Marine Biological Laboratory Library Voods Hole, /AassQchuselts Gift of the F. R. Lillie estate - 1977 ^pv~^ :2 h d ,,- . THE PHYSICAL GEOGRAPHY OF gS;f^H E S E A, BY M. F. MAURY, I LB, LIEUT. U. S. NAVY. THIRD EDITION, ENLARGED AND IMPROVED. NEW YORK: HARPER & BROTHERS, PUBLISHERS, 329 & 331 PEARL STREET, FRANKLIN SQUARE. 1855. Entered, according to Act of Congress, in the year one thousand eight hundred and fifty-five, by HARPER & BROTHERS, in the Clerk's Office of the District Court of the Southern District of New York. AS A TOKEN OF FRIENDSHIP, AND A TRIBXTTE TO WORTH, GEORGE MANNING, OF NEW YORK. Washington Observatobt, December, 1654. INTRODUCTION. § I. The primary object of " The "Wind and Current Charts," out of which has grown this Treatise on the Physical Cieography of the Sea, was to collect the experience of every navigator as to the winds and currents of the ocean, to discuss his observations upon them, and then to present the world with the results on charts for the improvement of commerce and navigation. II. Accordingly, when this object was made known, and an ap- peal was addressed to mariners, there was a flight up into the gar- rets, and a ransacking of time-honored sea-chests in all the mari- time communities of the country for old log-books and sea journals. III. It was supposed that the records therein contained as to winds and weather, the sea and its currents, would afford the in- formation requisite for such an undertaking. lY. By putting down on a chart the tracks of many vessels on- the same voyage, but at different times, in different years, and during all seasons, and by projecting along each track the w^inds and currents daily encountered, it w^as plain that navigators here- after, by consulting this chart, would have for their guide the re- sults of the combined experience of all whose tracks were thus pointed out. Y. Perhaps it might be the first voyage of a young navigator to the given port, when his own personal experience of the winds to be expected, the currents to be encountered by the way, would it- self be blank. If so, there would be the wind and current chart. It ^vould spread out before him the tracks of a thousand vessels that had preceded him on the same voyage, wherever it might be, and that, too, at the same season of the year. Such a chart, it was held, would show him not only the tracks of the vessels, but the experience also of each master as to the winds and currents by the way, the temperature of the ocean, and the variation of the vi IMTRODUCTION. needle. All this could be taken in at a glance, and thus the young mariner instead of groping his way along until the lights of expe- rience should come to him by the slow teachings of the dearest of all schools, would here find, at once, that he had already the expe- rience of a thousand navigators to guide him on his voyage. He might, therefore, set out upon his first voyage with as much con- fidence in his knowledge as to the wmds and currents he might expect to meet with, as though he himself had already been that way a thousand times before. YI. But, to show the tracks of these vessels on a chart, a line had to be drawn for each one ; now this, for so many, and all in black or blue, and on the same sheet of paper too, would present, it was perceived, a mass of lines in inextricable confusion. More- over, after these tracks were projected, there would be no room left for the name of the month to show when each one was made, much less for any written account of the winds and currents daily encountered by each vessel of the multitude. After the tracks were projected, there would, it was found after trial, be barely room left on the chart to write the name of the vessel, much less the direction and set of the winds and currents. YIL An appeal, it was consequently decided, should be taken to the most comprehensive sense of the five, and it was thereupon re- solved to address all those tracks, and winds, and currents, with their strength, set, and direction— in short, all this experience, knowledge, and information — to the eye, by means of colors and symbols. YIIL The symbols devised with this view w^ere a comet's tail for the wind, an arrow for currents, Arabic numerals for the tem- perature of the sea, Roman for the variation of the needle, contin- uous, broken, and dotted lines for the month, and colors for the four seasons. IX. A continuous line was used ip show that the track was made during the first month ; a broken, the second ; and a dotted line, the last month of each season : black standing for the winter, green for spring, red fpr summer, and blue for autumn. X. The comet's tail, and the arrow, and the numerals, were also in colors, according to the seasons. The force and direction of the wind were indicated by the shape and position of this tail ; while INTRODUCTION. yji the flight and length of the arrows designated the velocity and set of the currents. XI. Thus the eye was successfully addressed ; for, by a mere glance at the chart, the navigator saw in a moment from what quarter he might expect to find the wind in any part of the sea to prevail for any month ; and he thus had to guide him across the pathless ocean, not theory or conjecture, nor the faint glimmerings of any one man's experience, but the entire blaze and full flood of light which the observations of all the navigators that had preceded him could shed. XII. Thus, while the young ship-master, with these charts be- fore him, would be immediately lifted up and placed on a footing with the oldest sea-captains in this respect, the aged might see in these charts also the voyages made in their young days spread out before them. There, on the chart, was the ship's name, her track, the year; and, by the color and fashion of the line (§ IX.), the month might be told. There, on that day, in that latitude and longitude, these charts would remind the old sailor that he had en- countered a terrible gale of wind ; there, that he had been beset with calms ; how here, with fair winds and a smooth sea, he had made a glorious run. Here, he had fu'st encountered the trades ; and there, lost them. At this place, he had met with a " hawsing current." Here, the winds were squally with rain ; and there, it was he had been beset with fogs ; here, with thunder-storms. AU this was seen on paper, and so represented as to recall the reality vividly to mind. XIII. Such a chart could not fail to commend itself to intelli- gent ship-masters, and such a chart was constructed for them. They took it to sea, they tried it, and to their surprise and delight they found that, with the knowledge it afforded, the remote corners of the earth were brought closer together, in some instances, by many days' sail. The passage hence to the equator alone was shortened ten days. Before the commencement of this undertak- ing, the average passage to California was 183 days ; but with these charts for their guide, navigators have reduced that average, and brought it down to 135 days. XrV. Between England and Australia, the average time going, without these charts, is ascertained to be 124 days, and coming, yiii INTRODUCTION. about the same ; making the round voyage one of about 250 clays on the average. XY. These charts, and the system of research to which they have given rise, bid fair to bring that colony and the mother coun- try nearer by many days, reducing, in no small measure, the aver- age duration of the round voyage * XVI. At the meeting of the British Association of 1853, it was stated by a distinguished member — and the statement was again repeated at its meeting in 1854 — that in Bombay, whence he came, it was estimated that this system of research, if extended to the Indian Ocean, and embodied in a set of charts for that sea, such as I have been describing, would produce an annual saving to British commerce, in those waters alone, of one or two millions of dollars ;t and in all seas, of ten miUions.l XVII. A system of philosophical research, which is so rich with fruits and abundant with promise, could not fail to attract the at- tention and commend itself to the consideration of the seafaring community of the whole civilized world. It was founded on ob- servation ; it was the result of the experience of many observant * The outward passage, it has smce been ascertained, has been reduced to 97 days on the average. t . . . " Now let us make a calculation of the annual saving to the commerce of the United States effected by those charts and sailing directions. According to Mr. Maury, the average freight fronithe United States to Rio Janeiro is 17.7 cts. per ton per day ; to Australia, 20 cts. ; to California, also, about 20 cts. The mean of this is a little over 19 cents per ton per day ; but to be within the mark, we will take it at 15, and include all the ports of South America, China, and the East Indies. " The sailing directions have shortened the passages to California 30 days, to Aus- tralia 20, to Rio Janeiro 10. The mean of this is 20, but we will take it at 15, and also include the above-named ports of South America, China, and the East Indies. " We estimate the tonnage of the United States engaged in trade with these places at 1,000,000 tons per annum. "With these data, we sec that there has been effected a saving for each one of these tons of 15 cents per day for a period of 15 days, which will give an aggregate of $2,250,000 saved per annum. This is on the outward voyage alone, and the ton- nage trading with all other parts of the world is also left out of the calculation. Take these into consideration, and also the fact that there is a vast amount of foreign tonnage trading between these places and the United States, and it v/ill be seen that the annual sura saved will swell to an enormous amount." — Extract from HunCs Mcrchanfs Magazine, May, 1854. % See Inaugural Address of the Earl of Harrowby, President of the British Asso- ciation at its twenty-fourth meeting. Liverpool, 1854. INTRODUCTION. IX men, now brought together for the first time and patiently dis- cussed. The results tended to increase human knowledge with regard to the sea and its wonders, and therefore they could not be wanting in attractions to right-minded men. XYIII. As we went on with our labors in this field, it was found that the flight inta the garret and the dive into the sea- chests for old logs (§11.) were not sufficient. The old records thence turned up proved to be only outcroppings to the rich vein which had been struck ; but the indications which they gave of hidden treasure were unmistakable to the nautical mind of the world. It was found necessary to go deeper, and to observe more minutely than our ancestors of the sea had done. XIX. Accordingly, it was deemed advisable to make an exhibit of what had been obtained from the old sea-chests. This was done, and presented to mariners in the shape of a set of " Track Charts" for the North Atlantic Ocean. XX. On those charts all the tracks that could be collected at that time from the old sea-journals were projected, and one was surprised to see how they cut up and divided the ocean off into great turnpike-looking thoroughfares. There was the road to China : it, and the road to South America, to the Pacific around Cape Horn, to the East around the Cape of Grood Hope, and to Australia, were one and the same until the navigator had left the North, crossed the equator, and passed over into the South Atlan- tic. Here there was, in this great highway, a fork to the right, leading to the ports of Brazil. A little farther on you came to an- other on the left : it was the road by which the Cape of Good Hope Y/as to be doubled. There was no finsfer-board or other visible o sign to guide the wayfarer, but, nevertheless, all turned off at the same place. None missed it. XXI. This outward road to Indja and the gold fields of Austra- lia was, as it passed through the South Atlantic, a crooked one, but the road home from the Cape was straight, for the winds along it were fresh and fair. XXII. But the outward-bound route through the North Atlantic, from the United States especially, was most curious and crooked. It seemed, on the chart, to be as well beaten, and almost as well defined, as any Indian trail through the wilderness. First it struck X INTRODUCTION. across the Atlantic until it reached the Cape de Yerd Islands on the other side ; then it took a turn, and came hack on this side again, reaching the coast of Brazil in the vicinity of Cape St. Roque. Here there was another turn, and another recrossing of the broad ocean, striking this time for the Cape of Grood Hope, but bending far away to the right before that turning point was reached. XXni. Thus the great highway from the United States to the Cape of Good Hope nearly crossed the Atlantic, it was discovered, three times. The other parts of the ocean by the wayside were blank, untraveled spaces. All the vessels that sailed went by one road and returned by the other. Now and then there was a sort of a country cross-road, that was frequented by robbers and bad men as they passed on their voyage from Africa to the West In- dies and back. But all the rest of the ocean on the wayside, and to the distance of hundreds of miles on either hand, was blank, and seemed as untraveled and as much out of the way of the haunts of civilized man as are the solitudes of the wilderness that lie broad off from the emigrants' trail to Oregon. Such was the old route. XXIV. "Who were the engineers that laid out these highways upon the sea, and why did traders never try short cuts across the blank spaces ? There was neither rock, nor shoal, nor hidden dan- ger of any sort to prevent ; why did not traders, therefore, seek to cut off these elbows in the great thoroughfares, and, instead of crossing the Atlantic three times on their way to the Cape of Good Hope (§ XXII.), cross it only once, as they did coming home? "Who, it was repeated, were the hydrographic engineers concern- ed in the establishing of this zigzag route ? XXY. Inquiry was instituted, and, after dihgent research, it was traced, by tradition^ to the early navigators and the chance that directed them. When they set sail from Europe, seeking a pas- sage to the East via the Cape of Good Hope, they passed along down by the Cape de Yerd Islands, and then, as they approached the equator, the winds forced them over toward the coast of Bra- zil. Thus a track was made, and the route to the East laid out. XXYI. As one traveler in the wilderness follows in the trail of another, so, it was discovered, did the trader on the high seas fol- low in the wake of those who had led the way. INTRODUCTION. xi The pioneer goes and returns : " Which way did you go ? How lies the route ? Grive us your saiHng directions," say his followers. XXVII. He that is questioned can speak only of the route by which he w^ent and came. He knows of no others ; and this, therefore, ho commends to his followers, and they to those who come after them ; and thus, in many cases, the route from place to place across the sea was, it was ascertamed, handed down from sailor to sailor by tradition, or as legend, and very much in the same way that the overland route of the first emigrants to Cali- fornia contmued to be followed season after season. XXYHL Among other things, these legends told of the most sweeping cuiTcnts to the north of St. Roque, along the coast of Brazil. The vessel, said they, that should fall so far to leeward of that cape and coast as to come within the influence of these cur- rents, was almost sure to be beset, and her crew to be cast upon an iron-bound coast amid the horrors of shipwreck. XXIX. Now these investigations have proved that there is no current there worth the name, and no danger to be apprehended when it is encountered, and so mariners now allude to these cur- rents as the *' bugbear" of St. Roque. XXX. Nevertheless, impressed with these legends and tradi- tions, the early navigators of this country, when they first com- menced to double the Cape of Good Hope on trading voyages, thought it most prudent to make the best of their way to the route from Europe, which had been often tried and was well known. They aimed to fall in with this route about the Cape de Yerd Isl- ands. The winds there threw them back on this side of the At- lantic, upon the coast of Brazil, and so they had to cross the ocean again to reach the Cape of G-ood Hope. But every body said that was the way, and it was so written down in the books. Hence the zigzag route (§ XXIL), and th^ supposed necessity, on the out- ward voyage to India, of crossing the Atlantic Ocean three times instead of once. XXXI. The results of the first chart, however (§ XIIL), though meagre and unsatisfactory, were brought to the notice of naviga- tors ; their attention was called to the blank spaces, and the im- portance of more and better observations than the old sea-chests generally contained was urged upon them. xii INTRODUCTION. XXXII. They were told that if each one would agree to co-op- erate in a general plan of observations at sea, and would send reg- ularly, at the end of every cruise, an abstract log of their voyage to the National Observatory at "Washington, he should, for so doing, be furnished, free of cost, with a copy of the charts and sailing di- rections that might be founded upon those observations. XXXIIT. The quick, practical mind of the American ship-mas- ter took hold of the proposition at once. To him the field was in- viting, for he saw in it the promise of a rich harvest and of many useful results. XXXIV. So, in a little v/hile, there were more than a thousand navigators engaged day and