Subject: Re: Curonian Lagoon
Date: Dec 18, 2002 @ 01:19
Author: acroorca2002 <orc@orcoast.com> ("acroorca2002 <orc@...>" <orc@...>)
Prev    Post in Topic    Next [All Posts]
Prev    Post in Time    Next


glad you like it too karolis
& i think you will also succeed in making a nice little collection
before finally realizing the immensity of your chosen topic
for that could well be the real moment of truth in such a case

but then at least you can simply drop your try at any point
rather than insist on completing the inventory

& you can also continue to compromise & diffuse your focus
from rare things to common & commoner ones
as you have already begun to do here once again
all in the name of interest

but i certainly salute your enormous reach & ever burgeoning
ambitions
for thats what trypointing is all about


btw & fyi
all coastal boundaries are indeed shore boundaries too
even tho not all shore boundaries are coastal ones

i didnt mean to confuse you about that

coast & seashore are one & the same thing

also
internal waters are indeed often maritime
yipes
despite their interior sounding name
& legally they can even extend seaward beyond the coastline
as far out as the straight baselines

but fortunately this wont affect your try
only perhaps what you might call it


ps
the coastal try seemingly completed on your behalf this morning
with no more than 3 items
must also at least countenance the possibility of gysr too
since suriname claims the entire courantyne estuary
all the way to the guyana shore
but i doubt their dispute will ever be settled along that line
so this potentially 4th item remains just a little footnote for now

& a still smaller asterisk for you
the ill defined frnl boundary on the island of saint martin is said
by some to run along the shoreline of a coastal lagoon
but this appears to be even more problematic than all the others

--- In BoundaryPoint@yahoogroups.com, asdff sssdfddt
<kbajoraz@y...> wrote:
>
> why thank you, Mike, for all that seemingly complete research
done on my behalf! Coastal Border List having been done so
fast, I suppose I will now move on to internal waters - lakes,
rivers and the like.
>
> Since shore boundarues are a little more common than
coastal, I shall stay with international borders only. But there's
also a rather interesting situation that I found in Lithuania.Now,
I've seen a few lakeshore municipality boundaries, but this is in
the Curonian Lagoon. Map attached does the explaining.