For the Instructor
These student materials complement the Coastal Processes, Hazards and Society Instructor Materials. If you would like your students to have access to the student materials, we suggest you either point them at the Student Version which omits the framing pages with information designed for faculty (and this box). Or you can download these pages in several formats that you can include in your course website or local Learning Managment System. Learn more about using, modifying, and sharing InTeGrate teaching materials.Tidal "Bulge"
The gravitational attraction between the moon and the Earth causes the water in the oceans, which is fluid and mobile, to be pulled towards the moon. This creates a "bulge" in the ocean that is closest to the moon and as the Earth rotates, the location of the waters that are affected change. Picture the moon as a magnet that draws the water towards it. This movement of water towards the moon is counteracted by the force of intertia, the force that tends to cause a moving object to continue moving in a straight line. This is what balances out the movement of our oceans, but because the gravitational pull is stronger, the resultant force causes our tides. The sun also has this effect, but due to the vast distance from Earth, plays a smaller role.