Ocean tides are formed by meadow-solar interaction. Tides in the solid body of the Earth are formed by other forces. Let's analyze the data from https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Earth_tide. Look at the diagram of the ocean tide (Lunar tidal force: these images depict the Moon directly over 30° N (or 30° S) viewed from above the Northern Hemisphere, showing both sides of the planet. Red up, blue down.). Let us analyze the schemes of tides in the solid body of the Earth (Vertical displacements of sectorial movement. Red up, blue down; ertical displacements of tesseral movement. Red up, blue down; Vertical displacements of zonal movement. Red up, blue down).
Ocean tides are created predominantly by the Moon with periods (12.421 and 25.819 hours). Tides in the solid body of the Earth do not have these periods, they have periods of 12; 24 hours and 14 days and move in latitude and longitude. These deformations are not affected by the Moon's declination of 27 degrees north and south? It seems that the tides in the solid body of the Earth are associated with the rotation of the earth around its axis under the influence of the attraction of the Sun. Why ocean and Earth tides are so different in the physics of the process.