thumb|upright=1.2|A 2016 [[United States Army Corps of Engineers|U.S. Army Corps of Engineers map showing New York–New Jersey Harbor Estuary's drainage divide and drainage basin]]

thumb|[[Henry Harrisse|Harrisse/LOC copy of the Manatus Map of 1639]]

thumb|upright=1.2|An 1866 map of New York–New Jersey Harbor Estuary

thumb|upright=1.2|A 2011 [[NASA image of New York–New Jersey Harbor Estuary]]

thumb|upright=1.2|Population density and elevation above sea level in the [[New York metropolitan area|New York City metropolitan area as of 2010]]

thumb|upright=1.2|An aerial view of New York–New Jersey Harbor Estuary

The New York–New Jersey Harbor Estuary, also known as the Hudson-Raritan Estuary, is in the northeastern states of New Jersey and New York on the East Coast of the United States. The system of waterways of the Port of New York and New Jersey forms one of the most intricate natural harbors in the world and one of the busiest ports of the United States. The harbor opens onto the New York Bight in the Atlantic Ocean to the southeast and Long Island Sound to the northeast.

Although the overall form of the estuary remains unchanged from the time of Giovanni da Verrazzano's visit in 1524, all parts have changed at least a little, and some parts, such as Hell Gate and Ellis Island, have been almost completely altered. In the greatest hidden change, the navigational channels have been deepened from the natural depth to . In some places this required blasting of bedrock.

There is an extremely complex system of tides and currents. Both the Bight and the Sound are essentially marine bodies with tides and saltwater, but the Sound compared to the Atlantic is about 20–30% less saline (as an estuary), and the tide is about 3 hours later with as much as 70% more variation. Rivers add a fresher, non-tidal inflow although the tide and brackishness extend well up rivers throughout the extended hydrologic system from Albany to Montauk Point to the Hudson Canyon region of the New York Bight. The New York Harbor Observing and Prediction System (NYHOPS) utilizes information from sensors, weather forecasts, and environment models to provide real-time forecasts of meteorological and oceanographic conditions in the area.

Since the Ash Wednesday Storm of 1962 beaches along the shores of the East Coast have been regularly replenished with sand pumped in from off-shore. The United States Army Corps of Engineers (USACE) coordinates the projects.

In 2016, USACE and the Port Authority of New York and New Jersey produced a comprehensive restoration plan for the New York Harbor region, with proposals to mitigate the effects of sea level rise through projects to restore natural areas. In September the USACE released the New York New Jersey Harbor and Tributaries Study (HATS).

Features of the harbor estuary

[[Image:NYH gna41074 5.jpg|thumb|upright=1.2|

1. Upper New York Bay<br />

2. Lower New York Bay<br />

3. Newark Bay<br />

4. Hudson River<br />

5. East River<br />

6. Raritan Bay<br />

7. Jamaica Bay<br />

8. Long Island Sound<br />

9. New York Bight-North Atlantic<br />

10. Ambrose Channel<br />

11. Mud Dump Site<br />

12. Hudson Canyon<br />

A. Manhattan<br />

B. Brooklyn<br />

C. Staten Island<br />

D. Queens<br />

E. The Bronx<br />

F. Bayonne-Jersey City<br />

G. Newark<br />

H. Raritan Bayshore<br />

i. Rockaway Point<br />

j. Sandy Hook<br />

(This is <!--NOAA provided with the consent that image is--> '.)]]

The lists below includes features of the Port of New York and New Jersey with a waterborne emphasis, starting with natural features. Where possible the list proceeds from the Lower Bay entrance approximately clockwise around the harbor. The alternative sorting is by jurisdiction.

Official references are the NOAA Coastal pilot, NOAA nautical charts, and USGS topographic maps.

Many jurisdictional issues appear in U.S. law.