night, and in all parts of the ocean, in making and recording observations according to a uniform plan, and in furthering this attempt to increase our knowledge as to the winds and currents of the sea, and other phenomena that relate to its safe navigation and physical geography. XXXY. To enlist the service of such a large corps of observers, and to have the attention of so many clever and observant men di- rected to the same subject, was a great point gained : it was a giant stride in the advancement of knowledge, and a great step to- ward its spread upon the waters. XXXVI. Important results soon followed, and great discoveries were made. These attracted tlie attention of the commercial world, and did not escape the notice of philosophers every where. XXXVII. The field was immense, the harvest was plenteous, and there was both need and room for more laborers. Whatever the reapers should gather, or the merest gleaner collect, was to in- ure to the benefit of commerce and navigation — the increase of knowledge — ^the good of all. XXXVIII. Therefore, all who use the sea were equally interest- ed in the undertaking. The government of the United States, so considering the matter, proposed a uniform system of observations at sea, and invited all the maritime states of Christendom to a con- ference upon the subject. XXXIX. This conference, consisting of representatives from France, England and Russia, from Sweden and Norway, Holland, Denmark, Belgium, Portugal, and the United States, met in Brus- sels, August 23, 1853, and recommended a plan of observations INTRODUCTION. xiii which should be follo^\^ed on "board the vessels of all friendly na- tions, and especially of those there present in the persons of their representatives. XL. Prussia, Spain, the free city of Hamburg, the republics of Bremen and Chili, and the empires of Austria and Brazil, have since offered their co-operation also in the same plan. XLI. Thus the sea has been brought regularly within the do- mains of philosophical research, and crowded with observers. XL II. In peace and in war these observations are to be carried on ; and, in case any of the vessels on board of which they are con- ducted may be captured, the abstract log — as the journal which contains these observations is called — is to be held sacred. XLIIL Baron Humboldt is of opmion that the results already obtained from this system of research are sufficient to give rise to a new department of science, which he has called the Physical G-EOGRAPHY OF THE Sea. If SO much liave already been accom- plished by one nation, what may vre not expect in the course of a few years from the joint co-operation of so many ? XLIY. Rarely before has there been such a sublime spectacle presented to the scientific world : all nations agreeing to unite and co-operate in carrying out one system of philosophical research with regard to the sea. Though they may be enemies in all else, here they are to be friends. Every ship that navigates the high seas with these charts and blank abstract logs oh board may henceforth be regarded as a floating observatory, a temple of science. The instruments used by every co-operating vessel are to be compared with standards that are common to all ; so that an observation that is made any where and in any ship, may be referred to and compared with all similar observations by all other ships in all other parts of the world. But these meteorological observations which this extensive and admirable system includes will relate only to the sea. It is a pity. The plan should include the land also, and be universal. It is now proposed to have another and general meteorological congress ; and the initiatory steps, by way of counsel, for calling it together, have been taken, both in England and on the Continent. It is to be hoped that this country will not fail to co-operate in such a hu- mane, wise, and noble undertaking as is this. It involves a study xiy INTRODUCTION. of the laws which regulate the atmosphere, and a careful investi- gation of all its phenomena. XLV. Another beautiful feature in this system is, that it costs nothins: additional. The instruments that these observations call for are such as are already in use on board of every well-condi- tioned ship, and the observations that are required are precisely those which are necessary for her safe and proper navigation. XLYI. As great as is the value attached to what has been ac- complished by these researches in the way of shortening passages and lessening the dangers of the sea, a good of higher value is, in the opinion of many seamen, yet to come out of the moral, the educational, influence which they are calculated to exert upon the seafaring community of the world. A very clever English ship- master, speaking recently of the advantages of educational influ- ences among those who intend to follow the sea, remarks : '' To the cultivated lad there is a new world spread out when he enters on his first voyage. As his education has fitted, so will he perceive, year by year, that his profession makes him acquaint- ed with thinsfs new and instructive. His intellisrence will enable him to appreciate the contrasts of each country in its general aspect, manners, and productions, and in modes of navigation, adapted to the character of coast, climate, and rivers. He will dwell v/ith in- terest on the phases of the ocean, the storm, the calm, and the breeze, and will look for traces of the laws which regulate them. All this will induce a serious earnestness in his work, and teach him to view lightly those irksome and often offensive duties inci- dent to the beginner. "=* Sentiments which can not fail to meet with a hearty response from all good men, whether ashore or afloat. XLYH. Never before has such a corps of observers been enlist- ed in the cause of any department of physical science as is that which is now about to be engaged in advancing our knowledge of the physical geography of the sea, and never before have men felt such an interest with regard to this knowledge. * " The Log of a Merchant Officer ; viewed with reference to the Education of young Officers and the Youth of the Merchant Service. By Robert Methren, com- mander in the Peninsular and Oriental Company, and author of the ' Narrative of the Blenheim Hurricane of 1851.' " London: John Weale, 59 liigh Holborn; Smith, Eider & Co., Cornhill ; Ackerraan & Co., Strand. 1854. INTRODUCTION. xv Under this term will be included a philosophical account of the winds and currents of the sea ; of the circulation of the atmosphere and ocean ; of the temperature and depth of the sea ; of the won- ders that are hidden in its depths ; and of the phenomena that dis- play themselves at its surface. In short, I shall treat of the econ- omy of the sea and its adaptations — of its salts, its waters, its climates, and its inhabitants, and of whatever there may be of gen- eral interest in its commercial uses or industrial pursuits, for all such things pertain to its Physical G-eography. XLYIII. The object of this little book, moreover, is to show the present state, and, from time to time, the progress of this new and beautiful system of research, as well as of this interesting depart- ment of science ; and the aim of the author is to present the glean- ings from this new field in a manner that may be interesting and instructive to all, whether old or young, ashore or afloat, who desire a closer look into " the wonders of the great deep," or a better knowl- edge as to its winds, its adaptations, or its Physical G-eography.* * There is an old and very rare book which treats upon some of the subjects to which this Uttle work relates. It is by Count L. F. RIarsigli, a Frenchman, and is called Natural Description of the Seas. The copy to which I refer was transla- ted into Dutch by Boerhaave in 1786. The French count made his observations along the coast of Provence and Langue- doc. The description only relates to that part of the Mediterranean. The book is di- vided into four chapters : the first, on the bottom and shape of the sea ; the second, of sea water ; the third, on the movements of sea water ; and the fourth, of sea plants. He divides sea water into surface and deep-sea water ; because, when he makes salt from surface water (not more than half a foot below the upper strata), this salt will give a red color to blue paper ; whereas the salt from deep-sea water will not al- ter the colors at all. The blue paper can only change its color by the action of an acid. The reason why this acid (iodine 1) is found in surface and not in deep-sea water is : it is derived from the air ; but he supposes that the saltpetre that is found in sea water, by the action of the sun's rays and the motion of the waves, is deprived of its coarse parts, and, by evaporation, embodied in the air, to be conveyed to beasts or plants for their existence, or deposed upon the earth's crust, as it occurs on the plains of Hungary, where the earth absorbs so much of this saltpetre vapor. Donati, also, was a valuable laborer in this field. His inquiries enabled Mr. Trem- bley^ to conclude that there are, " at the bottom of the water, mountains, plains, val- leys, and caverns, just as upon the land." But by far the most interesting and valuable book touching the physical geography of the Mediterranean is Admiral Smyth's last work, entitled " The Mediterranean ; A Memoir, Physical, Historical, and Nautical. By Rear-admiral William Hen- EY Smyth, K.S.F., D.C.L.," &c. London: John W. Parker and Son. 1854. ^ Philosophical Transactions. CONTENTS. CHAPTER I. THE GULF STREAM. The Gulf Stream, «5 1.— Its Color, 2.— Its Cause, 3-7.— Dr. Franklin's Theory, 8.— The Sargasso Sea, 13. — The Trade-wind Agency refuted, 14. — Galvanic Properties of Gulf Stream Waters, 26. — Initial Velocity, 30. — Agents that make Water in one part of the Sea heavier than in another, 31. — Temperature of the Gulf Stream, 37. — It is Roof-shaped, 39. — Why the Drift Matter of the Gulf Stream is sloughed off to the right of its Course, 42. — Course of the Gulf Stream, 47. — Currents run along arcs of Great Circles, 49. — The Course of Currents counter to the Gulf Stream, 52. — The Force derived from Changes of Temperature, 53. — Limits of the Gulf Stream for March and September, 54. — Streaks of Warm and Cool Water in it, 55. — A Cushion of Cold Water betv^^een the Bottom of the Sea and the Waters of the Gulf Stream, 56. — It runs up hill, 57 Page 25 CHAPTER II. INFLUENCE OP THE GULF STREAM UPON CLIMATES. An Illustration, «^ 60.— Best Fish in cold Water, 65.— The Sea a Part of a grand Ma- chine, 67. — Influence of the Gulf Stream xipoii the Meteorology of the Sea: It is a "Weather Breeder," 69. — Dampness of Climate of England due to it, 70. — The Pole of Maximum Cold, 71.— Gales of the Gulf Stream, 72.— The Wreck of the San Francisco, 73. — Influence of the Gulf Stream upon Commerce and Navigation : Used as a Land-mark, 77, — The first Description of it, 78. — Thermal Navigation, 81 . 47 CHAPTER III. THE ATMOSPHERE. The Relation of the Winds to the Physical Geography of the Sea, () 88. — No Expres- sion of Nature without Meaning, 93. — The Circulatioyi of the Atmosphere, Plate I., 95. — Southeast Trade-wind Region the larger, 109. — How the Winds approach the Poles, 112. — The Offices of the Atmosphere, 114. — It is a powerful Machine, 118. — Whence come the Rains that feed the great Rivers 1 120. — How Vapor passes from one Hemisphere to the other, 123. — Evaporation greatest about Latitude 17°- 20°, 127.— Explanation, 128.— The Rainy Seasons : how caused, 129.— Why there is one Rainy Season in California, 130 — One at Panama, 131 — Two at Bogota, 132. — Rainless Regions explained, 135. — W^hy Australia is a Dry Country, 136. — Why Mountains have a dry and a rainy Side, 137. — The immense Fall of Rain upon the Western Ghauts in India: how caused, 139. — Vapor for the Patagonia Rains comes from the North Pacific, 141. — The mean annual Fall of Rain, 144. — Evaporation from the Indian Ocean, 146. — Evidences pf Design, 143 66 B ^yjjj cd^Tssrrs. C?IAPTER IV. RED FOGS AND SEA DUST. Where found, (} 157.— Tallies on the Wind, 158.— Where taken up, 160.— Hum- boldt's Description, 163. — Information derived from Sea Dust, 165. — Its Bearings upon the Theory of Atmospherical Circulation, 167.— Suggests Magnetic Agency, 170 Page 97 CHAPTER V. ON THE PROBABLE RELATION BETWEEN MAGNETISM AND THE CIRCULATION OF THE ATMOSPHERE. Reasons for supposing that the Air of the Northeast and of the Southeast Trades cross at the calm Belts, ^ 174. — What Observations have shown, 184. — Physical Agencies not left to Chance, 188. — Conjectures, 192. — Reasons for supposing that there is a crossing of Trade-wind Air at the Equator, 194. — Why the extra-trop- ical Regions of the Northern Hemisphere are likened to the Condenser of a Steam- boiler in the South, 199.— Illustration, 200.— A Coincidence, 202.— Proof, 203.— Nature affords nothing in contradiction to the supposed System of Circulation, 204. Objections answered, 205. — Wliy the Air brought to the Equator by the Northeast Trades will not readily mix with that brought by the Southeast, 207. — Additional Evidence, 209. — Rains for the Mississippi River are not supplied from the Atlan- tic, 210. — Traced to the South Pacific, 213. — Anticipation of Light from the Polar Regions, 216. — Received from the Microscope of Ehrenbcrg, 217, and the Exper- iments of Faraday, 219. — More Light, 221. — Why there should be a calm Place near each Pole, 222. — Why the Whirlwinds of the North should revolve against the Sun, 223. — Why certain Countries should have scanty Rains, 228. — Magnetism the Agent that causes the Atmospherical Crossings at the calm Places, 231 . . 104 CHAPTER VI. CURRENTS OF THE SEA. Currents of the Sea : Governed by Laws, ^ 232. — The Inhabitants of the Sea the Creatures of Climate, 233. — The Currents of the Sea an Index to its Climates, 235. — First Principles, 236. — Some Currents run up hill, 237. — Currents of the Red Sea, 238. — Top of that Sea an inclined Plane, 240. — How an under Current from it is generated, 245. — Specific Gravity of Sea Waters, 248. — Why the Red Sea is not salting up, 251. — Mediterranean Currents : How we know there is an un- der Current from this Sea, 252. — The sunken Wreck which drifted out, 253. — Both Currents caused by the Salts of the Sea, 254. — Currents of the Indian Ocean: Why immense Volumes of warm Water flow from it, 255. — A Gulf Stream along the Coast of China, 256. — Points of Resemblance between it and the Gulf Stream of the Atlantic, 257.— A Current into Behring's Strait, 258.— Geographical Features unfavorable to large Icebergs in the North Pacific, 260. — Necessity for cold to restore the Waste by the warm Currents, and Evaporation, 261. — Argu- ments in favor of return Currents, because Sea Water is salt, 262. — Currents of THE Pacific : Its Sargasso Sea, 264. — The Drift on the Aleutian Islands, 265. — The cold China Current, 266.— Humboldt's Current, 267.— Discovery of an im- CONTENTS. xix mense Body of warm Water drifting South, 268. — Currents about tlie Equator, 270. — Under Currents : Experiments of Lieutenants Walsh and Lee, 271. — Proof of under Currents aftbrded by Deep Sea Soundings, 272. — Currents caused by Changes in Specific Gravity of Sea Water, 273. — Constituents of Sea Water every where the same ; affords Evidence of a system of Oceanic Circulation, 274 — Currents of the Atlantic : The great Equatorial Current : its Fountain-head, 275. — The Cape St. Roque Current proved to be not a constant Current, 276.— Difficulties of understanding all the Currents of the Sea-shore of the Atlantic can not be accounted for without the aid of under Currents, 277 Page 124 CHAPTER VIL THE OPEN SEA IN THE ARCTIC OCEAN. How Whales struck on the east Side of the Continent have been taken ozi the west Side, ^ 278. — Right Whales can not cross the Equator, 279. — How the Existence of a northwest Passage was proved by the Whales, 280. — Other Evidence in F^ivor of it, 281. — An under Current sets into the Arctic Ocean, 282. — Evidences of a milder Climate near the Pole, 284. — The Water Sky of Lieutenant De Haven, 285. — Tliis open Sea not permanently in one Place, 286 14G CHAPTER VHL the salts of the sea. What the Salt in the Sea Water has to do with the Currents in the Ocean, <^ 289. — Reasons for supposing the Sea to have its system of Circulation, 290. — Arguments furnished by Coral Islands, 293. — What would be the Effect of no system of Cir- culation for Sea Water 1 295. — Its Components, 297. — The principal Agents from which Dynamical Force in the Sea is derived, 300. — Illustration, 302. — Sea and Fresh AVater have different Laws of Expansion, 308. — The Gulf Stream could not exist in a Sea of fresh Water, 309. — The effect of Evaporation in producing Cur- rents, 310.— How the Polar Sea is supplied with Salt, 323.— The Influence of this under Current upon open AVater in the Frozen Ocean, 326. — Sea Shells : The Influence exerted by them upon Currents, 330. — Order among them, 335. — They assist in regulating Climates, 336. — How Sea Shells and Salts act as Compensa- tions in the Machinery by which Oceanic Circulation is conducted, 339. — Whence come the Salts of the Sea 1 344 150 CHAPTER IX, the equatorial cloud-rixg. Description of the Equatorial Doldrums, ^ 346. — Oppressive Weather, 348. — The Of- fices performed by Clouds in the terrestrial Economy, 349. — The Barometer and Thermometer under the Cloud-ring, 350. — Its Offices, 353. — How its Vapors are brought by die Trade- Winds, 361. — Breadth of the Cloud-ring, 363. — How it would appear if seen from one of the Planets, 364. — Observations at Sea interest- ing, 368 171 XX CONTENTS. ' CHAPTER X. ox THE GEOLOGICAL AGENCY OF THE WINDS. To appreciate the Offices of the Wmds and Waves, Nature must be regarded as a Whole, ^ 369.