Reference

OBX Tide Glossary

Plain-language definitions of the tide and ocean terms you’ll see on tide charts, NOAA forecasts, fishing reports, and weather alerts for the Outer Banks.

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Apogee
The point in the moon’s orbit when it is farthest from Earth. Tidal forces are weakest at apogee, producing smaller-than-average tide ranges.
Astronomical tide
The portion of the tide caused purely by the gravitational pull of the moon and sun. This is what NOAA tide tables predict — it does not include effects of wind, pressure, or storms.
Bathymetry
The shape and depth of the seafloor. Bathymetry shapes how the tidal wave moves across the continental shelf and through OBX inlets.
Constituent (tidal constituent)
One of the individual harmonic components that, added together, produce the predicted tide curve. The biggest one — M2, the principal lunar semi-diurnal constituent — has a 12.42-hour period and dominates OBX tides.
Current (tidal current)
The horizontal movement of water associated with the rise and fall of the tide. Strongest in inlets like Oregon Inlet and Hatteras Inlet, where peak ebb and flood currents reach 3-5 knots.
Datum (tidal datum)
A reference water level. Common datums on OBX charts include MLLW (Mean Lower Low Water — the average of the lower of each day’s two low tides) and MHW (Mean High Water). Tide chart heights are measured relative to a datum.
Diurnal tide
One high and one low tide per day. Not the OBX pattern — we’re semi-diurnal.
Ebb tide
The outgoing tide, when water is flowing from high to low. On the OBX oceanfront, ebb tide drains the beach and lengthens the surf zone.
Estuary
A partially enclosed body of water where freshwater rivers meet the ocean. Pamlico Sound is the second-largest estuary in the U.S.
Flood tide
The incoming tide, when water is flowing from low to high. Fish often move shoreward on the flood, making it a productive surf-fishing window.
Fetch
The distance of open water over which wind blows. Pamlico Sound’s long fetch lets even moderate winds build a meaningful wind-driven tide.
Gulf Stream
The warm, fast ocean current that passes closer to Cape Hatteras than to any other point on the U.S. East Coast. Influences offshore sea level, water temperature, and fishing patterns.
High tide
The maximum water level reached during a tidal cycle. The OBX oceanfront sees two high tides per day, separated by about 12 hours and 25 minutes.
Harmonic prediction
The method NOAA uses to forecast tides — summing dozens of sine-wave constituents derived from years of measured water levels at each station.
Inverse barometer effect
Sea level rises about 1 cm for every 1 mb drop in atmospheric pressure. A deep low-pressure system can add a foot to OBX water levels just from the pressure drop.
Low tide
The minimum water level during a tidal cycle. Best time for shelling and beachcombing.
M2
The principal lunar semi-diurnal tidal constituent, with a period of 12.42 hours. The dominant signal in every OBX tide chart.
Mean range
The average difference between Mean High Water and Mean Low Water at a tide station. About 3.4 ft at Duck, 1.6 ft at USCG Hatteras.
Mean Lower Low Water (MLLW)
The reference datum used on U.S. nautical charts — the average of the lower of each day’s two low tides, averaged over 19 years. Tide heights on charts are typically given above MLLW.
Mixed tide
Two highs and two lows per day, but with noticeably different heights. The OBX experiences mild mixed semi-diurnal tides — the second high of the day is usually a few inches different from the first.
Neap tide
The smaller-range tides occurring at first and third quarter moons, when the sun and moon pull at right angles to each other.
Nor’easter
An extratropical storm forming offshore between October and April, with strong northeast winds and onshore push. Can hold OBX water levels 2-4 ft above normal for several days.
Perigee
The point in the moon’s orbit when it is closest to Earth. Tidal forces are about 20% stronger at perigee.
Perigean spring tide / King tide
When a new or full moon coincides with the moon’s perigee, producing the largest tides of the year. Often causes nuisance flooding on NC-12 even without storms.
Semi-diurnal tide
Two highs and two lows per day, roughly equal in size. The OBX oceanfront pattern.
Slack tide
The brief period of minimal current at the turn between flood and ebb. The safest window for boats transiting Oregon Inlet or Hatteras Inlet.
Spring tide
Larger-than-average tides occurring around new and full moons, when the sun and moon align gravitationally. Nothing to do with the season “spring.”
Storm surge
The abnormal rise in seawater driven entirely by a storm (wind setup + pressure drop). Distinct from “storm tide,” which is surge + the regular astronomical tide combined.
Tidal range
The vertical distance between high tide and the following low tide.
Tidal prism
The total volume of water that moves into or out of an inlet during one tide cycle. Oregon Inlet’s tidal prism drives those famously strong inlet currents.
Wind setup
The tilt of a water surface caused by sustained wind. The dominant non-astronomical effect on Pamlico Sound water levels.