Lowest Tide

As a follow-up to yesterday’s Seaweed Dawn post showing Fucus glowing in the yellow light, today’s post shows the very lowest intertidal edge, pictures taken at the lowest tide we experienced during the Kilgii Gwaay archaeology project this year. This post features bat stars and turban snails and a lot of other things that I am not familiar with and have not looked up either. Bat stars come in an incredible variety of colours, but I think are all one species. I am pretty sure these are the Red Turban snails (Lithopoma gibberosa). They are said to be good to eat, though I have not tried them. They have large operculum which is an oval-shaped flat shell disc that is used to close the entrance to the main shell. Turban snail opercula are used as an inlay to decorate Northwest Coast boxes and masks and other wood carvings.

turban snails

There are also some interesting seaweeds at these lower tidal levels – the kelp fronds are in the lower tidal reaches, the green algae(?) I only noticed at the lowest levels.

green and brown seaweeds

This link catalogues my posts about volunteering on the Kilgii Gwaay archaeological site project.

To open the gallery below, click on any image then use the arrows to navigate and escape to return to this page.

Tansy, one of the Quimper Hittys came along and has blogged about the trip from a doll’s view and you can find those posts here while this post has a good shot of a turban snail that gives a sense of scale and this one has some good shots of her inspecting the bat stars.

Canon 5Dii, Canon 50mm/f1.4, ISO200 (two shots at 640) see gallery for EXIF data.

18 thoughts on “Lowest Tide

  1. Pingback: Protest « burnt embers

    • Hi Lynn – can you imagine a variety of starfish that could live in the garden – finding a blue one under a hosta or a brown and yellow one blending in at the base of a tree? Anyway, they don’t really like being exposed at low tide, which is why they live so low in the tidal range, so gardens will just have to do without. There are very few daylight tides every year when these can be seen, so its a real treat. I am glad these photos pleased you 🙂

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      • Surrogate starfish, and not slippery either. Sounds good to me. Your daylilies are terrific btw. I need to take some garden shots – our white calla lilies are in full swing right now, and very photogenic in the right conditions.

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    • Hi Isaac – welcome to my blog, and thanks so much for your comment – nice to make someone’s morning, that’s for sure. I was pretty floored by them when I came upon them – it made my morning.

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