— Level of the Dead Sea, 370.— Evidences that at former Geolog- ical Periods more Rain fell than now falls upon the Dead Sea and other inland Basins, 371. — Where Vapor for the Rains in the Basin of the American Lakes comes from, 375. — The Effect produced by the Upheaval of Mountains across the course of vapor-bearing Winds, 376. — The Agencies by which the Drainage of Hydrographic Basins may be cut oif from the Sea, 380. — Utah an Example, 382. — Effect of the Andes upon vapor-bearing Winds, 383. — Geological Age of the Andes and Dead Sea compared, 391. — Ranges of dry Countries and little Rain, 393. — Rain and Evaporation in the Mediterranean, 399. — Evaporation and Precip- itation in the Caspian Sea equal, 404. — The Quantity of Moisture the Atmosphere keeps in Circulation, 407. — 'WTiere Vapor for the Rains that feed the Nile come from, 409.— Lake Titicaca, 420 Page 181 CHAPTER Xr. THE DEPTHS OF THE OCEAN. The Depth of blue Water unknown, 559. — Cyclones, 561. — West India Hurricanes, 562. — Extra-tropical Gales, 563. — The San Francisco's Gale, 564. — These, Gales seldom occur at cer- tain Seasons, 565. — Most prevalent Quarter for the Gales beyond the Calm Belt ol Capricorn, 566. — Storm and Rain Charts, 567 2o7 xxii CONTENTS. CHAPTER XVII KOUTES. How Passages have been shortened, () 568. — How closely Vessels follow each other's Track, 570. — The Archer and the Flying Cloud, 571. — The great Race-course upon the Ocean, 573. — Description of a Race, 575. — Presei^ Knowledge of Winds en- ables the Navigator to compute his Detour, 582 . . .^"TT Page 262 CHAPTER XVHI. A LAST WORD. Brussels Conference, aiii, llu)iiL;h but a Ic^w iiuli-s distant, tliiMi" llcsh is soil and unlit lor the tal)l('. Tho tiunpcraturc^ of tli(« wale r ;il. tlic Ualr/c rcaclics *.»0". Tlic lisli taken thcro aro in)t lo 1)1" compared with lliosi' ol the sanu^ hititndi^ in this eold stream. New Orleans tiieiidore resorts to the cool waters on tlu; I'lorida. eoasls lor her elioieest lish. 'Hie s;im(> is th(^ ease in th(3 Paeilie. A em rent oteold waler Irom llu; south swcu'ps tlu> siiores of Chili, l\'ru,and Columhia, and reaches the ( Jallipiij^os Islands under ihe line. 'riiroii<;hout lliis whole distance, the world does not allbrd a nior(^ ahnndant or <'\eellent su|)[)ly ol' lish. Vet out III the Pacilie, at tln^ Soei(>ty Islands, where eoral abounds, and tht; Wilier preseives a hii;Ii(>r l(Mn|) lish, though they vie in i;()rj;(>ousness ol" colorinj; w ith Ihe birds, and plants, and insects ol ihe tropics, wvr held in no (>steem as an arlicit? of food. . I have known siidors, even aller Ioml;" voyai;i>s, slid \o preler their salt heel' and pork lo a mess ol lish taken ther(>. The lew laclswhic-h we have* Ix^arini;" upon this subjin-t seem to siiij;i;('st it as a j)oint (»r the impiir)' lo be made, wIuMIum' the habilal ol certain lish iloes not indicate Ihe tcmperaliir(M)r tht« water ; and whether these cold and warm ciirreiils ol the occ;m Ai) not constitute ihc*- «»reat hii^li- ways through which migratory lishcs travid Irom onv region lo anolhi'r. Navigators \\a\c olttMi \\\v\ with vast numhcn's ol youiii;' sea- m-ttlcs (nuduste) drifliui; aloni;- with Ihe (Julf Stream. They are known lo constitute" the principal i\HH\ for th(M\liale ; but whitlun- bound b\ this route has causi'd much curious spcHudiition, lor it IS wi-ll kiu>wii that ihe habits of the rii;ht whale are avtM-s(> lo \\\c warm wati'rs of this slri^im. An mtellii;tMit S(M-eaptain inlorms \\\c that, two or three vcsirs a<;(), in tlu< (JuU Stri^im on the coast {)( I'lorida, he hdl in with such a. "school of youni>- sea-iu>ttl(\s as Jiad never bidon^ beiMi hvard ol." 'IMie s(>a \*as ccwtM-tul with tluMU ior many loai;ui\^. lie hkiMied them, m a[)pi\irance on the water, lo acorns lloalini;' on a stream ; but they wore so thick as to I'oni- plt'ttdy covtM" the sim. \\v was bound to l"ini»land, and was live or si\ days in sailiii'; through lluMii. In about sixty days al'ter- \v;n'd, on his rtMiirn, he lell in with tlu" sanu^ school oll'the Wi^sl- v.m Islands, and here he was three or lour days in passhig them influencj: ov tui: g\}lf stream upon climatk.s 53 again, lie recognized them ;is llie same, for 1h; IiikI ii(;V('r belore «een any like them; and on hoth oceaKions lie fre({U(;ntly iiauhid u\) hnck(;ts full and examin(;d them. Now the Western J,slan(Js is the great place of resort for whal(;s , and at first there ia something curious to us in the idea that the Gulf of Mexico is the harvest field, arul the (iulf Stream the gleaner wliich collects the fruitage plant(;d there, and conv(;ys it thousands of miles off to the hungry whale at sea. Jiut Ijovv j)( r- fectly in unison is it with the kind and j)rovidential care of that great and good Jjeing which feeds the young ravens when they cry, and caters for the sparrow! (H). The sea has its climates as wcjIJ as the land. I'hey hoth change with the latitude ; hut one varices with the elevation ahove, the other with the depression helow the sea level. Each is reg- ulated hy circulation ; hut the regulators are, on tliri onr; hand, winds ; on the otlutr, currents. 07. TIk; irjhahitants of the ocean are as much the creatures of climate as are those of the dry land ; for the same Almighty hand which decked the lily and cares for the sparrow, fasiiionc^d also the pearl and feeds the great whale. Whether of the land or the sea, Ihey are all his creatures, suhjects of his laws, and agents in his economy. 'J'he sea, therefore^, we infer, has its offices and duties lo perform ; so may we infer, have its currents, and so, too, it^ inhahitants ; corLsequently, he who undertakes to study its phe- nomena, must cease to regard it as a waste of waters, lie must look upon it as a part of the exquisite machinery by which the harmonics of nature are preserved, and then he will begin to per- ceive the developments of order and the evidences of design which make it a most beautiful and interesting subject for contemplation. OS. To one who has never studied the mechanism of a watch, its main-spring or the balance-wheel is a mere piece of mental. He may have looked at the face of the watch, and, while he arl- mires the motion of its hands, arrd the time it keeps, or the tune il plays, he may have wondered in idle amazement as to the char- acter of the machinery which is concealed within. '^Fake it t(j pieces, and show him each part separately ; he will rocognizr; neither design, nor adaptation, nor relation between them ; but put them together, set them to work, point out the offices of each spring, wheel, and cog, ex]:>lain their movements, and then show 54 THE PHYSICAL GEOGRAPHY OF THE SEA. him the result ; now he perceives that it is all one design ; that, notwithstanding the number of parts, their diverse forms and va- rious offices, and the agents concerned, the whole piece is of one thought, the expression of one idea. He now perceives that when the main-spring was fashioned and tempered, its relation to all the other parts must have been considered ; that the cogs on this wheel are cut and regulated — adopted — to the rachets on that, &LC. ; and his conclusion will be, that such a piece of mechanism could not have been produced by chance ; the adaptation of the parts is such as to show it to be according to design, and obedient to the will of one intelligence. So, too, w^hen one looks out upon the face of this beautiful v/orld, he may admire the lovely scene, but his admiration can never grow into adoration unless he will take the trouble to look behind and study, in some of its details at least, the exquisite system of machinery by which such beauti- ful results are accomplished. To him w^ho does this, the sea, with its physical geography, becomes as the main spring of a watch ; its waters, and its currents, and its salts, and its inhabitants, with their adaptations, as balance-w^heels, cogs and pinions, and jew- els. Thus he perceives that they, too, are according to design ; that they are the expression of One Thought, a unity with harmo- nies wiiich One Intelhgence, and One Intelligence alone, could ut- ter. And when he has arrived at this point, then he feels that the study of the sea, in its physical aspect, is truly sublime. It ele- vates the mind and ennobles the man. The Gulf Stream is now no longer, therefore, to be regarded by such an one merely as an immense current of warm water running across the ocean, but as a balance-wheel — a part of that grand machinery by which air and water are adapted to each other, and by which this earth itself is adapted to the well-being of its inhabitants — of the flora which deck, and the fauna which enliven its surface. 69. X-et us therefore consider the influence of the Gulf Stream upon the meteorology of the ocean. To use a sailor expression, the Gulf Stream is the great " weath- er breeder" of the North Atlantic Ocean. The most furious gales of wind sweep along with it ; and the fogs of Newfoundland, v/hich so much endanger navigation in winter, doubtless owe their existence to the presence, in that cold sea, of immense volumes of warm water brought by the Gulf Stream. Sir Philip Brooke INFLUENCE OF THE GULF STREAM UPON CLIMATES. 55 found the air on each side of it at the freezing point, while that of its waters was 80°. " The heavy, warm, damp air over the cur- rent produced great irregularities in his chronometers." The ex- cess of heat daily brought into such a region by the waters of the Gulf Stream would, if suddenly stricken from them, be sufficient to make the column of superincumbent atmosphere hotter than melted iron. With such an element of atmospherical disturbance in its bo- som, we might expect storms of the most violent kind to accom- pany it in its course. Accordingly, the most terrific that rage on the ocean have been known to spend their fury in and near its borders. Our nautical w^orks tell us of a storm which forced this stream back to its sources, and piled up the w^ater in the Gulf to the height of thirty feet. The Ledbury Snow attempted to ride it out. When it abated, she found herself high up on the dry land, and discovered that she had let go her anchor among the tree tops on Elliott's Key. The Florida Keys were inundated many feet, and, it is said, the scene presented in the Gulf Stream v/as never surpassed in awful sublimity on the ocean. The water thus dam- med up is said to have rushed out with wonderful velocity against the fury of the gale, producing a sea that beggared description. The "great hurricane" of 1780 commenced at Barbadoes. In. it, the bark was blown from the trees, and the fruits of the earth destroyed ; the very bottom and depths of the sea w^ere uprooted, and the weaves rose to such a height that forts and castles were washed away, and their great guns carried about in the air; houses were blown dow^n, ships were WTecked, and the bodies of men and beasts lifted up above the earth and dashed to pieces in the storm. At the different islands, not less than twenty thou- sand persons lost their lives on shore, while farther to the north, the "Sterling Castle" and the "Dover Castle," men-of-war, were wrecked at sea, and fifty sail driven on shore at the Bermu- das. Several years ago, the British Admiralty set on foot inquiries as to the cause of the storms in certain parts of the Atlantic, which so often rage with disastrous effects to navigation. The result may be summed up in the conclusion to which the investigation led : that they are occasioned by the irregularity between the tem- 56 THE PHYSICAL GEOGRAPHY OF THE SEA. perature of the Gulf Stream and of the neighboring regions, both in the air and water. 70. The habitual dampness of the climate of the British Islands, as well as the occasional dampness of that along the Atlantic coasts of the United States when easterly winds prevail, is attrib- utable also to the Gulf Stream. They come to us loaded w^ith vapors gathered from its warm and smoking waters. It carries the temperature of summer, even in the dead of win- ter, as far north as the Grand Banks of New^foundland. 71. One of the poles of maximum cold is, according to theory, situated in latitude 80° north, longitude 100° west. It is distant but little more than two thousand miles, in a northwestwardly direction, from the summer-heated waters of this stream. This proximity of extremes of greatest cold and summer heat, will, as observations are multiplied and discussed, be probably found to have much to do with the storms that rage with such fury on the left side of the Gulf Stream. 72. I am not prepared to maintain that the Gulf Stream is really the " Storm King" of the Atlantic, which has power to con- trol the march of every gale that is raised there ; but the course of many gales has been traced from the place of their origin di- rectly to the Gulf Stream. Gales that take their rise on the coast of Africa, and even as far down on that side as the parallel of 10° or 15° north latitude, have, it has been shown by an examination of log-books, made straight for the Gulf Stream ; joining it, they have then been known to turn about, and, traveling with this stream, to recross the Atlantic, and so reach the shores of Eu- rope. In this way the tracks of storms have been traced out and followed for a week or ten days. Their path is marked by wreck and disaster. At the meeting of the American Association for the advancement of Science in 1854, Mr. Redfield mentioned one which he had traced out, and in which no less than seventy odd vessels had been wrecked, dismasted, or damaged. Plate X. was prepared by Lieutenant B. S. Porter, from data furnished by the log-books at the Observatory. It represents one of these storms that commenced in August, 1848. It commenced more than a thousand miles from the Gulf Stream, made a straight course for it, and traveled with it for many days. The dark shading shows the space covered by the gale, and INFLUENCE OF THE GULF STREAM UPON CLLAIATES. 57 the white hne in the middle shows the axis of the gale, or the line of minimum barometric pressure. There are many other instances of similar gales. Now w"hat should attract these terrific storms to the Gulf Stream ? Sailors dread storms in the Gulf Stream more than they do in any other part of the ocean. It is not the fury of the storm alone that they dread, but it is the " ugly sea" which these storms raise. The current of the stream running in one direction, and the wind blowing in another, creates a sea that is often frightful. In the month of December, 1853, the fine new steam-ship San Francisco sailed from New York with a regiment of United States troops on board, bound around Cape Horn for California. She was overtaken, while crossing the Gulf Stream, by a gale of wind, in which she was terribly crippled. Her decks were swept, and by one single blow of those terrible seas that the storms there raise, one hundred and seventy-nine souls, officers and soldiers, were washed overboard and drowned. The day after this disaster she was seen by one vessel, and again the next day, December 26th, by another, but neither of them could render her any assistance. When they arrived in the United States and reported what they had seen, the most painful apprehensions were entertained by friends for the safety of those on board. Vessels were sent out to search for and relieve her. But which way should these ves- sels go ? where should they look ? An appeal was made to know what light the system of re- searches carried on at the National Observatory concerning winds and currents could throw upon the subject. 73. The materials that had been discussed were examined, and a chart was prepared to show the course of the Gulf Stream at that season of the year. (See the limits of the Gulf Stream for March, Plate VI.) Upon the supposition that the steamer had been completely disabled, the lines a h were drawn to define the limits of her drift. Between these two lines, it was said, the steamer, if she could neither steam nor sail after the gale, had drifted. By request, I prepared instructions for two revenue cutters that were sent to search for her. One of them, being at New London, was told to go along the dotted track leading to c, expecting thereby to keep inside of the line along which the steamer had 58 THE PHYSICAL GEOGRAPHY OF THE SEA. drifted, with the view of intercepting and speaking homeward- bound vessels that might have seen the wreck. The cutter was to proceed to c, where she might expect to fall in with the line of drift taken by the steamer. The last that wets seen of that ill-fated vessel was w^hen she was at o. So, if the cutter had been in time, she had instructions that would have taken her in sight of the object of her search. It is true that, before the cutter sailed, the Kilby, the Three Bells, and the Antarctic, unknown to anxious friends at home, had fallen in with and relieved the wreck ; but that does not de- tract from the system of observations, of the results of which, and their practical application, it is the object of this work to treat. A beautiful illustration of their usefulness is the fact that, though the bark Kilby lost sight of the wa^eck at night, and the next morn- ing did not know which way to look for it, and could not find it, yet, by a system of philosophical deduction, we on shore could point out the w^hereabouts of the disabled steamer so closely, that vessels could be directed to look for her exactly where she was to be seen. 74. These storms, for which the Gulf Stream has such attrac- tion, and over which it seems to exercise so much control, are said to be, for the most part, whirlwinds. All boys are familiar with miniature Avhirlwinds on shore. They are seen, especially in the autumn, sweeping along the roads and streets, raising col- umns of dust, leaves, &c., which rise up like inverted cones in the air, and gyrate about the centre or axis of the storm. Thus, while the axis, and the dust, and the leaves, and all those things which mark the course of the whirlwind, are traveling in one direction, it may be seen that the wind is blowing around this axis in all di- rections. Just so wdth some of these Gulf Stream storms. That repre- sented on Plate X, is such a one. It was a rotary storm. Mr. Piddington, an eminent meteorologist of Calcutta, calls them Cij- cloins. 