Well, I did not read the article, but the exact times between full heights (max high, max low) do not necessarily match the celestial timeline everywhere on the globe. The earth-moon orbital axis creates tidal bulges on opposite sides of the globe. The bulges track the moon in its orbit around the earth. If high tide in Long Beach occurs at noon today, that same high tide should occur at or near 12:50 pm the next day. That’s b/c by the time Long Beach aligns with that bulge on the second day it has “moved” corresponding to the moon’s progress in its orbit around the earth. (In the meantime, Long Beach would have passed under the opposite bulge about 12 h 25 min later, etc.) Consequently, the earth has to rotate for 50 min longer to catch up to the same tidal bulge on a following day. That’s the celestial timeline in its purest sense; so everywhere in the world should experience semi-diurnal tides. But as noted above, not so. Landmasses have an effect. Unless there is a microchip in your tide clock that can be programmed to compensate for variances across the globe the clock will likely eventually deviate from the celestial timeline. For example, it may read half-tide when it’s actually two hr past low tide.