Boating Waters |
Critical Area |
Main Basin |
Seafood |
Water Frontage |
Watershed |
Seagull at pier, Chesapeake Beach, Maryland, December 2002. Photo by Diane F. Evartt.
Native Americans living along its shores gave the Bay an Algonquin name. Chesepiook, meaning "great shellfish bay," was used to signify the abundance of Bay crabs, oysters, and clams. The Bay was the site of the first English settlement in Maryland and later saw the Civil War confrontation between the iron-clad Confederate Merrimac and the Union's Monitor in 1862.
Generations of watermen have made their living harvesting the bounty of the Bay, while recreational fishing, hunting, and boating attract millions of people each year and contribute significantly to Maryland's economy. Major annual seafood harvests include millions of bushels of crabs, oysters, clams, and eels.
Skipjacks under sail. Photo by Chuck Prahl.
Information about the Bay, including its history and effect on regional culture, may be found at the Chesapeake Bay Maritime Museum at St. Michaels.
The Bay watershed provides rich habitat for an abundance of life. In addition to resident species of fish and wildlife, the Bay supports large winter populations of migratory waterfowl and provides spawning, nursery and feeding grounds for ocean fish. This diversity enables some 2,700 different species of plants and animals to live in the Bay area. Research on the Chesapeake Bay and its watershed is conducted by the University of Maryland Center for Environmental Science.
According to the Chesapeake Bay Program, the number of people living within the Bay's watershed was 17.5 million in 2011, up from 17.4 million in 2010. Scientists project that the population of the watershed will approach 19 million by 2020.
? Copyright Maryland State Archives
MAIN BASIN
AREA
Maryland
1,726 square miles
Virginia
1,511 square miles
LENGTH
195 miles
WIDTH
(widest near Cape Charles, Virginia)
30 miles
(narrowest at Annapolis)
4 miles
SHORELINE
4,600 miles
DEPTH
average
25 feet
greatest (southeast of Annapolis)
174 feet
TIDAL RANGE
at Annapolis
1 foot
at head
2 feet
at mouth
3 feet
VOLUME
18 trillion gallons
SURFACE SALINITY
(parts per thousand)
at mouth
30 ppt
midway to head
15 ppt
above fall line
00 ppt
surface to bottom
2-3 ppt
WATER FRONTAGE
WATERSHED
Chesapeake Bay Commission
Chesapeake Bay Critical Area Commission
Chesapeake Bay Trust
Maryland State Crustacean
Maryland State Fish
Maryland State Reptile
Maryland Constitutional Offices & Agencies
Maryland Departments
Maryland Independent Agencies
Maryland Executive Commissions, Committees, Task Forces, & Advisory Boards
Maryland Universities & Colleges
Maryland Counties
Maryland Municipalities
Maryland at a Glance
Maryland Manual On-Line
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e-mail: mdmanual@mdarchives.state.md.us