75. Now, what should make these storms travel toward the Gulf Stream, and then, joining it, travel along with its current ? It is the high temperature of its waters, say mariners. But why, or wherefore, should the spirits of the storm obey in this manner INFLUENCE OF THE GULF STREAM UPON COMMERCE. 59 the influence of these high temperatures, philosophers have not been able to explain. 76. The influence of the Gulf Stream upon commerce and navi- gation. Formerly the Gulf Stream controlled commerce across the At- lantic by governing vessels in their routes through this ocean to a greater extent than it does now, and simply for the reason that ships are faster, instruments better, and navigators are more skill- ful now than formerly they were. Up to the close of the last century, the navigator guessed as much as he calculated the place of his ship : vessels from Europe to Boston frequently made New York, and thought the land-fall by no means bad. Chronometers, now so accurate, wxre then an experiment. The Nautical Ephemeris itself w^as faulty, and gave tables which involved errors of thirty miles in the longitude. The instruments of navigation erred by degrees quite as much as they now do by minutes ; for the rude " cross staff" and " back staff," the "sea-ring" and "mariner's bow," heid not yet given place to the nicer sextant and circle of reflection of the present day. In- stances are numerous of vessels navigating the Atlantic in those times being 6°, 8°, and even 10° of longitude out of their reckon- ing iij as many days from port. 77. Though navigators had been in the habit of crossing and recrossing the Gulf Stream almost daily for three centuries, it never occurred to them to make use of it as a means of giving them their longitude, and of warning them of their approach to the shores of this continent. Dr. Franklin was the first to suggest this use of it. The con- trast afforded by the temperature of its waters and that of the sea between the Stream and the shores of America was striking. The dividing line between the warm and the cool waters was sharp (^ 2) ; and this dividing line, especially that on the western side of the stream, never changed its position as much in longitude as mariners erred in their reckoning. 78. When he was in London in 1770, he happened to be con- sulted as to a memorial which the Board of Customs at Boston sent to the Lords of the Treasury, stating that the Falmouth packets were generally a fortnight longer to Boston than com- mon traders were from London to Providence, Rhode Island. ^ THE PHYSICAL GEOGRAPHY OF THE SEA. They therefore asked that the Falmouth packets might be sent to Providence instead of to Boston. This appeared strange to the doctor, for London was much farther than Falmouth, and from Fal- mouth the routes were the same, and the difference should have been the other way. He, how^ever, consulted Captain Folger, a Nantucket whaler, who chanced to be in London also ; the fish- erman explained to him that the difference arose from the circum- stance that the Rhode Island captains were acquainted with the Gulf Stream, while those of the English packets were not. The latter kept in it, and were set back sixty or seventy miles a day, while the former avoided it altogether. He had been made ac- quainted with it by the whales which were found on either side of it, but never in it (^ 65). At the request of the doctor, he then traced on a chart the course of this stream from the Straits of Florida. The doctor had it engraved at Tower Hill, and sent copies of it to the Falmouth captains, who paid no attention to it. The course of the Gulf Stream, as laid down by that fisherman from his general recollection of it, has been retained and quoted on the charts for navigation, we may say, until the present day. But the investio^ations of which we are treating are beo;inninQ: to throw more light upon this subject ; they are giving us more correct knowledge in every respect with regard to it, and to many other new and striking features in the physical geography of the sea. 79. No part of the world affords a more difficult or dangerous navigation than the approaches of our northern coast in winter. Before the warmth of the Gulf Stream was known, a voyage at this season from Europe to New England, New York, and even to the Capes of the Delaware or Chesapeake, was many times more trying, difficult, and dangerous than it now^ is. In making this part of the coast, vessels are frequently met by snow-storms and gales which mock the seaman's strength and set at naught his skill. In a little while his bark becomes a mass of ice ; w^ith her crew frosted and helpless, she remains obedient only to her helm, and is kept away for the Gulf Stream. After a few hours' run, she reaches its edge, and almost at the next bound passes from the midst of winter into a sea at summer heat. Now the ice disap- pears from her apparel ; the sailor bathes his stiffened limbs in tep- id waters; feeling himself invigorated and refreshed with the INFLUENCE OF THE GULF STREAM UPON COMMERCE. Ql genial warmth about him, he reahzes, out there at sea, the fable of Antaeus emd his mother Earth. He rises up and attempts to make his port again, and is again as rudely met and beat back from the northwest ; but each time that he is driven off from the contest, he comes forth from this stream, like the ancient son of Neptune, stronger and stronger, until, after many days, his fresh- ened strength prevails, and he at last triumphs and enters his ha- ven in safety ; though in this contest he sometimes falls to rise no more, for it is often terrible. Many ships annually founder in these gales ; and I might name instances, for they are not uncom- mon, in which vessels bound to Norfolk or Baltimore, with their crews enervated in tropical climates, have encountered, as far down as the Capes of Virginia, snow-storms that have driven them back into the Gulf Stream time and again, and have kept them out for forty, fifty, and even for sixty days, trying to make an an- chorage. 80. Nevertheless, the presence of the warm waters of the Gulf Stream, with their summer heat in mid-winter, off the shores of New England, is a great boon to navigation. At this season of the year especially, the number of wrecks and the loss of life along the Atlantic sea-front are frightful. The month's average of wrecks has been as high as three a day. How many escape by seeking refuge from the cold in the warm waters of the Gulf Stream is matter of conjecture. Suffice it to say, that before their temperature was known, vessels thus distressed knew of no place of refuge short of the West Indies ; and the newspapers of that day — Franklin's Pennsylvania Gazette among them — inform us that it was no uncommon occurrence for vessels, bound for the Capes of the Delaw^are in winter, to be blown off and to go to the West Indies, and there w^ait for the return of spring before they w^ould attempt another approach to this part of the coast. 81. Accordingly, Dr. Frankhn's discovery with regard to the Gulf Stream temperature was loo\ed upon as one of great import- ance, not only on account of its affording to the frosted mariner in winter a convenient refuge from the snow-storm, but because of its serving the navigator with an excellent land-mark or beacon for our coast in all weathers. And so view^ing it, the doctor con- cealed his discovery, for we were then at war with England. It was then not uncommon for vessels to be as much as 10° out in 62 THE PHYSICAL GEOGRAPHY OF THE SEA. their reckoning. He himself was 5°. Therefore, in approaching the coast, the current of warm water in the Gulf Stream, and of cold water on this side of it, if tried with the thermometer, w^ould enable the mariner to judge with great certainty, and in the w^orst of weather, as to his position. Jonathan Williams afterward, in speaking of the importance which the discovery of these w^arm and cold currents would prove to navigation, pertinently asked the question, " If these stripes of w^ater had been distinguished by the colors of red, white, and blue, could they be more distinctly dis- covered than they are by the constant use of the thermometer ?" And he might have added, could they have marked the position of the ship more clearly ? When his work on Thermometrical Navigation appeared. Com- modore Truxton wrote to him : " Your publication will be of use to navigation by rendering sea voyages secure far beyond w^hat even you yourself will immediately calculate, for I have proved the utility of the thermometer very often since we sailed together. " It w^ill be found a most valuable instrument in the hands of mariners, and particularly as to those who are unacquainted with astronomical observations ; these particularly stand in need of a simple method of ascertaining their approach to or distance from the coast, especially in the winter season ; for it is then that passages are often prolonged, and ships blown off the coast by hard westerly winds, and vessels get into the Gulf Stream with- out its being known ; on which account they are often hove to by the captains' supposing themselves near the coast when they are very far off (having been drifted by the currents). On the other hand, ships are often cast on the coast by sailing in the eddy of the Stream, which causes them to outrun their common reckoning. Every year produces new proofs of these facts, and of the calam- ities incident thereto." 82. Though Dr. Franklin's discovery was made in 1775, yet, for political reasons, it was not generally made known till 1790. Its immediate effect in navigation was to make the ports of the North as accessible in winter as in summer. What agency this circum- stance had in the decline of the direct trade of the South, which followed this discovery, w^ould be, at least to the political econo- mist, a subject for much curious and interesting speculation. I have referred to the commercial tables of the time, and have com- INFLUENCE OF THE GULF STREAM UPON COMMERCE. 63 pared the trade of Charleston with that of the northern cities for several years, both before and after the discovery of Dr. Frankhn became generally known to navigators. The comparison shows an immediate decline in the Southern trade and a wonderful in- crease in that of the North. But whether this discovery in navi- gation and this revolution in trade stand in the relation of cause and effect, or be merely a coincidence, let others judge. 83. In 1769, the commerce of the two Carolinas equaled that of all the New England States together ; it was more than double that of New York, and exceeded that of Pennsylvania by one third.* In 1792, the exports from New York amounted in value to two millions and a half ; from. Pennsylvania, to $3,820,000 ; and from Charleston alone, to $3,834,000. But in 1795, by which time the Gulf Stream began to be as well understood by navigators as it now is, and the average pas- sages from Europe to the North were shortened nearly one half, while those to the South remained about the same, the customs at Philadelphia alone amounted to $2,941, 000,t or more than one half of those collected in all the states together. Nor did the effect of the doctor's discovery end here. Before * From Mcpherson's Annals of Commerce. — Exports and Imports in 1769, valued in Sterling Money. To Gr. Britain.] Sou. of Europe. I West Indies. \ Africa. New England New York Pennsylvania North and South Carolina. Total. £ s.d. 142,775 12 9 113,382 8 8 28.112 ' ' £ 81,173 50,885 13 0 203,762 11 11 405,014 13 l| 76,119 12 10 £ s. 2 308,427 9 66,324 17 178.331 7 87,758 19 £ s.d.\ £ s.d. 17,713 0 9 550,089 19 2 1,313 2 6 231,906 1 7 560 9 9 410,756 16 1 691 12 1 569,584 17 3 New England New York Pennsylvania North and South Carolina. 223,695 11 6 75,930 19 7 204,979 17 4 327,084 8 6 IMPORTS. 25,408 17 9 314,749 14 5| 180 0 0 14,927 7 8 97,420 4 0 697 10 0 14,249 8 4 180,591 12 4 7,099 5 10 76,260 17 11 '1.37,620 10 0 564,034 3 8 188,976 1 3 399.830 18 0 535,714 2 3 Massachusetts . New York . . . . Pennsylvania . . South Carolina. + Value of Exports in Dollars.X 2,519,651 2,505,465 3,436.000 2,693,000 2,688,104 2,535,790 3,820,000 2,428,000 3,755,347 2,932,370 6,958,000 3,191,000 1794. 5,292,441 5,442,000 6,643,000 3.868,000 1795. T~1796. r,117,9f,7; 9,949,345 10,304,000 11,518.000 5,998,000 12,208 17,513,866 7,620,000 Duties on Imports in Dollars. 1791. 1792. 1793. 1794. 1795. 1796. 1833. Massachusetts 1,006,000 1,334,000 1,466,000 523,000 723,0(10 1,044,000 1.121,000 1,173,000 1,204,000 1.878,000 1,100.000 1,623,000 1,498,000 359,000 360,000 661,000 1,520,00(;' 2.028.000 2.300,000 722,000 1,400.000 2.187,000 2,050,000 66.000 3,055,000 10,713,000 2,207,000 389,000 Pennsylvania ! South Carolina t Doc. No. 330, n. R., 2d Session, 25th Congress, taien from M'Pherson, and previously quoted. Some of its statements do not agree with those 64 THE PHYSICAL GEOGRAPHY OF THE SEA. it was made, the Gulf Stream was altogether insidious in its ef- fects. By it, vessels wea'e often drifted many miles out of their course without knowing it ; and in bad and cloudy weather, when many days would intervene from one observation to another, the set of the current, though really felt for but a few hours during the interval, could only be proportioned out equally among the whole number of days. Therefore navigators could have only very vague ideas either as to the strength or the actual limits of the Gulf Stream, until they were marked out to the Nantucket fishermen by the whales, or made known by Captain Folger to Dr. Franklin. The discovery, therefore, of its high temperature, assured the navigator of the presence of a current of surprising velocity, and which, now turned to certain account, would hasten, as it had retarded his voyage in a wonderful degree. 84. Such, at the present day, is the degree of perfection to which nautical tables and instruments have been brought, that the navigator may now detect, and with great certainty, every current that thwarts his way. He makes great use of them. Colonel Sabine, in his passage, a few years ago, from Sierra Le- one to New York, was drifted one thousand six hundred miles of his way by the force of currents alone ; and, since the application of the thermometer to the Gulf Stream, the average passage from England has been reduced from upward of eight weeks to a little more than four. 85. Some political economists of America have ascribed the great decline of Southern commerce which followed the adoption of the Constitution of the United States to the protection given by legislation to Northern interests. But I think these statements and figures show^ that this decline was in no small degree owing to the Gulf Stream and the water thermometer ; for they changed the relations of Charleston — the great Southern emporium of the times — removing it from its position as a half-way house, and placing it in the category of an outside station. 86. The plan of our work takes us necessarily into the air, for the sea derives from the winds some of the most striking features in its physical geography. Without a knowledge of the winds, we can neither understand the navigation of the ocean, nor make our- selves inteUigently acquainted with the great highways across it. As with the land, so with the sea ; some parts of it are as un- INFLUENCE OF THE GULF STREAM UPON COMMERCE. 65 traveled and as unknown as the great Amazonian wilderness of Brazil, or the inland basins of Central Africa. To the south of a line extending from Cape Horn to the Cape of Good Hope (Plate VHL) is an immense waste of waters. None of the commercial thoroughfares of the ocean lead through it ; only the adventurous whaleman finds his way there now and then in pursuit of his game ; but for all the purposes of science and navigation, it is a vast unknown region. Now, were the prevailing winds of the South Atlantic northerly or southerly, instead of easterly or west- erly, this unplowed sea would be an oft-used thoroughfare. 87. Nay, more, the sea supplies the winds with food for the rain which these busy messengers convey away from the ocean to "the springs in the valleys which run among the hills." To the philosopher, the places which supply the vapors are as sug- gestive and as interesting for the instruction they afford, as the places are upon wdiich the vapors are showered down. There- fore, as he who studies the physical geography of the land is ex- pected to make himself acquainted with the regions of precipita- tion, so he who looks into the physical geography of the sea should search for the regions of evaporation, and for those springs in the ocean which supply the reservoirs among the mountains with water to feed the rivers ; and, in order to conduct this search properly, he must consult the winds, and make himself acquainted with their " circuits." Hence, in a work on the Physical Geog- raphy of the Sea, we treat also of the Atmosphere. E 66 THE PHYSICAL GEOGRAPHY OF THE SEA. CHAPTER III. THE ATMOSPHERE. The Relation of the Winds to the Physical Geography of the Sea, ^ 88. — No Expres- sion of Nature without Meaning, 93. — The Circulation of the Atmosphere, Plate I., 95. — Southeast Trade-wind Region the larger, 109. — How the Winds approach the Poles, 112. — The Offices of the Atmosphere, 114. — It is a powerful Machine, 118. — Whence come the Rains that feed the great Rivers'? 