The foreshore, also called the intertidal or littoral zone, is that part of a beach that lies between average high tide and average low tide.
Topography
Tidepools can be formed at low tide when water is trapped in rocky hollow. Under certain conditions such as those at Morecambe Bay, quicksand can be formed.
Ecology
Since the foreshore is alternately covered by the sea and exposed to the air, organisms living in this environment must have adaptions for both wet and dry conditions. Hazards include being smashed or carried away by rough waves. Typical inhabitants include sea anemones, barnacles, chitons, crabs, isopods, limpets, mussels, sea stars, snails and whelks.
Legal issues
As with the dry sand part of a beach, legal and political disputes can arise over the ownership and use of the foreshore. One recent example is the New Zealand foreshore and seabed controversy. In legal discussions the foreshore is often referred to as the wet-sand area. For privately owned beaches in the United States, some states such as Massachusetts use the low water mark as the dividing line between the property of the State and that of the beach owner while others such as California use the high water mark.
FORESHORE, that part of the seashore which lies between highand lowwater mark at ordinary tides.
In the United Kingdom it is ordinarily and prima facie vested in the crown, except where it may be vested in a subject by ancient grant or charter from the crown, or by prescription.
There is a public right of user in that part of the foreshore which belongs to the crown, for the purpose of navigation or fishery, but there is no right of passage over lands adjacent to the shore, except by a particular custom.
Foreshore along the Abel Tasman National Park coastline is now a scenic reserve under the joint management of the Tasman District Council and the Department of Conservation.
The foreshore reserve is to be managed under an administration committee comprised of the Tasman District Council Chief Executive and the DOC Nelson/Marlborough Conservator.
Reserve status for the Abel Tasman foreshore was then determined to be consistent with the Foreshore and Seabed Act 2004 and the Conservation Minister, Chris Carter, gave his approval for the foreshore to be created a reserve.