Bay of Puck
Bay of Puck Zatoka Pucka | |
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Beach in Puck, kitesurfers | |
Puck Bay, with inner shallow |
The Bay of Puck or Puck Bay (Polish: Zatoka Pucka, German: Putziger Wiek), is a shallow western branch of the Bay of Gdańsk in the southern Baltic Sea, off the shores of Gdańsk Pomerania, Poland. It is separated from the open sea by the Hel Peninsula.[1]
The bay has an average depth of 2 m (7 ft) to 6 m (20 ft). There is a shallow sand-bank from Rewa to Kuźnica in the middle of Hel Peninsula. The bay, historically also known as the Bay of Putzig (German: Putziger Wiek; Kashubian: Pùckô Hôwinga), is available only for small fishing boats and yachts, which have to stick to the strict deeper routes. There are deposits of potassium salt below the Bay of Puck.
The main ports are Puck, Jastarnia, and Hel.
- Bay of Puck and Hel Peninsula as seen from Landsat satellite in 2000
- Towns of Puck Bay and Hel Peninsula
See also
- Bays of Poland
- Special Protection Areas in Poland
- Natura 2000 in Poland
References
- ↑ "Pucka, Zatoka". Internetowa Encyklopedia PWN (in Polish). Wydawnictwo Naukowe PWN. Retrieved 30 August 2014.
External links
Wikimedia Commons has media related to Bay of Puck. |
Coordinates: 54°40′00″N 18°35′00″E / 54.6667°N 18.5833°E