120. — How Vapor passes from one Hemisphere to the other, 123. — Evaporation greatest about Latitude 17°- 20°, 127. — Explanation, 128. — The Rainy Seasons : how caused, 129. — Why there is one Rainy Season in California, 130 — One at Panama, 131 — Two at Bogota, 132. — Rainless Regions explained, 135. — Why Australia is a Dry Country, 136. — Why Mountains have a dry and a rainy Side, 137. — The immense Fall of Rain upon the Western Ghauts in India: how caused, 139. — Vapor for the Patagonia Rains comes from the North Pacific, 141. — The mean annual Fall of Rain, 144. — Evaporation from the Indian Ocean, 146. — Evidences of Design, 148. 88. A PHILOSOPHER of tlio East,* with a richness of imagery truly Oriental, describes the atmosphere as " a spherical shell which surrounds our planet to a depth which is unknown to us, by reason of its growing tenuity, as it is released from the pressure of its own superincumbent mass. Its upper surface can not be nearer to us than fifty, and can scarcely be more remote than five hundred miles. It surrounds us on all sides, yet we see it not ; it presses on us with a load of fifteen pounds on every square inch of surface of our bodies, or from seventy to one hundred tons on us in all, yet we do not so much as feel its weight. Softer than the softest down — more impalpable than the finest gossamer — it leaves the cobweb undisturbed, and scarcely stirs the lightest flower that feeds on the dew it supplies ; yet it bears the fleets of nations on its wings around the world, and crushes the most re- fractory substances with its weight. When in motion, its force is sufficient to level the most stately forests and stable buildings with the earth — to raise the waters of the ocean into ridges like mountains, and dash the strongest ships to pieces like toys. It warms and cools by turns the earth and the living creatures that mhabit it. It draws up vapors from the sea and land, retains * Dr. Buist, of Bombay. THE ATMOSPHERE. 67 them dissolved in itself, or suspended in cisterns of clouds, and throws them down again as rain or dew when they are required. It bends the rays of the sun from their path, to give us the twi- light of evening and of dawn ; it disperses and refracts their va- rious tints to beautify the approach and the retreat of the orb of day. But for the atmosphere, sunshine would burst on us and fail us at once, and at once remove us from midnight darkness to the blaze of noon. We should have no twilight to soften and beautify the landscape ; no clouds to shade us from the scorching heat, but the bald earth, as it revolved on its axis, would turn its tanned and weakened front to the full and unmitigated rays of the lord of day. It affords the gas which vivifies and warms our frames, and receives into itself that which has been polluted by use, and is throwTi off as noxious. It feeds the flame of hfe ex- actly as it does that of the fire — it is in both cases consumed, and affords the food of consumption — in both cases it becomes com- bined with charcoal, w^hich requires it for combustion, and is re- moved by it when this is over." *' It is only the girdling encirchng air," says another philoso- pher,* " that flows above and around all, that makes the whole world kin. The carbonic acid w4th which to-day our breathing fills the air, to-morrow seeks its way round the world. The date- trees that grow round the falls of the Nile will drink it in by their leaves ; the cedars of Lebanon w^ill take of it to add to their stat- ure ; the cocoa-nuts of Tahiti w^ill grow rapidly upon it, and the palms and bananas of Japan will change it into flowers. The oxygen we are breathing was distilled for us some short time ago by the magnolias of the Susquehanna, and the great trees that skirt the Orinoco and the Amazon — the giant rhododendrons of the Himalayas contributed to it, and the roses and myrtles of Cashmere, the cinnamon-tree of Ceylon, and the forest older than the flood, buried deep in the heart of Africa, far behind the Mount- ains of the Moon. The rain we see descending was thawed for us out of the icebergs w^hich have watched the polar star for ages, and the lotus lihes have soaked up from the Nile, and exhaled as vapor, snows that rested on the summits of the Alps." 89. "The atmosphere," continues Maun, " which forms the outer surface of the habitable world, is a vast reservoir, into which the * Vide North British Review. 68 THE PHYSICAL GEOGRAPHY OF THE SEA. supply of food designed for living creatures is thrown ; or, in one word, it is itself the food, in its simple form, of all Uving crea- tures. The animal grinds down the fibre and the tissue of the plant, or the nutritious store that has been laid up within its cells, and converts these into the substance of which its own organs are composed. The plant acquires the organs and nutritious store thus yielded up as food to the animal, from the invulnerable air surrounding it." " But animals are furnished with the means of locomotion and of seizure — they can approach their food, and lay hold of and swallow it; plants must w^ait till their food comes to them. No solid particles find access to their frames ; the restless ambient air which rushes past them loaded with the carbon, the hydrogen, the oxygen, the w^ater — every thing they need in the shape of sup- plies is constantly at hand to minister to their w^ants, not only to aiFord them food in due season, but in the shape and fashion in which alone it can avail them." 90. There is no more worthy or suitable employment of the human mind than to trace the evidences of design and purpose in the Creator, which are visible in many parts of the creation. Hence, to the right-minded mariner, and to him who studies the physical relations of earth, sea, and air, the atmosphere is some- thing more than a shoreless ocean, at the bottom of which his bark is wafted or driven along. It is an envelope or covering for the dispersion of light and heat over the surface of the earth ; it is a sewer into which, with every breath we draw, we cast vast quantities of dead animal matter ; it is a laboratory for purifica- tion, in which that matter is recompounded, and wrought again into wholesome and healthful shapes ; it is a machine (^ 87) for pumping up all the rivers from the sea, and conveying the waters for their fountains on the ocean to their sources in the mount- ains. 91. Upon the proper working of this machine depends the well- being of every plant and animal that inhabits the earth ; there- fore the management of it, or its movement, or the performance of its offices, can not be left to chance. They are, w^e may rely upon it, guided by laws that make all parts, functions, and move- ments of the machinery as obedient to order as are the planets in their orbits. THE ATMOSPHERE. 69 92. An examination into the economy of the universe will be sufficient to satisfy the well-balanced minds of observant men that the laws w^hich govern the atmosphere and the laws which govern the ocean (§ 67) are laws which were put in force by the Creator when the foundations of the earth were laid, and that, therefore, they are laws of order ; else, why should the Gulf Stream, for instance, be always where it is, and running from the Gulf of Mexico, and not somewhere else, and sometimes running into it ? Why should there be a perpetual drought in one part of the world, and continual showers in another ? Or why should the winds and sea obey the voice of rebuke ? 93. To one who looks abroad to contemplate the agents of na- ture, as he sees them at w^ork upon our planet, no expression ut- tered nor act performed by them is without meaning. By such an one, the wind and rain, the vapor and the cloud, the tide, the cur- rent, the saltness, and depth, and warmth, and color of the sea, the shade of the sky, the temperature of the air, the tint and shape of the clouds, the height of the tree on the shore, the size of its leaves, the brilliancy of its flowers — each and all may be regarded as the exponent of certain physical combinations, and therefore as the expression in which Nature chooses to announce her own do- ings, or, if we please, as the language in which she writes down or chooses to make known her own laws. To understand that language and to interpret aright those laws is the object of the undertaking w^hich we now have in hand. No fact gathered in such a field as the one before us can, therefore, come amiss to those who tread the walks of inductive philosophy ; for, in the hand-book of nature, every such fact is a syllable ; and it is by pa- tiently collecting fact after fact, and by joining together syllable after syllable, that we may finally seek to read aright from the great volume which the mariner at sea and the philosopher on the mountain see spread out before them. 94. Of its Circulation. — We have seen (^1) that there are constant currents in the ocean ; we shall now see that there are also regular currents in the atmosphere. 95. From the parallel of about 30° north and south, nearly to the Ci^ator, we have, extending entirely around the earth, two zones of perpetual winds, viz., the zone of northeast trades on this side, and of southeast on that. They blow perpetually, and are 70 THE PHYSICAL GEOGRAPHY OF THE SEA. as steady and as constant as the currents of the Mississippi River —always moving in the same direction (Plate I.). As these two PLATE L DIAGRAM OF THE WINDS. currents of air are constantly flowing from the poles toward the equator, we are safe in assuming that the air which they keep m motion must return by some channel to the place near the poles whence it came in order to supply the trades. If this we^re not so, these winds would soon exhaust the polar regions of atmos- phere, and pile it up about the equator, and then cease to blow for the want of air to make more wind of. THE ATMOSPHERE. 71 96. This return current, therefore, must be in the upper regions of the atmosphere, at least until it passes over those parallels be- tween which the trade-winds are always blowing on the surface. The return current must also move in the direction opposite to that wind the place of which it is intended to supply. These di- rect and counter currents are also made to move in a sort of spiral or loxodromic curve, turning to the west as they go from the poles to the equator, and in the opposite direction as they move from the equator to the poles. This turning is caused by the rotation of the earth on its axis, 97. The earth, we know, moves from w^est to east. Now if we imagine a particle of atmosphere at the north pole, where it is at rest, to be put in motion in a straight line toward the equator, we can easily see how this particle of air, coming from' the very axis of the pole, where it did not partake of the diurnal motion of the earth, would, in consequence of its vis inerticE, find, as it travels south, the earth slipping from under it, as it were, and thus it would appear to be coming from the northeast and going toward the southwest ; in other words, it would be a northeast wind. The better to explain, let us take a common terrestrial globe for the illustration. Bring the island of Madeira, or any other place about the same parallel, under the brazen meridian ; put a finger of the left hand on the place ; then, moving the finger down along the meridian to the south, to represent the particle of air, turn the globe on its axis from west to east, to represent the diur- nal rotation of the earth, and when the finger reaches the equator, stop. It will now be seen that the place on the globe under the finger is to the southward and westward of the place from which the finger started ; in other words, the track of the finger over the surface of the globe, like the track of the particle of air upon the earth, has been from the northward and eastward. 98. On the other hand, we can perceive how a like particle of atmosphere that starts from the equator, to take the place of the other at the pole, would, as it travels north, in consequence of its vis inei'ticB, be going toward the east faster than the earth. It would, therefore, appear to be blowing from the southwest, and going toward the northeast, and exactly in the opposite direction to the other. Writing south for north, the same takes place be- tween the south pole and the equator. 72 THE PHYSICAL GEOGRAPHY OF THE SEA. Such is the process which is actually going on in nature ; and if we take the motions of these two particles as the type of the mo- tion of all, we shall have an illustration of the great currents in the air, the equator being near one of the nodes, and there being two systems of currents, an upper and an under, between it and each pole. Halley, in his theory of the trade-winds, pointed out the key to the explanation so far, of the atmospherical circulation ; but, were the explanation to rest here, a northeast trade-wind extending from the pole to the equator w^ould satisfy it ; and were this so, we should have, on the surface, no winds but the northeast trade- winds on this side, and none but southeast trade-winds on the other side, of the equator. 99. Let us return now to our northern particle (Plate I., p. 70), and follow it in a round from the north pole across the equator to the south pole, and back again. Setting off from the polar re- gions, this particle of air, for some reason which does not appear to have been very satisfactorily explained by philosophers, instead of traveling (§98) on the surface all the way from the pole to the equator, travels in the upper regions of the atmosphere until it gets near the parallel of 30°. Here it meets, also in the clouds, the hypothetical particle that is coming from the south, and going north to take its place. 100. About this parallel of 30° north, then, these two particles press against each other with the whole amount of their motive power, and produce a calm and an accumulation of atmosphere : this accumulation is sufficient to balance the pressure of the two winds from the north and south. 101. From under this bank of calms, w^hich seamen call the '' horse latitudes" (I have called them the calms of Cancer), two surface currents of wind are ejected ; one toward the equator, as the northeast trades, the other toward the pole, as the southwest passage-winds. These winds come out at the lower surface of the calm region, and consequently the place of the air borne away in this manner must be supplied, w^e may infer, by downward currents from the superincumbent air of the calm region. Like the case of a vessel of water which has two streams from opposite directions running in at the top, and two of equal capacity discharging in opposite THE ATMOSPHERE. 73 directions at the bottom, the motion of the water would be down- ward, so is the motion of the air in this calm zone. 102. The barometer, in this calm region, is said to stand higher than it does either to the north or to the south of it ; and this is another proof as to the banking up here of the atmosphere, and pressure from its downward motion. 103. Following our imaginary particle of air from the north across this calm belt, we now feel it moving on the surface of the earth as the northeast trade-wind ; and as such it continues, till it arrives near the equator, w^here it meets a like hypothetical par- ticle, which, starting from the south at the same time the other started from the north pole, has blown as the southeast trade-wind. 104. Here, at this equatorial place of meeting, there is another conflict of winds and another calm region, for a. northeast and southeast wind can not blow at the same time in the same place. The two particles have been put in motion by the same power ; they meet with equal force ; and, therefore, at their place of meet- ing, are stopped in their course. Here, therefore, there is a calm belt. 105. Warmed now by the heat of the sun, and pressed on each side by the wdiole force of the northeast and southeast trades, these two hypothetical particles, taken as the type of the whole, cease to move onward and ascend. This operation is the reverse of that which took place at the meeting (^ 100) near the parallel of 30°. 