9 Astronomic Fundamental Principles 2 Astronomic Fundamental Principles The chronological sequence of marine tides has been associated with the Moon’s and the Sun’s relative positions to Earth already since ancient times. A characteristic of North Sea tides is the fact that to each upper culmination of the Moon can be assigned a high water and the ensuing low water. On average 12 h 25 min later, after the lower culmination, follows another high water and subsequent low water. The average time passing between the Moon’s transit over the prime meridian in upper culmination (or over 180° W in lower culmina tion) and the onset of the next following high water is called mean high water interval (MHWI). In the German Bight, intervals between 9 h 45 min (Borkum) and 16 h 27 min (Geesthacht) are observed; in Cuxhaven, the interval is 11 h 50 min (cf. Table 3). In contrast to wide parts of the global ocean with its fringing and marginal seas, the North Sea tides are very regular, in particular within the German Bight; mostly these are semi-diurnal with tidal ranges of 2 to 4 m. The astronomically explicable deviations of high and low water intervals from their mean values are less than 1 h. The correspondent height deviations vary in the amount of less than 0,5 m. Because this is so, temporal mean values of levels and intervals already provide good approximations for each individual case. A detailed illustration of the celestial rudiments of tidal theory shall be dis pensed with here. Commendable illustrations of tides as a function of time have been published already by Horn (1948 and 1960).