach was marked by lightvessels at the Tongue (1847) and Girdler (1848) sands, with another being added (between these two) in the Princes Channel (1856). In 1851 two more screw-pile lighthouses were built further upriver, on the northern foreshore of Sea Reach: at Mucking and on the Chapman sands (just off Canvey Island).

Prior to 1684 beacons were set up on the mudflats north of the Swin channel, to help vessels approaching the Thames from the north to navigate the sands. Pan-sand Beacon was set up by Trinity House in 1774 to mark a dangerous sandbank on the southern approach.[20] Similar daymarks were set up on other nearby sandbanks in later years, including on Margate Hook (1843), Middle Ground (1844) and Shingles (1846).[20] Trinity House also maintained beacons further upriver, including at Broadness (established in 1821), Stoneness (1839), Erith (1830) and Tripcock (1832).

In 1864 responsibility for maintaining the navigation lights of the River Thames between London Bridge and Yantlet was transferred by Act of Parliament from the Thames Conservancy to the Corporation of Trinity House; responsibility for buoyage was transferred likewise in 1878.[21] In 1885 the beacons at Broadness and Stoneness were replaced with iron-frame experimental lighthouses, each lit by a novel system which would allow the light to function unattended (except for a twice-weekly visit by a boatman for cleaning and maintenance). Broadness was lit by Pintsch gas, and Stoneness by a Lindberg light (which burned petroleum naphtha).[22] At the same time Trinity House began experimenting with the application of lamps to buoys, using Pintsch's oil-gas system, beginning with three in the Thames Estuary (East Oaze, Ovens and Sheerness Middle); the experiment was deemed a success and subsequently further buoys and beacons were lit by Trinity House using the same system, in the Estuary and beyond.[22]

Today the Port of London Authority's Thames Navigation Service (established in 1959) is responsible for buoyage, beaconage and bridge lights on the Tideway.[23] Trinity House remains responsible for aids to navigation in the wider estuary (and beyond).

Thames estuary navigation marks[edit]

This table shows, from west to east, the principal navigation lights, buoys and other marks to the north (port) and south (starboard) of the main deep-water channels of the River Thames from Gallions Reach to the Sunk Light Float.[24][25][26][27][28] The Thames is in IALA region A so port buoys are red and starboard buoys are green.

Name of navigational mark South of channel Channel North of channel
Type Light Location coordinate Type Light Location coordinate
Margaretness Point (or Tripcock Ness) Light Lighthouse Group flashing (2) white 5s 51°30.662′N 0°05.766′E / 51.511033°N 0.096100°E / 51.511033; 0.096100 (Margaretness Point) Gallions Reach / Barking Reach ̶ ̶ ̶
Crossness Point Light Lighthouse Flashing white 5s 51°30.920′N 0°07.990′E / 51.515333°N 0.133167°E / 51.515333; 0.133167 (Crossness Point Light) Barking Reach / Halfway Reach ̶ ̶ ̶
Crayfordness Point Light Lighthouse Flashing white 5s + fixed 51°28.689′N 0°13.000′E / 51.478150°N 0.216667°E / 51.478150; 0.216667 (Crayfordness Point Light) Erith Rands / Long Reach ̶ ̶ ̶
Stone Ness Light ̶ ̶ ̶ Long Reach / St Clement's Reach Lighthouse Flashing green 2.5s 51°27.9167′N 0°16.8231′E / 51.4652783°N 0.2803850°E / 51.4652783; 0.2803850 (Stone Ness Light)
Broadness Point Light Lighthouse Occulting red 5s 51°27.878′N 0°18.900′E / 51.464633°N 0.315000°E / 51.464633; 0.315000 (Broadness Point Light) St Clement's or Fiddler's Reach / Northfleet Hope ̶ ̶ ̶
Tilbury Warning Light ̶ ̶ ̶ Gravesend Reach Warning light, vessels manoeuvring at Tilbury Isophase 6s 51°27.000′N 0°21.340′E / 51.450000°N 0.355667°E / 51.450000; 0.355667 (Gravesend Reach)
Shornmead Light Lighthouse Group flashing (2) white, red 10s 51°26.983′N 0°26.533′E / 51.449717°N 0.442217°E / 51.449717; 0.442217 (Shornmead Light) Gravesend Reach / The Lower Hope ̶ ̶
Ovens ̶ ̶ ̶ The Lower Hope Quick flashing green 51°27.493′N 0°26.355′E / 51.458217°N 0.439250°E / 51.458217; 0.439250 (The Lower Hope)
Haven Traffic Warning Lights Warning light, vessels manoeuvring at Coryton E 51°27.90′N 0°30.10′E / 51.46500°N 0.50167°E / 51.46500; 0.50167 (Coryton) The Lower Hope / Sea Reach Warning light, vessels manoeuvring at Coryton White 51°30.50′N 0°31.65′E / 51.50833°N 0.52750°E / 51.50833; 0.52750 (Coryton)
London Gateway ̶ ̶ ̶ Sea Reach Buoy 51°30.30′N 0°28.20′E / 51.50500°N 0.47000°E / 51.50500; 0.47000 (Sea Reach)
Sea Reach № 7 Port buoy

