Article · Wikipedia archive · Last revised Jun 16, 2026

Wash margin

A drift line or wrack line, also known as a wash margin or wash fringe is an area of the shore on which material is deposited or washed up. It often runs along the margin of a waterbody and there can be several bands due to variations in water levels. As a result of the richness of nutrients that occur in such wash fringes, ruderal species frequently occur here, that, for example, on the Baltic Sea coast consist of grassleaf orache and sea kale.

Last revised
Jun 16, 2026
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Two successive wash margins (centre and below right) comprising seaweed and eelgrass. source ↗
Close-up of wash margin on the beach at Cuxhaven source ↗
The strandline at Ringstead Beach, Dorset, United Kingdom source ↗

A drift line or wrack line,1 also known as a wash margin2 or wash fringe2 (German: Spülsaum)2 is an area of the shore on which material is deposited or washed up. It often runs along the margin of a waterbody and there can be several bands due to variations in water levels. As a result of the richness of nutrients that occur in such wash fringes, ruderal species frequently occur here, that, for example, on the Baltic Sea coast consist of grassleaf orache and sea kale.

See also

See also

References

References

Literature

  • Leser, Hartmut, ed. (2005). Wörterbuch Allgemeine Geographie, 13th ed., Deutsche Taschenbuch Verlag, Munich, ISBN 978-3-423-03422-7.
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