106. This imaginary particle then, having ascended to the up- per regions of the atmosphere again, travels there counter to the southeast trades, until it meets, near the calm belt of Capricorn, another particle from the south pole ; here there is a descent as before (§ 101); it then (§ 98) flows on toward the south pole as a surface wind from the northw^est. Entering the polar regions obliquely, it is pressed upon by sim- ilar particles flowing in oblique currents across every meridian ; and here again is a calm place or node ; for, as our imaginary par- ticle approaches the parallels near the polar calms more and more obhquely, it, with all the rest, is whirled about the pole in a con- tinued circular gale ; finally, reaching the vortex or the calm place, it is carried upward to the regions of atmosphere above, whence it commences again its circuit to the north as an upper current, as 74 THE PHYSICAL GEOGRAPHY OF THE SEA. far as the calm belt of Capricorn ; here it encounters (§ 106) its fellow from the north (§ 98) ; they stop, descend, and flow out as surface currents (§ 101), the one with which the imagination is traveling, to the equatorial calms as the southeast trade-wind ; here (^ 104) it ascends, traveling thence to the calm belt of Can- cer as an upper current counter to the northeast trades. Here (§ 100 and 99) it ceases to be an upper current, but, descending (§ 101), travels on with the southwest peissage-winds toward the pole. Now the course we have imagined an atom of air to take is this (Plate I.) : an ascent at P, at the north pole ; an efflux thence as an upper current (§99) until it meets G (also an upper current) over the calms of Cancer. Here (§ 100) there is supposed to be a descent, as shown by the arrows along the wavy lines which en- velop the circle. This upper current from the pole (§ 97) now becomes the northeast trade-wind B (§ 103), on the surface, until it meets the southecist trades in the equatorial calms, when it ascends and travels as C with the upper current to the calms of Capricorn, then as D with the prevailing northwest surface cur- rent to the south pole, thence up with the arrow P, and around with the hands of a watch, and back, as indicated by the arrows along E, F, G, and H. 107. The Bible frequently makes allusions to the laws of nature, their operation and effects. But such allusions are often so wrap- ped in the folds of the pecuhar and graceful drapery with which its language is occasionally clothed, that the meaning, though peeping out from its thin covering all the while, yet lies in some sense concealed, until the lights and revelations of science are thrown upon it ; then it bursts out and strikes us with the more force and beauty. As our knowledge of Nature and her laws has increased, so has our understanding of many passages in the Bible been improved. The Bible called the earth " the round world ;" yet for ages it was the most damnable heresy for Christian men to say the world is round ; and, finally, sailors circumnavigated the globe, proved the Bible to be right, and saved Christian men of science from the stake. " Canst thou tell the sweet influences of the Pleiades ?" Astronomers of the present day, if they have not answered this THE ATMOSPHERE. 75 question, have thrown so much hght upon it as to show that, if ever it be answered by man, he must^cQnsult the science of astron- omy. It has been recently all but proved, that the earth and sun, with their splendid retinue of comets, satellites, and planets, are all in motion around some point or centre of attraction inconceiv- ably remote, and that that point is in the direction of the star Al- cyon, one of the Pleiades ! Who but the astronomer, then, could tell their " sweet influences ?" And as for the general system of atmospherical circulation which I have been so long endeavoring to describe, the Bible tells it all in a single sentence : " The wind goeth toward the south, and turneth about unto the north ; it whirleth about continually, and the wind returneth again according to his circuits." — Eccl., i., 6. 108. Of course, as the surface winds H and D (Plate I.) ap- proach the poles, there must be a sloughing off, if I may be al- lowed the expression, of air from the surface winds, in consequence of their approaching the poles. For as they near the poles, the parallels become smaller and smaller, and the surface current must either extend much higher up, and blow w4th greater rapid- ity as it approaches the poles, or else a part of it must be slough- ed off above, and so turn back before reaching the poles. The latter is probably the case. Our investigations show that the southeast trade-wind region is much larger than the northeast. I speak now of its extent over the Atlantic Ocean only ; that the southeast trades are the fresh- er, and that they often push themselves up to 10° or 15° of north latitude ; whereas the northeast trade-wind seldom gets south of the equator. The peculiar clouds of the trade-winds are formed between the upper and lower currents of air. They are probably formed of vapor condensed from the upper current, and evaporated as it de- scends by the lower and dry current from the poles. It is the same phenomenon up there which is so often observed here below ; when a cool and dry current of air meets a warm and wet one, an evolution of vapor or fog ensues. We now see the general course of the " wind in his circuits," as we see the general course of the w^ater in a river. There are many abrading surfaces, irregularities, &c., which produce a thou- 76 - THE PHYSICAL GEOGRAPHY OF THE SEA. sand eddies in the main stream ; yet, nevertheless, the general di- rection of the whole is not, disturbed nor affected by those counter currents ; so with the atmosphere and the variable winds which we find here in this latitude. Have I not, therefore, very good grounds for the opinion (^ 92) that the ''wand in his circuits," though apparently to us never so wayward, is as obedient to law and as subservient to order as were the morning stars when they " sang together?" 109. There are at least two forces concerned in driving the wind through its circuits. We have seen (§ 97 and § 98) whence that force is derived which gives easting to the winds as they ap- proach the equator, and westing as they approach the poles, and allusion, without explanation, has been made (§ 105) to the source whence they derive their northing and their southing. The trade- winds are caused, it is said, by the inter-tropical heat of the sun, which, expanding the air, causes it to rise up near the equator ; it then flows off in the upper currents north and south, and there is a rush of air at the surface both from the north and the south to restore the equihbrium — hence the trade-winds. But to the north side of the trade-wind belt in the northern, and on the south side in the southern hemisphere, the prevailing direction of the winds is not toward the source of heat about the equator, but ex- actly m the opposite direction. In the extra-tropical region of each hemisphere the prevailing winds blow from the equator to* ward the poles. It therefore at first appears paradoxical to say that heat makes the easterly winds of the torrid zone blow toward the equator, and the westerly winds of the temperate zones to blow toward the poles. Let us illustrate : 110. The primum mobile of the extra-tropical winds toward the equator is, as just intimated, generally ascribed to heat, and in this wise, viz. : Suppose, for the moment, the earth to have no di- urnal rotation ; that it is at rest ; that the rays of the sun have been cut off from it ; that the atmosphere has assumed a mean uniformity of temperature, the thermometer at the equator and the thermometer at the poles giving the same reading ; that the winds are still, and that the whole aerial ocean is in equilibrium and at rest. Now imagine the screen w^hich is supposed to have shut off the influence of the sun to be removed, and the whole at- mosphere to assume the various temperatures in the various parts THE ATMOSPHERE. 77 ot the world that it actually has at this moment, what would take place, supposing the uniform temperature to be a mean between that at the equator and that at the poles ? Why, this would take place : a swelling up of the atmosphere about the equator by the expansive force of inter-tropical heat, and a contraction of it about the poles in consequence of the cold. These two forces, consid- ering them under their most obvious eifects, would disturb the supposed atmospherical equilibrium by altering the level of the great aerial ocean ; the expansive force of heat elevating it about the equator, and the contracting powers of cold depressing it about the poles. And forthwith tw^o systems of winds would commence to blow, viz., one in the upper regions from the equator toward the poles, and as this warm and expanded air should flow toward either pole, seeking its level, a w^ind would blow on the surface from either pole to restore the air to the equator which the upper current had carried off. These two winds would blow due north and south ; tHb effects of heat at the equator, and cold at the poles, would cause them so to do. Now suppose the earth to commence its diurnal rotation ; then, instead of having these winds north and south winds, they will, for reasons already explained (^ 97), approach the equator on both sides with easti?ig in them, and each pole with wresting. 111. The circumference of the earth measured on the parallel of 60° is only half what it is when measured on the equator. Therefore, supposing velocity to be the same, only half the vol- ume of atmosphere (§ 109) that sets off from the equator as an upper current toward the poles can cross the parallel of 60° north or south. The other moiety has been gradually drawn in and carried back (^ 108) by the current which is moving in the oppo- site direction. Such, and such only, would be the extent of the power of the sun to create a polar and equatorial flow of air, w^ere its power confined simply to a change of -level. But the atmosphere has been invested with another property which increases its mobility, and gives the heat of the sun still more power to put it in motion, and it is this : as heat changes the atmospherical level, it changes also the specific gravity of the air acted upon. If, therefore, the level of the great aerial ocean were undisturbed by the sun's rays, and if the air were adapted to a change of specific gravity alone, 78 THE PHYSICAL GEOGRAPHY OF THE SEA. without any change in volume, this quahty would also be the source of at least two systems of currents in the air, viz., an up- per and a lower. The two agents combined, viz., that which changes level or volume, and that which changes specific gravity, give us the general currents under consideration. Hence we say that the primum mobile of the air is derived from change of speci- fic gravity induced by the freezing temperature of the polar re- gions, as well as from change of specific gravity due the expand- ing force of the sun's rays within the tropics. 112. Therefore, fairly to appreciate the extent of the influence due the heat of the sun in causing the winds, it should be recol- lected that we may with as much reason ascribe to the inter- tropical heat of the sun the northwest winds, which are the pre- vailing winds of the extra-tropical regions of the southern hemi- sphere, or the southwest winds, which are the prevailing winds of the extra-tropical regions of the northern hemisphere, as w^e may the*trade-winds, which blow in the opposite directions. Par- adoxical, therefore, as it seems for us to say that the heat of the sun causes the winds between the parallels of 25° or 30° north and south to blow toward the equator, and that it also causes the prevailing winds on the polar sides of these same parallels to blow toward the poles, yet the paradox ceases when we come to rec- ollect that by the process of equatorial heating and polar cooling which is going on in the atmosphere, the specific gravity of the air is changed as well as its level. Nevertheless, as Halley said, in his paper read before the Royal Society in London in 1686, and as we also have said (§ 99), "it is likewise very hard to con- ceive why the limits of the trade-wind should be fixed about the parallel of latitude 30° all around the globe, and that they should so seldom exceed or fall short of those bounds." 113. Operated upon by the equilibrating tendency of the at- mosphere and by diurnal rotation, the wind approaches the north pole, for example, by a series of spirals from the southwest. If we draw a circle about this pole on a common terrestrial globe, and intersect it by spirals to represent the direction of the wind, we shall see that the wind enters all parts of this circle from the southwest, and, consequently, that a whirl ought to be created thereby, in which the ascending column of air revolves from right to left, or against the hands of a watch. At the south pole the THE ATMOSPHERE. 79 winds come from the northwest (^ 106), and consequently there they revolve about it ivith the hands of a watch. That this should be so will be obvious to any one who will look at the arrows on the polar sides of the calms of Cancer and Cap- ricorn (Plate I., p. 70). These arrows are intended to represent the prevailing direction of the w^ind at the surface of the earth on the polar side of these calms. 114. It is a singular coincidence between these two facts thus deduced, and other facts which have been observed, and which have been set forth by Redfield, Reid, Piddington, and others, viz., that all rotary storms in the northern hemisphere revolve as do the whirlwinds about the north pole, viz., from right to left, and that all circular gales in the southern hemisphere revolve in the opposite direction, as does the whirl about the south pole. How can there be any connection between the rotary motion of the wind about the pole, and the rotary motion of it in a gale caused here by local agents ? That there is probably such a connection has been suggested by other facts and circumstances, and perhaps I shall be enabled to make myself clearer when we come to treat of these facts and circumstances, and to inquire farther, as at § 172, into the rela- tions between magnetism and the circulation of the atmosphere ; for, although the theory of heat satisfies many conditions of the problem, and though heat, doubtless, is one of the chief agents in keeping up the circulation of the atmosphere, yet it can be made to appear that it is not the sole agent. 115. Some of its Meteorological Agencies. — So far, we see how the atmosphere moves ; but the atmosphere, like every other department in the economy of nature, has its offices to perform, and they are many. I have already alluded to some of them ; but I only propose, at this time, to consider some of the meteoro- logical agencies at sea, which, in the grand design of creation, have probably been assigned to this w^onderful machine. To distribute moisture over the surface of the earth, and to temper the climate of different latitudes, it would seem, are two great offices assigned by their Creator to the ocean and the air. When the northeast and southeast trades meet and produce the equatorial calms (§ 104), the air, by this time, is heavily laden wdth moisture, for in each hemisphere it has traveled obliquely 80 THE PHYSICAL GEOGRAPHY OF THE SEA. over a large space of the ocean. It has no room for escape but in the upward direction {^ 105). It expands as it ascends, and becomes cooler ; a portion of its vapor is thus condensed, and comes down in the shape of rain. Therefore it is that, under these calms, we have a region of constant precipitation. Old sailors tell us of such dead calms of long continuance here, of such heavy and constant rains, that they have scooped up fresh water from the surface of the sea. 116. The conditions to which this air is exposed here under the equator are probably not such as to cause it to precipitate all the moisture that it has taken up in its long sweep across the waters. Let us see what becomes of the rest ; for Nature, in her economy, permits nothing to be taken away from the earth which is not to be restored to it again in some form, and at some time or other. Consider the great rivers — the Amazon and the Mississippi, for example. We see them day after day, and year after year, dis- charnrinsr an immense volume of water into the ocean. " All the rivers run into the sea, yet the sea is not full." — Ecc, i., 7. Where do the waters so discharged go, and where do they come from ? They come from their sources, you will say. But whence are their sources supplied ? for, unless what the fountain sends forth be returned to it again, it will fail and be dry. 117. We see simply, in the waters that are discharged by these rivers, the amount by w^hich the precipitation exceeds the evapor- ation throughout the whole extent of valley drained by them ; and by precipitation I mean the total amount of w^ater that falls from, or is deposited by the atmosphere, wiiether as dew^, rain, hail, or snow. The springs of these rivers (^ 87) are supplied from the rains of heaven, and these rains are formed of vapors which are taken up from the sea, that " it be not full," and carried up to the mount- ains through the air. " Note the place whence the rivers come, thither they return again." 118. Behold now the waters of the Amazon, of the Mississippi, the St. Lawrence, and all the great rivers of America, Europe, and Asia, lifted up by the atmosphere, and flowing in invisible streams back through the air to their sources among the hills (§ 87), and that through channels so regular, certain, and well de- THE ATMOSPHERE. 81 fined, that the quantity thus conveyed one year with the other is nearly the same : for that is the quantity which we see running down to the ocean through these rivers ; and the quantity dis- charged annually by each river is, as far as we can judge, nearly constant. We now begin to conceive what a powerful machine the at- mosphere must be ; and, though it is apparently so capricious and wayward in its movements, here is evidence of order and arrange- ment which we must admit, and proof which we can not deny, that it performs this mighty office with regularity and certainty, and is therefore as obedient to law as is the steam-engine to the will of its builder. (See Appendix A.) 119. It, too, is an engine. The South Seas themselves, in all their vast inter-tropical extent, are the boiler for it, and the north- ern hemisphere is its condenser. 