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breaker zone

noun

  1. the area offshore where waves break, between the outermost breaker and the limit of wave uprush; the zone within which waves approaching the coastline start breaking, usually in water depths of 16 to 32 feet (5 to 10 meters).


breaker zone

  1. The nearshore zone between the outermost breakers and the bore area where wave water rushes onto the beach. The water in the breaker zone is shallow, usually between 5 and 10 m (16 and 33 ft) deep; therefore, most waves there are unstable.
  2. Also called surf zone
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Example Sentences

A rip current is a powerful, narrow channel of water flowing away from the beach and often extending through the breaker zone where waves form.

A rip current is a powerful, narrow channel of water flowing away from the beach and often extending through the breaker zone where waves form.

The sands were laid down not long after the Cambrian explosion, when animal life in the world’s oceans diversified, and we can presume that the waters farther offshore, past the breaker zone, teemed with trilobites, brachiopods, and sponges.

The sands were laid down not long after the Cambrian explosion, when animal life in the world’s oceans diversified, and we can presume that the waters farther offshore, past the breaker zone, teemed with trilobites, brachiopods, and sponges.

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