Tomales Bay | |
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Tomales Bay as viewed from Tomales Point Trail | |
Tomales Bay | |
Coordinates | 38°08′55″N 122°53′52″W / 38.14860°N 122.89787°W / 38.14860; -122.89787 |
Type | Bay |
Ocean/sea sources | Pacific Ocean |
Basin countries | United States |
Max. length | 15 km (9.3 mi) |
Max. width | 1.6 km (0.99 mi) |
Settlements | Inverness Inverness Park Point Reyes Station Marshall |
Ramsar Wetland | |
Official name | Tomales Bay |
Designated | October 21, 2002 |
Reference no. | 1215 |
Tomales Bay is a long, narrow inlet of the Pacific Ocean in Marin County in northern California in the United States.
Geography
Tomales Bay is approximately 15 mi (24 km) long and averages nearly 1.0 mi (1.6 km) wide, with relatively shallow depths averaging 18 ft, effectively separating the Point Reyes Peninsula from the mainland of Marin County. It is located approximately 30 mi (48 km) northwest of San Francisco. The bay forms the eastern boundary of Point Reyes National Seashore. Tomales Bay is recognized for protection by the California Bays and Estuaries Policy. On its northern end, it opens out onto Bodega Bay, which shelters it from the direct currents of the Pacific (especially the California Current). The bay is formed along a submerged portion of the San Andreas Fault. The fault divides the Point Reyes Peninsula through Tomales Bay in the north, and the Bolinas Lagoon in the south. The Bear Valley Visitor Center in Point Reyes Station is home to the Earthquake Trail, where visitors can see a visible rift formed on the fault during the 1906 San Francisco earthquake.
Towns bordering Tomales Bay include Inverness, Tomales, Inverness Park, Point Reyes Station, and Marshall. Additional hamlets include Nick's Cove, Spengers, Duck Cove, Shallow Beach, and Vilicichs. Dillon Beach lies just to the north of the mouth of the bay, and Tomales just to the east.
Beaches
California State Parks department monitored, surf-free beaches on the bay include Heart's Desire, Shell Beach, Indian Beach, Pebble Beach, and Millerton Point. Most beaches require a hike-in, so if visiting, prepare with walkable shoes. Swimming, picnicking, sailing, kayaking, motorboating, and fishing are all popular activities on the bay.
Water sports, oystering, and fishing
Watercrafts may be launched on Tomales Bay from the public boat ramp at Nick's Cove, north of Marshall. The sandbar at the mouth of Tomales Bay is notoriously dangerous, with a long history of small-boat accidents.
Oyster farming is a major industry on the bay. The two largest producers are Hog Island Oyster Company and Tomales Bay Oyster Company, both of which retail oysters to the public and have picnic grounds on the east shore. Hillsides east of Tomales Bay are grazed by cows belonging to local dairies. There is also grazing land west of the bay, on farms and ranches leased from Point Reyes National Seashore.
The California Office of Environmental Health Hazard Assessment (OEHHA) has developed a safe eating advisory for fish caught here, based on levels of mercury or PCBs found in local species.
Biology
The bay is home to many aquatic species, and its habitat diversity is supported by eelgrass beds and intertidal mudflats. In the bay’s waters, bony and cartilaginous fish species including halibut, coho salmon, bat rays and leopard sharks can be found. Along muddy parts of bay's shore, it is common to find the gastropods such as the invasive False Cerith snail, recognizable from its dextrally coiled shape and brown-gray pattern.
History
Coast Miwok
The area surrounding Tomales Bay was once the territory of the Coast Miwok tribe. Documented villages in the area included Echa-kolum (south of Marshall), Sakloki (opposite Tomales Point), Shotommo-wi (near the mouth of the Estero de San Antonio), and Utumia (near Tomales). The tribe's history is deeply rooted in the bay and its surrounding areas. Fishing and hunting supported their liveilhood, and shells and clams collected from the bay's shore served as currency.