Racon T

Flashing Red 2.5s 51°30.011′N 0°36.908′E / 51.500183°N 0.615133°E / 51.500183; 0.615133 (Sea Reach No. 7 port) The Yantlet Channel Yellow pillar buoy Flashing yellow 2.5s 51°30.206′N 0°36.938′E / 51.503433°N 0.615633°E / 51.503433; 0.615633 (Sea Reach No. 7 starboard)
Sea Reach № 6 Port buoy Flashing red 5s 51°29.932′N 0°39.839′E / 51.498867°N 0.663983°E / 51.498867; 0.663983 (Sea Reach No. 6 port) Starboard buoy Flashing green 5s 51°30.126′N 0°39.867′E / 51.502100°N 0.664450°E / 51.502100; 0.664450 (Sea Reach No. 6 starboard)
Sea Reach № 5 Port buoy Very quick flashing red 51°29.848′N 0°41.426′E / 51.497467°N 0.690433°E / 51.497467; 0.690433 (Sea Reach No. 5 port) Starboard buoy Very quick flashing Green 51°30.041′N 0°41.473′E / 51.500683°N 0.691217°E / 51.500683; 0.691217 (Sea Reach No. 5 starboard)
Sea Reach № 4 Port buoy Group flashing (2) red 5s 51°29.504′N 0°44.121′E / 51.491733°N 0.735350°E / 51.491733; 0.735350 (Sea Reach No. 4 port) Starboard buoy Group flashing (2) green 5s 51°29.694′N 0°44.193′E / 51.494900°N 0.736550°E / 51.494900; 0.736550 (Sea Reach No. 4 starboard)
Sea Reach № 3 Port buoy Quick flashing red 51°29.221′N 0°46.707′E / 51.487017°N 0.778450°E / 51.487017; 0.778450 (Sea Reach No. 3 port) Starboard buoy Quick flashing green 51°29.410′N 0°47.061′E / 51.490167°N 0.784350°E / 51.490167; 0.784350 (Sea Reach No. 3 starboard)
Sea Reach № 2 Port buoy Flashing red 5s 51°29.296′N 0°49.754′E / 51.488267°N 0.829233°E / 51.488267; 0.829233 (Sea Reach No. 2 port) Starboard buoy Flashing green 5s 51°29.493′N 0°49.726′E / 51.491550°N 0.828767°E / 51.491550; 0.828767 (Sea Reach No. 2 starboard)
Sea Reach № 1 Port buoy Flashing red 2.5s 51°29.368′N 0°52.445′E / 51.489467°N 0.874083°E / 51.489467; 0.874083 (Sea Reach No. 1 port) Yellow pillar buoy