120. Where does the vapor that makes the rains which feed, the rivers of the northern hemisphere come from 1 The proportion between the land and water in the northern hemisphere is very different from the proportion between them in the southern. In the northern hemisphere, the land and water are nearly equally divided. In the southern, there is several times more water than land. All the great rivers in the world are in the northern hemisphere, where there is less ocean to supply them. Whence, then, are their sources replenished ? Those of the Ama- zon are supplied with rains from the equatorial calms and trade- winds of the Atlantic. That river runs east, its branches come from the north and south ; it is always the rainy season on one side or the other of it ; consequently, it is a river without periodic stages of a very marked character. It is always near its • high- water mark. For one half of the year its northern tributaries are flooded, and its southern for the other half. It discharges under the line, and as its tributaries come from both hemispheres, it can not be said to belong exclusively to either. It is supplied with water from the Atlantic Ocean. Taking the Amazon, therefore, out of the count, the Rio de la Plata is the only great river of the southern hemisphere. There is no large river in New Holland. The South Sea Isl- ands give rise to none, nor is there one in South Africa that we know of. F 82 THE PHYSICAL GEOGRAPHY OF THE SEA. 121. The great rivers of North America and North Africa, and all the rivers of Europe and Asia, lie wholly within the northern hemisphere. How is it, then, considering that the evaporating sur- face lies mainly in the southern hemisphere — how is it, I say, that we should have the evaporation to take place in one hemisphere and the condensation in the other ? The total amount of rain which falls in the northern hemisphere is much greater, meteorol- ogists tell us, than that w^hich falls in the southern. The annual amount of rain in the north temperate zone is half as much again as that of the south temperate. 122. How is it, then, that this vapor gets, as stated § 119, from the southern into the northern hemisphere, and comes with such regularity that our rivers never go dry and our springs fail not ? It is because of the beautiful operations and the exquisite compen- sation of this grand machine, the atmosphere. It is exquisitely and wonderfully counterpoised. Late in the autumn of the north, throughout its winter, and in* early spring, the sun is pouring his rays with the greatest intensity down upon the seas of the south- ern hemisphere, and this powerful engine which w^e are contem- plating is pumping up the water there (§ 119) for our rivers with the greatest activity. At this time, the mean temperature of the entire southern hemisphere is said to be about 10° higher than the northern. 123. The heat which this heavy evaporation absorbs becomes latent, and, with the moisture, is carried through the upper regions of the atmosphere until it reaches our climates. Here the vapor is formed into clouds, condensed, and precipitated. The heat which held this water in the state of vapor is set free, it becomes sensible heat, and it is that which contributes so much to temper our winter climate. It clouds up in winter, turns warm, and we say we are going to have falling weather. That is because the process of condensation has already commenced, though no rain or snow may have fallen : thus we feel this southern heat, that has been collected from the rays of the sun by the sea, been bot- tled away by the winds in the clouds of a southern summer, and set free in the process of condensation in our northern winter. 124. If the Plate at page 70 fairly represent the course of the winds, the southeast trade-winds would enter the northern hemi- sphere, and, as an upper current, bear into it all their moisture, THE ATMOSPHERE. 83 except that which is precipitated in the region of equatorial calms. The South Seas, then, according to ^ 119, should supply mainly the water for this engine, w^hile the northern hemisphere condenses it ; we should, therefore, have more rain in the northern hemi- sphere. The rivers tell us that we have — at least on the land : for the great water-courses of the globe, and half the fresh water in the w^orld, are found on our side of the equator. This fact alone is strongly corroborative of this hypothesis. The rain gauge tells us also the same story. The yearly aver- age of rain in the north temperate zone is, according to Johnston, thirty-seven inches. He gives but twenty-six in the south tem- perate, 125. Moisture is never extracted from the air by subjecting it from a low to a higher temperature, but the reverse. Thus, all the air which comes loaded with moisture from the other hemisphere, and is borne into this with the southeast trade-winds, travels in the upper regions of the atmosphere {^ 100) until it reaches the calms of Cancer ; here it becomes the surface wind that prevails from the southward and w^estward. As it goes north it grows cooler, and the process of condensation commences. We may now liken it to the Avet sponge, and the decrease of temperature to the hand that squeezes that sponge. Finally reach- ing the cold latitudes, all the moisture that a dew-point of zero, and even far below, can extract, is WTung from it; and this air, then commences " to return according to his circuits" as dry at- mosphere. And here we can quote Scripture again : " The north wind driveth away rain." This is a meteorological fact of high authority and great importance in the study of the circulation of the atmosphere. 126. By reasoning in this manner, we are led to the conclusion that our rivers are supplied with their waters principally from the trade-wind regions — the extra-tropical northern rivers from the southern trades, and the extra-tropioal southern rivers from the northern trade-winds, for the trade-winds are the evaporating winds. Taking for our guide such faint glimmerings of light as we can catch from these facts, and supposing these view^s to be correct, then the saltest portion of the sea should be in the trade-wind re- 84 THE PHYSICAL OSTEOGRAPHY OF THE SEA. gions, where the water for all the rivers is evaporated ; and there the saltest portions are found. 127. Dr. Ruschenberger* of the Navy, on his late voyage to In- dia, was kind enough to conduct a series of observations on the specific gravity of sea water. In about the parallel of 17° north and south — midway of the trade-wind regions — he found the heaviest water. Though so warm, the water there was heavier than the cold w^ater to the south of the Cape of Good Hope. Lieutenant D. D. Porter, in the steam-ship Golden Age, found the heaviest water about the parallels of 20° north and 17° south. In summing up the evidence in favor of this view of the general system of atmospherical circulation, it remains to be shown how it is, if the view" be correct, there should be smaller rivers and less rain in the southern hemisphere. 128. The Exijlanation. — The winds that are to blow as the northeast trade-winds, returning from the polar regions, where the moisture (§ 125) has been compressed out of them, remain, as we have seen, dry winds until they cross the calm zone of Cancer, and are felt on the surface as the northeast trades. About two thirds of them only can then blow over the ocean ; the rest blow over the land, over Asia, Africa, and North America, where there is but comparatively a small portion of evaporating surface ex- posed to their action. The zone of the northeast trades extends, on an average, from about 29° north to 7° north. Now, if we examine the globe, to see how much of this zone is land and how much water, we shall find, commencing with China and coming over Asia, the broad part of Africa, and so on, across the continent of America to the Pacific, land enough to fill up, as nearly as may be, just one third of it. This land, if thrown into one body between these parallels, would make a belt equal to 120° of longitude by 22° of latitude. According to the hypothesis, illustrated by Plate I., p. 70, as to the circulation of the atmosphere, it is these northeast trade-winds that take up and carry over, after they rise up in the belt of equa- torial calms, the vapors which make the rains that feed the rivers in the extra-tropical regions of the southern hemisphere. Upon this supposition, then, two thirds only of the northeast trade-winds are fully charged with moisture, and only two thirds of the amount of rain that falls in the northern hemisphere should THE ATMOSPHERE. 85 fall in the southern, and this is just about the proportion (§ 124) that observation gives. In like manner, the southeast trade-winds take up the vapors which make our rivers, and as they prevail to a much greater ex- tent at sea, and have exposed to their action about three times as much ocean as the northeast trade-winds have, we might expect, according to this hypothesis, more rains in the northern — and, con- sequently, more and larger rivers — than in the southern hemi- sphere. A glance at Plate YIII. will show how very much larger that part of the ocean over which the southeast trades prevail is than that where the northeast trade-winds blow. This estimate as to the quantity of rain in the two hemispheres is one which is not capable of verification by any more than the rudest approximations ; for the greater extent of southeast trades on one side, and of high mountains on the other, must each of ne- cessity, and independent of other agents, have their effects. Nev- ertheless, this estimate gives as close an approximation as we can make out from any other data. 129. The rainy seasons, lioio caused. — The calm and trade-wind regions or belts move up and down the earth, annually, in latitude nearly a thousand miles. In July and August the zone of equato- rial calms is found between 7° north and 12° north; sometimes higher ; in March and April, between latitude 5° south and 2° norths With this fact and these points of view before us, it is easy to perceive w^hy it is that we have a rainy season in Oregon, a rainy and dry season in California, another at Panama, two at Bogota, none in Peru, and one in Chili. In Oregon it rains every month, but more in the winter months. The winter there is the summer of the southern hemisphere, when this steam-engine is working with the greatest pressure. The vapor that is taken up by the southeast trades is borne along over the region of northeast trades to latitude 35° or 40° north (^ 124), where it descends and appears on the surface with the southwest winds of those latitudes. Driving upon the highlands of the continent, this vapor is condensed and precipitated, during this part of the year, almost in constant showers. 130. In the winter, the calm belt of Cancer approaches the equator. This whole system of zones, viz., of trades, calms, and westerly winds, follows the sun ; and they of our hemisphere are 86 THE PHYSICAL GEOGRAPHY OF THE SEA. nearer the equator m the winter and spring months than at any- other season. The southwest winds commence at this season to prevail as far down as the lower part of California. In winter and spring, the land in California is cooler than the sea air, and is quite cold enough to extract moisture from it. But in summer and autumn the land is the warmer, and can not condense the vapors of water held by the air. So the same cause which made it rain in Ore- gon now" makes it rain in California. As the sun returns to the north, he brings the calm belt of Cancer and the northeast trades along with him ; and now, at places where, six months before, the southwest wdnds were the prevailing winds, the northeast trades are found to blow. This is the case in the latitude of California. The prevailing winds, then, instead of going from a warmer to a cooler climate, as before, are going the opposite way. Conse- quently, they can not, if they have the moisture in them to make rains of, precipitate it under such circumstances. 131. Panama is in the region of equatorial calms. This belt of calms travels during the year, back and forth, over about 17° of latitude, coming farther north in the summer, where it tarries for several months, and then returns so as to reach its extreme southern latitude some time in March or April. Where these calms are it is always raining, and the chart shows that they hang over the latitude of Panama from June to November ; consequent- ly, from June to November is the rainy season at Panama. The rest of the year that place is in the region of the northeast trades, which, before they arrive there, have to cross the mountains of the ibthmus, on the cool tops of which they deposit their moisture, and leave Panama rainless and pleasant until the sun returns north with the belt of equatorial calms after him. They then push the belt of northeast trades farther to the north, occupy a part of the winter zone, and refresh that part of the earth wdth summer rains. This belt of calms moves over more than double of its breadth, and nearly the entire motion from south to north is accomplished generally in two months. May and June. 132. Take the parallel of 4° north as an illustration: during tiiese two months the entire belt of calms crosses this parallel, and then leaves it in the region of the southeast trades. During these two months it was pouring down rain on that parallel. After the THE ATMOSPHERE. 87 calm belt passes it -the rains cease, and the people in that latitude have no more wet weather till the fall, when the belt of calms re- crosses this parallel on its way to the south. By examining the '' Trade-wind Chart," it may be seen what the latitudes are that have two rainy seasons, and that Bogota is within the bi-rainy latitudes. 133. The Rainless Regions .—^he coast of Peru is within the region of perpetual southeast trade- winds. Though the Peruvian shores are on the verge of the great South Sea boder, yet it never rains there. The reason is plain. The southeast trade-winds in the Atlantic Ocean first strike the water on the coast of Africa. Traveling to the northwest, they blow obliquely across the ocean untd they reach the coast of Brazil. By this time they are heavily laden with vapor, which they continue to bear along across the continent, depositing it as they go, and supplying with it the sources of the Rio de la Plata and the southern tributaries of the Amazon. Finally they reach the snow-capped Andes, and here is wrung from them the last particle of moisture that that very low temper- ature can extract. Reaching the summit of that range, they now tumble down as cool and dry winds on the Pacific slopes beyond. Meeting with no evaporating surface, and with no temperature colder than that to which they were subjected on the mountain-tops, they reach the ocean before they become charged with fresh vapor, and be- fore, therefore, they have any which the Peruvian climate can ex- tract. Thus we see how the top of the Andes becomes the res- ervoir from which are supphed the rivers of Chili and Peru. 134. The other rainless or almost rainless regions are the west- ern coasts of Mexico, the deserts of Africa, Asia, North America, and Australia. Now study the geographical features of the coun- try surrounding those regions ; see how the mountain ranges run ; then turn to Plate VIII. to see how the winds blow, and where the sources are (^ 87) which supply them with vapors. This plate shows the prevailing direction of the wind only at sea ; but know- ing it there, we may infer what it is on the land. Supposing it to prevail on the land as it generally does in corresponding latitudes at sea, then the Plate will suggest readily enough how the winds that blow over these deserts came to be robbed of their moisture, gg THE PHYSICAL GEOGRAPHY OF THE SEA. or, rather, to have so much of it taken from them as to reduce their dew-point below the Desert temperature ; for tlie air can never de- posit its moisture when its temperature is higher than its dew-point. 135. We have a rainless region about the Red Sea, because the Red Sea, for the most part, lies within the northeast trade-wind region, and these winds, when they reach that region, are dry- winds, for they have as yet, in their course, crossed no wide sheets of water from which they could take up a supply of vapor. 136. Most of New Holland lies within the southeast trade-wind region ; so does most of inter-tropical South America. But inter- tropical South America is the land of showers. The largest riv- ers and most copiously watered country in the world are to be found there, whereas almost exactly the reverse is the case in Australia. Whence this dilFerence ? Examine the direction of the winds with regard to the shore-line of these two regions, and the explanation will at once be suggested. In Australia — east coast — the shore-line is stretched out in the direction of the trades ; in South America — east coast — it is perpendicular to their direc- tion. In Australia, they fringe this shore only with their vapor, and so stint that thirsty land with showers that the trees can not afford to spread their leaves out to the sun, for it evaporates all the moisture from them ; their instincts, therefore, teach them to turn their edges to his rays. In America, they blow perpendicu- larly upon the shore, penetrating the very heart of the country with their moisture. Here the leaves — as the plantain, &c. — turn their broad sides up to the sun, and court his rays. 137. Why there is more rain on one side of a mountain than on the other. We may now, from what has been said, see why the Andes and all other mountains which run north and south have a dry and a rainy side, and how the prevailing winds of the latitude determine which is the rainy and which the dry side. Thus, let us take the southern coast of Chili for illustration. In our summer time, when the sun comes north, and drags after him his belts of perpetual winds and calms, that coast is left with- in the regions of the northwest winds — the winds that are counter to the southeast trades — which, cooled by the winter temperature of the highlands of Chili, deposit their moisture copiously. Dur- ing the rest of the year, the most of Chili is in the region of the THE ATMOSPHERE. 