Francis Drake
Francis Drake is thought to have landed in nearby Drakes Estero in 1579. Members of the Vizcaíno Expedition found the Bay in 1603, and thinking it a river, named it Rio Grande de San Sebastian.
European settlements
Early 19th-century settlements constituted the southernmost Russian colony in North America and were spread over an area stretching from Point Arena to Tomales Bay.
Railroad
The narrow gauge North Pacific Coast Railroad from Sausalito was constructed along the east side of the bay in 1874 and extended to the Russian River until it was dismantled in 1930.
Preservation efforts
Tomales Bay State Park was formed to preserve some of the bay shore; it opened to the public in 1952.
The Ramsar Convention, signed in 1971, listed Tomales Bay as a wetland of international importance.
The Giacomini Wetland Restoration Project, completed in 2008, returned to wetland several hundred acres at the south end of the bay that had been drained for grazing in the 1940s.
Lodge at Marconi
The Marconi State Historical Park (formerly Marconi Conference Center State Historic Park) preserves a small hotel built in 1913 by Guglielmo Marconi to house personnel who staffed his transpacific radio station nearby. RCA purchased the station from Marconi in 1920, and it closed in 1939, though other nearby radio stations on the Point Reyes Peninsula still operate today. It was purchased by a private foundation and given to the state in 1984 to operate as a conference center.
Gallery
- View of Tomales Bay towards the north
- Tomales Bay near Marshall, California, looking south
- Entrance to Tomales Bay as viewed from Tomales Point, looking south
- The former grade of the narrow gauge North Pacific Coast Railroad follows the east shore of the bay.
- Satellite picture of Tomales Bay
See also
- Hog Island (Tomales Bay)
- Drakes Bay — adjacent to the south
- Nova Albion
- Pacific herring
References
- "Tomales Bay". Ramsar Sites Information Service. Retrieved April 25, 2018.
- Kilgallin, Anthony (2013). Tomales Bay. Arcadia Publishing Inc. ISBN 9780738596419.
- State Water Resources Control Board Water Quality Control Policy for the Enclosed Bays and Estuaries of California (1974) State of California
- Geology at Point Reyes National Seashore and Vicinity, California: A Guide to San Andreas Fault Zone and the Point Reyes Peninsula (PDF). United States Geological Survey (Report). 2005.
- DeRooy, Carola (2008). Point Reyes Peninsula: Olema, Point Reyes Station, and Inverness. Arcadia. ISBN 978-0738558486.
- Parks, California State. "Tomales Bay State Park". California State Parks. Retrieved October 14, 2024.
- "Your Safety While Boating - Point Reyes National Seashore (U.S. National Park Service)". www.nps.gov. Retrieved October 14, 2024.
- Admin, OEHHA (December 30, 2014). "Tomales Bay". OEHHA. Retrieved June 13, 2018.
- Ackerman, Joshua (2000). "Tidal Influence on Spatial Dynamics of Leopard Sharks, Triakis semifasciata, in Tomales Bay, California". Environmental Biology of Fishes. 58 (1): 33–43. Bibcode:2000EnvBF..58...33A. doi:10.1023/A:1007657019696 – via Springer Link.
- "Tomales Bay". Greater Farallones National Marine Sanctuary.
- "Batillaria attramentaria - Mollusks-Gastropods". Smithsonian Environmental Research Center.
- "Miwok Indian Tribe". Access Genealogy. Retrieved January 7, 2008.
- Avery, Christy (2009). Tomales Bay Environmental History and Historic Resource Study (PDF) (Report). U.S. Dept. of the Interior, Pacific West Region, National Park Service – via University of Washington.
- ^ "Tomales Bay State Park". Retrieved January 7, 2008.
- David L. Durham (2000). Durhams' Place Names of the San Francisco Bay Area. Clovis, California: Word Dancer Press. ISBN 1-884995-35-7.
- Historical Atlas of California
- Dickson, A. Bray Narrow Gauge to the Redwoods (1974) Trans-Anglo Books ISBN 0-87046-010-2
- "Lodge at Macroni on Tomales Bay". January 23, 2024.
External links
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