Rivers and streams

Bi-state

  • Hackensack River
  • Hudson River (lowest section also called the North River)

New Jersey

  • Berrys Creek
  • Dwars Kill
  • Elizabeth River
  • Overpeck Creek
  • Navesink River
  • Passaic River
  • First River (a.k.a. Mill Brook)
  • Second River
  • Third River
  • Rahway River
  • Raritan River
  • Shrewsbury River
  • Morses Creek
  • Piles Creek
  • Woodbridge River

New York

  • Alley Creek
  • Bronx River
  • Byram River
  • Coney Island Creek
  • Flushing River
  • Fresh Kills
  • Gerritsen Creek
  • Glen Cove Creek
  • Gowanus Canal (formerly Gowanus Creek)
  • Hawtree Creek
  • Hook Creek
  • Clear Stream
  • Valley Stream Brook
  • Hutchinson River
  • Luyster Creek
  • Main Creek
  • Mamaroneck River
  • Mianus River
  • Motts Creek
  • Newtown Creek
  • Dutch Kills
  • English Kills
  • Maspeth Creek
  • Whale Creek
  • Richmond Creek
  • Sherman Creek
  • Simonsons Creek
  • Smith Creek
  • Springville Creek
  • Stannards Brook
  • Tibbetts Brook

Tidal straits

Inter-state

  • Arthur Kill
  • Kill Van Kull
  • Long Island Sound

New York

  • Bronx Kill
  • Buttermilk Channel
  • East River
  • Grass Hassock Channel
  • Harlem River
  • Hell Gate
  • The Narrows
  • Pumpkin Patch Channel
  • Rockaway Inlet
  • Spuyten Duyvil

Bays, inlets and coves

New York Bay

  • Lower New York Bay
  • Gravesend Bay
  • Great Hills Harbor
  • Jamaica Bay
  • Bergen Basin
  • Fresh Creek Basin
  • Grassy Bay
  • Head of Bay
  • Thurston Basin
  • Mill Basin
  • Norton Basin
  • Paerdegat Basin
  • Leonardo Harbor
  • Prince's Bay
  • Raritan Bay
  • Sandy Hook Bay
  • Rockaway Inlet
  • Dead Horse Bay
  • Sheepshead Bay
  • Upper New York Bay (New York Harbor)
  • Atlantic Basin
  • Communipaw
  • Erie Basin
  • Gowanus Bay
  • Harsimus Cove
  • John's Cove
  • Long Canal
  • Morris Canal Basin
  • Newark Bay
  • Weehawken Cove

East River

  • Bowery Bay
  • Bushwick Inlet
  • Flushing Bay
  • Little Bay
  • Hallets Cove
  • Newtown Creek
  • Powell's Cove
  • Wallabout Bay (Navy Yard Basin)
  • Westchester Creek

Long Island Sound

  • City Island Harbor
  • Eastchester Bay
  • Hempstead Harbor
  • Little Neck Bay
  • Manhasset Bay
  • Pelham Bay
  • Port Chester Harbor

Islands

Bi-state

  • Ellis Island—All of the landfill portion of Ellis Island beyond its 1834 waterfront is in Jersey City, New Jersey, as is all water surrounding Liberty and Ellis Islands. The original island is an exclave in New York State.
  • Liberty Island, exclave of New York within surrounding waters of Jersey City
  • Shooters Island at head of Kill Van Kull in Newark Bay, part in New Jersey and part in New York

New Jersey

  • Plum Island, Sandy Hook Bay
  • Robbins Reef

New York

Bronx County

  • Pelham Islands
  • The Blauzes
  • Chimney Sweeps Islands
  • City Island
  • Hart Island
  • High Island
  • Hunters Island
  • Rat Island
  • Travers Island
  • Twin Island
  • North Brother Island
  • South Brother Island
  • Rikers Island

Kings County

  • Long Island

Jamaica Bay islands

  • The Canarsie Pol
  • Ruffle Bar

New York County

  • Manhattan

Upper Bay islands

  • Ellis Island
  • Anchorage Channel
  • Bayridge Channel
  • Buttermilk Channel
  • Claremont Terminal Channel
  • Port Jersey Channel
  • Greenville Channel
  • Pierhead Channel
  • Red Hook Channel
  • Red Hook Flats Anchorage

Hudson River

  • Weehawken Edgewater Channel

East River

  • East Channel
  • South Brother Channel
  • West Channel

Port facilities

One of the many duties of the Port Authority of New York and New Jersey is to develop trade interests in the New York-New Jersey area. The Port Authority operates most of the containerized port facilities listed here, and also collaborates with the Army Corps of Engineers to maintain shipping channels in the harbor.

