Santa Barbara Channel

The Santa Barbara Channel is that part of the Pacific Ocean which separates the mainland of California from the northern Channel Islands. It is generally south of the city of Santa Barbara, and west of the city of Ventura. It trends east-west, is approximately 80 miles long and averages about thirty miles across, becoming narrowest at its easternmost extremity where Anacapa Island is less than twenty miles from the mainland. The Santa Barbara Channel is considered a scenic location, with the islands visible from the mainland on clear days. The view is partly marred by oil platforms anchored in the channel. Excursion boats cross the channel, taking visitors to watch whales and visit the islands. In the perpendicular (east-west) direction, huge cargo ships and tankers occupy a major shipping lane on their way to or from the ports of Los Angeles and Long Beach. In 1969, the Santa Barbara Channel was the site of a major oil spill. Public outrage over the massive environmental damage inflicted by this spill was a major spur to the budding environmental movement.

 

<< PreviousWord BrowserNext >>
raf mona
reserve good conduct medal
the beginning of the end
krex tv
list of carfree places
raf neatishead
male pill
judo at the 1964 summer olympics
echo satellite
programming language dialect
the ripley
last best west
vietnam meritorious service medal
prague (novel)
john waite
project score
ketagalan
batesville
association of universities and colleges of canada
bubble boy
texas syndicate
association of commonwealth universities
tsugunai: atonement
dewey b. larson
snesamp
afrocarpus
sudbury wolves
nuer language
greg stafford
mike white
kelburn, new zealand
the greed of man
thread hijacking
friendly match
1992 93 nhl season
camborne, new zealand
sortino ratio
nefilim
dragonfish
aurora islands
sensorium
saints of eden
provence orange tip
samuel alexander