Shinnecock Inlet
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Shinnecock Inlet is the easternmost of five major inlets[1] connecting bays to the Atlantic Ocean through the narrow 100-mile-long barrier islands that stretch from New York City to Southhampton, New York on the south shore of Long Island.
The inlet was formed by the Great Hurricane of 1938 which killed several people when it permanently broke through the island in Hampton Bays, New York.
Maintenance of the inlet has been controversial.
It saves boaters in the Hamptons several miles in access to the Atlantic Ocean. The inlet is almost directly lined up with the Shinnecock Canal between Shinnecock Bay and the Peconic Bay which allows a shortcut to the ocean for boaters on the north fork of Long Island.
Consequently management has been geared to keep the inlet dredged and open. However, the inlet has interrupted the flow of sand (which normally flows east to west) and consequently there has been major beach erosion on the west side of the inlet including the November 1992 Nor'easter that wiped out much of West Hampton Dunes, New York. The phenomenon is called longshore drift.
Efforts to prevent erosion with jetty groynes have just pushed the problems further and further east resulting in serious beach erosion problems on Fire Island. West Hampton Dunes incorporated in 1993 specifically to have legal standing in the skirmishes with Corps of Engineers regarding the practice.
The major inlets on the barrier beach are:
- Rockaway Inlet
- East Rockaway Inlet[2]
- Fire Island Inlet
- Moriches Inlet
- Shinnecock Inlet