Pretty crazy....foamy beach!

sherpasrock

Active member


yeah. i was surfing digg, and came across this. i dunno if it's been posted yet, but i couldn't find anything. this would actually be pretty fun, if you didn't hit any rocks or anything you couldn't see. haha.

http://www.dailymail.co.uk/pages/live/articles/news/worldnews.html?in_article_id=478041&in_page_id=1811

Cappuccino Coast: The day the Pacific was whipped up into an ocean of froth

By RICHARD SHEARS - More by this author » Last updated at 08:27am on 28th August 2007

Comments Comments (8)

It was as if someone had poured tons of coffee and milk into the ocean, then switched on a giant blender.

Suddenly the shoreline north of Sydney were transformed into the Cappuccino Coast.

Foam swallowed an entire beach and half the nearby buildings, including the local lifeguards' centre, in a freak display of nature at Yamba in New South Wales.

One minute a group of teenage surfers were waiting to catch a wave, the next they were swallowed up in a giant bubble bath. The foam was so light that they could puff it out of their hands and watch it float away.

FoamBeachII2_800x513.jpg


It stretched for 30 miles out into the Pacific in a phenomenon not seen at the beach for more than three decades.

Scientists explain that the foam is created by impurities in the ocean, such as salts, chemicals, dead plants, decomposed fish and excretions from seaweed.

All are churned up together by powerful currents which cause the water to form bubbles.

These bubbles stick to each other as they are carried below the surface by the current towards the shore.

As a wave starts to form on the surface, the motion of the water causes the bubbles to swirl upwards and, massed together, they become foam.

The foam "surfs" towards shore until the wave "crashes", tossing the foam into the air.

FoamBeachII1_468x721.jpg


"It's the same effect you get when you whip up a milk shake in a blender," explains a marine expert.

"The more powerful the swirl, the more foam you create on the surface and the lighter it becomes."

In this case, storms off the New South Wales Coast and further north off Queensland had created a huge disturbance in the ocean, hitting a stretch of water where there was a particularly high amount of the substances which form into bubbles.

As for 12-year-old beachgoer Tom Woods, who has been surfing since he was two, riding a wave was out of the question.

"Me and my mates just spent the afternoon leaping about in that stuff," he said.

"It was quite cool to touch and it was really weird. It was like clouds of air - you could hardly feel it."

FoamBeachII3_800x450.jpg
 
yea i am gonna go out on a limb here and say that stuff is probably not good for you. we get some foam like stuff at our beach and its basically from pollution, nothing like that though.
 
yeah, here (east coast, nj) ive seen a little bit of foam very similar to that build up in small little piles during days of huge storm waves. it's widespread and there's not much though, nothing compared to those pics at all. I would not be jumping around in it, at least not without hopping in a shower immediately after.
 
I love how people assume they can just jump right into it for fun, until they remember that the foam is as light as it is, and then they break their faces
 
Back
Top