Racon T

Flashing yellow 2.5s 51°29.586′N 0°52.710′E / 51.493100°N 0.878500°E / 51.493100; 0.878500 (Sea Reach No. 1)
West Oaze ̶ ̶ ̶ The Oaze Deep Red & white buoy Isophase 5s 51°28.975′N 0°55.413′E / 51.482917°N 0.923550°E / 51.482917; 0.923550 (West Oaze)
Oaze Bank ̶ ̶ ̶ Starboard buoy Quick flashing green
Oaze Yellow pillar buoy Group flashing (4) Yellow 10s 51°28.977′N 0°56.917′E / 51.482950°N 0.948617°E / 51.482950; 0.948617 (Oaze) ̶ ̶ ̶
Argus ̶ ̶ ̶ Yellow pillar buoy yellow ‘X’ topmark Flashing yellow 2.5s 51°29.297′N 0°58.715′E / 51.488283°N 0.978583°E / 51.488283; 0.978583 (Argus)
Oaze Deep ̶ ̶ ̶ Starboard buoy Group flashing (2) green 5s 51°30.000′N 1°0.000′E / 51.500000°N 1.000000°E / 51.500000; 1.000000 (Oaze Deep)
Knob Red & white buoy Isophase 5s ̶ ̶ ̶
SE Mouse ̶ ̶ ̶ Starboard buoy Quick flashing green
Knock John № 7 ̶ ̶ ̶ The Knock John Channel Starboard buoy Group flashing (4) green 15s 51°31.956′N 1°06.406′E / 51.532600°N 1.106767°E / 51.532600; 1.106767 (Knock John No. 7)
Knock John № 5 ̶ ̶ ̶ Starboard buoy Group flashing (3) green 10s 51°32.490′N 1°07.750′E / 51.541500°N 1.129167°E / 51.541500; 1.129167 (Knock John No. 5)
Knock John № 4 Port buoy Group flashing (3) red 10s 51°32.323′N 1°07.906′E / 51.538717°N 1.131767°E / 51.538717; 1.131767 (Knock John No. 4) ̶ ̶ ̶
Knock John № 3 ̶ ̶ ̶ Starboard buoy Flashing green 5s 51°33.278′N 1°09.692′E / 51.554633°N 1.161533°E / 51.554633; 1.161533 (Knock John No. 3 starboard)
Knock John № 2 Port buoy Flashing red 5s 51°33.112′N 1°09.847′E / 51.551867°N 1.164117°E / 51.551867; 1.164117 (Knock John No. 2 port) ̶ ̶ ̶
Knock John № 1 ̶ ̶ ̶ South cardinal buoy Quick flashing white (6) + long flash 15s 51°33.717′N 1°10.833′E / 51.561950°N 1.180550°E / 51.561950; 1.180550 (Knock John No. 1 Starboard)
Knock John Port buoy Group flashing (2) red 5s 51°33.661′N 1°11.357′E / 51.561017°N 1.189283°E / 51.561017; 1.189283 (Knock John No. 1 Port) ̶ ̶ ̶
Black Deep № 12 Port buoy Group flashing (4) red 15s 51°33.661′N 1°13.511′E / 51.561017°N 1.225183°E / 51.561017; 1.225183 (Black Deep No. 12) The Black Deep Channel ̶ ̶ ̶
Black Deep № 11 ̶ ̶ ̶ Starboard buoy Group flashing (3) green 10s 51°34.250′N 1°13.475′E / 51.570833°N 1.224583°E / 51.570833; 1.224583 (Black Deep No. 11)
Black Deep № 10 Port buoy Group flashing (3) red 10s ̶ ̶ ̶
Black Deep № 9 ̶ ̶ ̶ South cardinal buoy Quick flashing white (6) + long flash
Inner Fisherman Port buoy Quick flashing red ̶ ̶ ̶
Black Deep № 7 ̶ ̶ ̶ Starboard buoy Quick flashing green
Black Deep № 8 ̶ ̶ ̶ West cardinal buoy Quick flashing white (9) 15s
BDM2 Yellow pillar buoy (mid-channel) Flashing yellow 2.5s 51°37.370′N 1°20.040′E / 51.622833°N 1.334000°E / 51.622833; 1.334000 (BDM2) ̶ ̶ ̶
Black Deep № 6 Port buoy Flashing red 2.5s ̶ ̶ ̶
Black Deep № 5 ̶ ̶ ̶ East cardinal buoy Very quick flashing white (3) 5s
Black Deep № 4 Port buoy Group flashing (2) red 5s ̶ ̶ ̶
BDM1 Yellow pillar buoy (mid-channel) yellow ‘X’ topmark Flashing yellow 2.5s 51°41.960′N 1°27.590′E / 51.699333°N 1.459833°E / 51.699333; 1.459833 (BDM1) ̶ ̶ ̶
Black Deep № 3 ̶ ̶ ̶ Starboard buoy Group flashing (3) green 15s
Black Deep № 1 ̶ ̶ ̶ Starboard buoy Flashing green 5s
Black Deep № 2 Port buoy Group flashing (4) red 15s ̶ ̶ ̶
SHM Yellow pillar buoy (mid-channel) yellow ‘X’ topmark Racon T Flashing yellow 2.5s 51°46.050′N 1°31.540′E / 51.767500°N 1.525667°E / 51.767500; 1.525667 (SHM) ̶ ̶ ̶
Sunk Head Tower ̶ ̶ ̶ North cardinal buoy Quick flashing white
Black Deep Port buoy Quick flashing red 51°48.10′N 1°36.60′E / 51.80167°N 1.61000°E / 51.80167; 1.61000 (Black Deep) ̶ ̶ ̶
Trinity South cardinal buoy Quick flashing (6) + long flash 15s ̶ ̶ ̶
Dynamo ̶ ̶ ̶ Yellow pillar buoy yellow ‘X’ topmark Flashing yellow 2.5s 51°50.060′N 1°33.880′E / 51.834333°N 1.564667°E / 51.834333; 1.564667 (Yellow pillar)
Sunk Inner ̶ ̶ ̶ Light float Isophase 3s 51°51.170′N 1°34.400′E / 51.852833°N 1.573333°E / 51.852833; 1.573333 (Light float)

