Abstract
FOR our knowledge of the physical conditicns at the bottom of the sea we are very largely beholden to the enterprise of submarine cable companies; indeed, it is difficult to imagine a more thoroughly satisfactory method of survey than that employed by them. Duties connected with the maintenance of cables have led to the discovery of details in the configuration of submarine gullies, of fresh-water outlets beneath the sea, and of alterations in the bed of the ocean itself, which would otherwise have eluded observation. Prof. Platania, of the Istituto Nautico of Catania, has directed attention to another rather surprising fact, namely, that in the Straits of Messina there are deep-water currents of sufficient velocity to cause the interruption of the cables joining Sicily with the mainland (“I cavi telegrafici e le correnti sottomarine nello stretto di Messina,” reprinted from the Atti della R. Accademia Peloritana, vol. xx.). The period under observation covers the last forty years, during which time there have been twenty-six interruptions; neglecting two, nineteen occurred between November and April, and five between May and October. The strong currents cause a continual attrition by sand and pebbles. The rocks on the sea bottom are swept free of mud and sand, and their rough surfaces, thus exposed, have worn out the cables lying upon them. In one case a cable seems to have been corroded by a sulphurous spring. The surface currents attain a speed of five miles an hour. They have always been a danger to navigation, and the wrecks of two large vessels which were lying last summer upon the Sicilian shore show that Scylla and Charybdis have lost none of their power. The existence of correlated strong deep-water currents had been suspected. Biologists have long been attracted to Messina by the plentiful harvest of deep-sea animals which are occasionally brought up to the surface by a vast turmoil of waters, thus affording almost unique opportunities. M. Thoulet and others have repeated the classical experiments of our countryman, Captain Richard Bolland, made in 1675 in the Straits of Gibraltar, and have demonstrated the existence, at twenty fathoms, of an undercurrent flowing in a contrary direction to that on the surface, but these currents have not yet been as systematically studied as the importance of the subject demands. The tides, as is frequently the case in narrow straits, as, for instance, inside the Isle of Wight, are doubled.
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Currents in the Straits of Messina . Nature 73, 621 (1906). https://doi.org/10.1038/073621a0
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DOI: https://doi.org/10.1038/073621a0