New Jersey (numerous privately operated bulk facilities, especially petroleum, are not listed)

  • Auto Marine Terminal, Bayonne and Jersey City—Port Authority
  • Global Marine Terminal, Jersey City—privately operated
  • Port Jersey
  • Port Newark–Elizabeth Marine Terminal, Newark and Elizabeth—Port Authority

New York

  • Brooklyn
  • Red Hook Container Terminal—Port Authority
  • South Brooklyn Marine Terminal—City of New York
  • Staten Island
  • Howland Hook Marine Terminal—Port Authority

Lights and lighthouses

For lists see and. Active unless noted.

New Jersey

  • Conover Beacon (Chapel Hill Front Range)
  • Great Beds Light
  • Old Orchard Shoal Light
  • Robbins Reef Light
  • Romer Shoal Light
  • Sandy Hook Light
  • West Bank Light (Range Front)

New York

  • Ambrose Light
  • Lightship Ambrose (to Scotland Station, NJ, 1933; decommissioned 1968)
  • Blackwell Island Light (decommissioned 1934)
  • Coney Island Light (Nortons Point)
  • Execution Rocks Light
  • Fort Wadsworth Light (decommissioned 1965)
  • Jeffreys Hook Light
  • Kings Point Light
  • New Dorp Light (Swash Channel Range Rear, decommissioned 1964)
  • Prince's Bay Light (decommissioned 1922)
  • Staten Island Range Light
  • Statue of Liberty (discontinued 1902)
  • Stepping Stones Light
  • Throgs Neck Light
  • Whitestone Point Light

Waterfront jurisdictions

Government and other agencies

  • Immigration and Customs Enforcement
  • National Park Service
  • New Jersey Meadowlands Commission
  • Port Authority of New York and New Jersey
  • United States Army Corps of Engineers
  • United States Coast Guard
  • U.S. Customs and Border Protection
  • United States Park Police
  • Waterfront Commission of New York Harbor

State, county, municipal

New Jersey

  • Monmouth County
  • Waterwitch Highlands
  • Atlantic Highlands
  • Leonardo
  • Belford
  • Port Monmouth
  • Keansburg
  • Port Comfort
  • Union Beach
  • Keyport
  • Middlesex County
  • Laurence Harbor
  • Morgan
  • South Amboy
  • Perth Amboy
  • Sewaren
  • Port Reading
  • Chrome
  • Carteret
  • Union County
  • Tremley Point
  • Grasselli
  • Linden
  • Elizabeth
  • Elizabethport
  • Essex County
  • Newark
  • Hudson County
  • Bayonne
  • Port Johnson
  • Liberty State Park
  • Jersey City
  • Hoboken
  • Weehawken
  • West New York
  • North Bergen
  • Edgewater

New York

  • New York City
  • Manhattan, New York County
  • Brooklyn, Kings County
  • Floyd Bennett Field
  • Manhattan Beach
  • Brighton Beach
  • Coney Island
  • Gravesend
  • Bensonhurst
  • Fort Hamilton
  • Bath Beach
  • Bay Ridge
  • Red Hook
  • South Brooklyn
  • Brooklyn Heights
  • Queens, Queens County
  • :Lower Bay
  • Far Rockaway
  • Rockaway Point
  • Breezy Point
  • :East River
  • Flushing
  • Willets Point
  • La Guardia Airport
  • The Bronx, Bronx County
  • City Island
  • Staten Island, Richmond County
  • Port Richmond
  • Elm Park
  • Mariners Harbor
  • West New Brighton
  • Sailors Snug Harbor
  • New Brighton
  • Tottenville
  • Charleston
  • Port Socony
  • Travis
  • Chelsea
  • St. George
  • Tompkinsville

See also

  • Marine life of New York–New Jersey Harbor Estuary
  • Land reclamation in Lower Manhattan
  • New York Harbor Storm-Surge Barrier
  • Newark Basin

References

  • New York-New Jersey Harbor Estuary Program, partnership to protect and restore the Harbor Estuary
  • New York and New Jersey Harbor, US Army Corps of Engineers
  • PANJNY Coastal Ecosystems Initiatives
  • Video explaining formation of estuary
  • EPA Water Quality
  • New York–New Jersey Harbor/Urban Core