References[edit]

Notes

  1. ^ a b "81. Greater Thames Estuary". Countryside Agency. Archived from the original on 27 February 2006. Retrieved 2 March 2013.
  2. ^ "River Thames". Britannica. Retrieved 25 February 2022.
  3. ^ a b "Port of London Act 1968 (as amended)" (PDF). Port of London Authority. Retrieved 25 February 2022.
  4. ^ "Thames Estuary Passages" (PDF). the Cruising Almanac. Archived from the original (PDF) on 29 February 2008. Retrieved 2 March 2013.
  5. ^ 2100.1 Thames Estuary South (chart), St Ives: Imray, Laurie, Norie & Wilson Ltd, February 2018. Tidal diamond "F" in West Swin
  6. ^ "The Thames Estuary Partnership". Thamesweb.com. 7 February 2012. Retrieved 18 March 2012.
  7. ^ "English Nature and the Greater Thames Estuary". English-nature.org.uk. Retrieved 18 March 2012.
  8. ^ Ordnance Survey, Landranger map 178: The Thames Estuary (2016)
  9. ^ "Home". Thames Estuary. Retrieved 4 June 2021.
  10. ^ "The Thames Estuary Airport Ltd". Teaco.co.uk. Retrieved 18 March 2012.
  11. ^ "Thames Estuary and Marshes". Ramsar Sites Information Service. Retrieved 25 April 2018.
  12. ^ The River Thames – its geology, geography and vital statistics from source to sea Archived 16 May 2010 at the Wayback Machine, The-River-Thames.co.uk
  13. ^ The River Thames – its natural history Archived 18 August 2006 at the Wayback Machine The-River-Thames.co.uk
  14. ^ Eade, John. "Estuary – Where Thames Smooth Waters Glide". thames.me.uk. Retrieved 27 June 2018.
  15. ^ a b c "Recreational Users Guide" (PDF). Retrieved 27 June 2018.
  16. ^ a b c Naish, John (1985). Seamarks: their History and Development. London: Stanford Maritime.
  17. ^ "History of the Corporation". Trinity House. Retrieved 26 February 2022.
  18. ^ "Lighthouse management : the report of the Royal Commissioners on Lights, Buoys, and Beacons, 1861, examined and refuted Vol. 2". 1861. pp. 116–119.
  19. ^ "Lighthouse management : the report of the Royal Commissioners on Lights, Buoys, and Beacons, 1861, examined and refuted Vol. 2". 1861. pp. 77–78.
  20. ^ a b "Lighthouse management : the report of the Royal Commissioners on Lights, Buoys, and Beacons, 1861, examined and refuted Vol. 2". 1861. pp. 133–135.
  21. ^ Report of the Royal Commission on Lighthouse Administration. London: Wyman & Sons. 1908. p. 202.
  22. ^ a b Ayres, Arthur (10 April 1888). "Compressed Oil-Gas and its applications". XCIII: 306–310. {{cite journal}}: Cite journal requires |journal= (help)
  23. ^ Stone, Peter (2017). The History of the Port of London: A Vast Emporium of All Nations. Barnsley, S. Yorks.: Pen & Sword Books Ltd.
  24. ^ Admiralty Chart 2484 - River Thames Hole Haven to London Bridge (2013)
  25. ^ Admiralty Chart 1185 - River Thames Sea Reach (2017)
  26. ^ Admiralty Chart 1183 - Thames Estuary (2017)
  27. ^ Crossing the Thames Estuary by Roger Gaspar (Imray)
  28. ^ "Mariners' passage planning and routeing guide" (PDF).


External links[edit]

wiki 51°30′N 0°35′E / 51.500°N 0.583°E / 51.500; 0.583