Sillon de Talbert, Pleubian, Bretagne, France
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Coastal photograph of Sillon du Talbert, L'Armor, Pleubian on 16 April 2004 low tide. End of the Sillon, looking N-N-E at the Archipel d'Ollone. The Sillon du Talbert is a natural thin 3-km long tongue made of "galets" (pebbles about 5 to 20 cm) and sand. It is located at the tip of a peninsula between the estuaries of the rivers Jaudy (Le Jaudy) and Trieux (Le Trieux) next to Ile de Bre´hat. At the end of the Sillon, there is an archipel of small islands and rocks called "Archipel d'Ollone" (Ollone archipel), also called the Talbert islands (Iles de Talbert) by the locals. The Sillon du Talbert (or Sillon de Talbert) is an important reserve of flora and fauna. The Sillon was damaged by locals using stones for construction until 1928, and by the Germans, who used stones for the Ile Blanche bunker system construction in 1943 as part of the WWII Atlantic wall. (Coastal Photograph by Hubert Chanson, Department of Civil Engineering, the University of Queensland, Brisbane, Queensland 4072, Australia.) |
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Palavras-Chave | #Sillon de Talbert #photograph #pebbles #260000 Earth Sciences #260400 Oceanography #260403 Physical Oceanography #260100 Geology #290000 Engineering and Technology #290800 Civil Engineering #290802 Water and Sanitary Engineering #291200 Maritime Engineering #291205 Ocean Engineering #291100 Environmental Engineering #300000 Agricultural, Veterinary and Environmental Sciences #300800 Environmental Sciences #770400 Coastal and Estuarine Environment #JX |
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