89 southeast trades, and the same causes which operate m California to prevent rain there, operate in ChiU ; only the dry season in one place is the rainy season of the other. Hence we see that the weather side of all such mountains as the Andes is the wet side, and the lee side the dry. 138. The same phenomenon, from a like cause, is repeated in inter-tropical India, only in that country each side of the mountain is made alternately the wet and the dry side by a change in the prevailing direction of the wind. Plate VIII. shows India to be in one of the monsoon regions : it is the most famous of them all. From October to April the northeast trades prevail. They evap- orate from the Bay of Bengal water enough to feed wuth rains, during this season, the western shores of this bay and the Ghauts range of mountains. This range holds the relation to these winds that the Andes of Peru (§ 133) hold to the southeast trades ; it first cools and then reheves them of their moisture, and they tum- ble down on the western slopes of the Ghauts, Peruvian-like (§ 137), cool, rainless, and dry; wherefore that narrow strip of country between the Ghauts and the Arabian Sea w^ould, like that in Peru between the Andes and the Pacific, remain without rain forever, wef e it not for other agents which are at work about India and not about Peru. The work of the agents to which I allude is felt in the monsoons, and these prevail in India and not. in Peru. 139. After the northeast trades have blown out their season, which in India ends in April (^ 138), the great arid plains of Cen- tral Asia, of Tartary, Thibet, and Mongolia, become heated up, react upon these northeast trades, turn them back, and convert them, during the summer and early autumn, into southwest mon- soons. These then come from the Indian Ocean and Sea of Ara- bia loaded with moisture, and striking w4th it perpendicularly upon the Ghauts, precipitate upon that narrow strip of land between this range and the Arabian Sea an amount of water that is truly astonishing. Here, then, are not only the conditions for causing more rain, now on the w^est, now on the east side of this mount- ain range, but the conditions also for the most copious precipita- tion. Accordingly, when we come to consult rain gauges, and to ask meteorological observers in India about the fall of rain, they tell us that on the western slopes of the Ghauts it some- 90 THE PHYSICAL GEOGRAPHY OF THE SEA. times reaches the enormous depth of twelve or fifteen inches in one day.* 140. These winds then continue their course to the Himalaya range as dry winds. In crossing this range, they are subjected to a lower temperature than that to which they were exposed in cross- ing the Ghauts. Here they drop more of their moisture in the shape of snow and rain, and then pass over into the thirsty lands beyond with scarcely enough vapor in them to make even a cloud. Thence they ascend into the upper air, there to become counter- currents in the general system of atmospherical circulation. By studying Plate VHL, where the rainless regions and inland basins, as well as the course of the prevailing winds, are shown, these facts will become obvious. 141. The Regions of Greatest Precipitation. — We shall now be enabled to determine, if the views which I have been en- deavoring to present be correct, what parts of the earth are sub- ject to the greatest fall of rain. They should be on the slopes of those mountains which the trade-winds first strike, after having blown across the greatest tract of ocean. The more abrupt the elevation, and the shorter the distance between the mountain top and the ocean, the greater the amount of precipitation. If, therefore, we commence at the parallel of about 30° north in the Pacific, where the northeast trade-winds first strike that ocean, and trace them through their circuits till they first strike high mountains, we ought to find such a place of heavy rains. Commencing at this parallel of 30°, therefore, in the North Pa- cific, and tracing thence the course of the northeast trade-winds, we shall find that they blow thence, and reach the region of equa- torial calms near the Caroline Islands. Here they rise up ; but, instead of pursuing the same course in the upper stratum of winds through the southern hemisphere, they, in consequence of the ro- tation of the earth (§ 98), are made to take a southeast course. They keep in this upper stratum until they reach the calms of Capricorn, betw^een the parallels of 30° and 40° ; after which they become the prevailing northwest winds of the southern hemi- sphere, which correspond to the southwest of the northern. Con- tinuing on to the southeast, they are now the surface winds ; they are going from warmer to cooler latitudes ; they become as the * Keith Johnston. THE ATMOSPHERE. 91 wet sponge (§ 125), and are abruptly intercepted by the Andes of Patagonia, whose cold summit compresses them, and with its low dew-point squeezes the water out of them. Captain King found the astonishing fall of water here of nearly thirteen feet (one hundred and fifty-one inches) in forty-one days ; and Mr. Darwin reports that the sea water along this part of the South American coast is sometimes quite fresh, from the vast quantity of rain that falls. 142. We ought to expect a corresponding rainy region to be found to the north of Oregon ; but there the mountains are not so high, the obstruction to the southwest winds is not so abrupt, the highlands are farther from the coast, and the air which these winds carry in their circulation to that part of the coast, though it be as heavily charged with moisture as at Patagonia, has a greater extent of country over which to deposit its rain, and con- sequently the fall to the square inch will not be as great.* 143. In like manner, we should be enabled to say in what part of the world the most equable climates are to be found. They are to be found in the equatorial calms, where the northeast and southeast trades meet fresh from the ocean, and keep the temper- ature uniform under a canopy of perpetual clouds. 144. Amount of Evaporation. — The mean annual fall of rain on the entire surface of the earth is estimated at about five feet. 145. To evaporate water enough annually from the ocean to cover the earth, on the average, five feet deep with rain ; to trans- port it from one zone to another ; and to precipitate it in the right places, at suitable times, and in the proportions due, is one of the offices of the grand atmospherical machine. This water is evap- orated principally from the torrid zone. Supposing it all to come thence, we shall have, encircling the earth, a belt of ocean three thousand miles in breadth, from which this atmosphere evaporates a layer of water annually sixteen feet in depth. And to hoist up as high as the clouds, and lower down again all the water in a lake sixteen feet deep, and three thousand miles broad, and * I have since, through the kindness of A. Holbrook, Esq., United States Attorney for Oregon, received the Oregon Spectator of February 13, 1851, containing the Rev. G. H. Atkinson's Meteorological Journal, kept in Oregon City during the month of January, 1851. The quantity of rain and snow for that month is 13.63 inches, or about one third the average quantity that falls at Washington during the year. 92 THE PHYSICAL GEOGRAPHY OF THE SEA. twenty-four thousand long, is the yearly business of this invisible machinery. What a powerful engine is the atmosphere ! and how nicely adjusted must be all the cogs, and wheels, and springs, and pinions of this exquisite piece of machinery, that it never wears out nor breaks dow^n, nor fails to do its work at the right time and in the right way ! 146. In his annual report to the Society ( Transactions of the Bombay Geographical Society from May, 1849, to August, 1850, vol. ix.), Dr. Buist, the secretary, states, on the authority of Mr. Laidly, the evaporation at Calcutta to be " about fifteen feet an- nually ; that between the Cape and Calcutta it averages, in Octo- ber and November, nearly three fourths of an inch daily ; between 10° and 20° in the Bay of Bengal, it was found to exceed an inch daily. Supposing this fo be double the average throughout the year, we should," continues the doctor, " have eighteen feet of evaporation annually." 147. If, in considering the direct observations upon the daily rate of evaporation in India, it be remembered that the seasons there are divided into wet and dry ; that in the dry season, evap- oration in the Indian Ocean, because of its high temperature, and also of the high temperature and dry state of the wind, probably goes on as rapidly as it does any where else in the world ; if, more- over, we remember that the regular trade-wind regions proper are, for the most part, rainless regions at sea ; that evaporation is going on from them all the year round, we shall have reason to consider the estimate of sixteen feet annually for the trade-wind surface of the ocean not too high. 148. We see the light beginning to break upon us, for we now begin to perceive why it is that the proportions between the land and water were made as we find them in nature. If there had been more water and less land, we should have had more rain, and vice versa; and then climates would have been different from what they now are, and the inhabitants, animal or vegetable, would not have been as they are. And as they are, that wise Being who, in his kind providence, so watches over and regards the things of this world that he takes notice of the sparrow's fall, and numbers the very hairs of our head, doubtless designed them to be. The mind is delighted, and the imagination charmed, by con- THE ATMOSPHERE. 93 templating the physical arrangements of the earth from such points of view as this is which we now have before us ; from it the sea, and the air, and the land, appear each as a part of that grand machinery upon which the well-being of all the inhabitants of earth, sea, and air depends ; and w^hich, in the beautiful adapta- tions that we are pointing out, affords new^ and striking evidence that they all have their origin in one omniscient idea, just as the different parts of a watch may be considered to have been con- structed and arranged according to o?ie human design. 149. In some parts of the earth the precipitation is greater than the evaporation ; thus the amount of water borne down by every river that runs into the sea may be considered as the excess of the precipitation over the evaporation that takes place in the val- ley drained by that river. 150. This excess comes from the sea ; the w^inds convey it to the interior ; and the forces of gravity, dashing it along in mount- ain torrents or gentle streams, hurry it back to the sea again. 151. In other parts of the earth the evaporation and precipita- tion are exactly equal, as in those inland basins such as that in which the city of Mexico, Lake Titicaca, the Caspian Sea, &c., &;c., are situated, which basins have no ocean drainage. 152. If more rain fell in the "v-^lley of the Caspian Sea than is evaporated from it, that sea would finally get full and overflow the whole of that great basin. If less fell than is evaporated from it again, then that sea, in the course of time, would dry up, and plants and animals there would all perish for the want of w^ater. 153. In the sheets of water which we find distributed over that and ev»ery other inhabitable inland basin, w^e see reservoirs or evaporating surfaces just sufficient for the supply of that degree of moisture which is best adapted to the well-being of the plants and animals that people such basins. In other parts of the earth still, we find places, as the Desert of Sahara, in which neither evaporation nor precipitation takes place, and in which we find neither plant nor animal. 154. Adaptations. — In contemplating the system of terrestrial adaptations, these researches teach one to regard the mountain ranges and the great deserts of the earth as the astronomer does the counterpoises to his telescope — though they be mere dead weights, they are, nevertheless, necessary to make the balance 94 THE PHYSICAL GEOGRAPHY OF THE SEA. complete, the adjustments of this machine perfect. These coun- terpoises give ease to the motions, stabihty to the performance, and accuracy to the workings of the instrument. They are com- pensations. 155. Whenever I turn to contemplate the works of nature, I am struck with the admirable system of compensation, with the beauty and nicety with which every department is poised by the others ; things and principles are meted out in directions the most opposite, but in proportions so exactly balanced and nicely ad- justed, that results the most harmonious are produced. It is by the action of opposite and compensating forces that the earth is kept in its orbit, and the stars are held suspended in the azure vault of heaven ; and these forces are so exquisitely ad- justed, that, at the end of a thousand years, the earth, the sun, and moon, and every star in the firmament, is found to come to its proper place at the proper moment. Nay, philosophy teaches us, when the little snow-drop, which in our garden walks we see raising its beautiful head to remind us that spring is at hand, was created, that the whole mass of the earth, from pole to pole, and from circumference to centre, must have been taken into account and weighed, in order that the proper de- gree of strength might be given to the fibres of even this little plant. Botanists tell us that the constitution of this plant is such as to require that, at a certain stage of its growth, the stalk should bend, and the flower should bow its head, that an operation may take place which is necessary in order that the herb should produce seed after its kind ; and that, after this, its vegetable health re- quires that it should lift its head again and stand erect. Now, if the mass of the earth had been greater or less, the force of grav- ity would have been different ; in that case, the strength of fibre in the snow-drop, as it is, would have been too much or too little ; the plant could not bow or raise its head at the right time, fecund- ation could not take place, and its family would have become ex- tinct with the first individual that was planted, because its '* seed" would not have been " in itself," and therefore it could not repro- duce itself. Now, if we see such perfect adaptation, such exquisite adjust- ment, in the case of one of the smallest flowers of the field, how much more may we not expect "compensation" in the atmosphere THE ATMOSPHERE. 95 and the ocean, upon the right adjustment and due performance of which depends not only the hfe of that plant, but the well-being of every individual that is found in the entire vegetable and ani- mal kingdoms of the world ? When the east winds blow along the Atlantic coast for a little while, they bring us air saturated with moisture from the Gulf Stream, and we complain of the sultry, oppressive, heavy atmos- phere ; the invalid grows worse, and the well man feels ill, be- cause, when he takes this atmosphere into his lungs, it is already so charged with moisture that it can not take up and carry off that which encumbers his lungs, and which nature has caused his blood to bring and leave there, that respiration may take up and carry ofi. At other times the air is dry and hot ; he feels that it is con- veying off matter from the lungs too fast ; he realizes the idea that it is consuming him, and he calls the sensation parching. 156. Therefore, in considering the general laws which govern the physical agents of the universe, and regulate them in the due performance of their offices, I have felt myself constrained to set out with the assumption that, if the atmosphere had had a greater or less capacity for moisture, or if the proportion of land and wa- ter had been different — if the earth, air, and water had not been in exact counterpoise — the whole arrangement of the animal and vegetable kingdoms would have varied from their present state. But God chose to make those kingdoms what they are ; for this purpose it was necessary, in his judgment, to establish the pro- portions between the land and water, and the desert, just as they are, and to make the capacity of the air to circulate heat and moisture just what it is, and to have it to do all its w^ork in obe- dience to law and in subservience to order. If it were not so, why was power given to the winds to lift up and transport moist- ure, or the property given to the sea by which its waters may be- come first vapor, and then fruitful showers or gentle dews ? If the proportions and properties oT land, sea, and air were not ad- justed according to the reciprocal capacities of all to perform the functions required by each, why should we be told that he " meas- ured the waters in the hollow of his hand, and comprehended the dust in a measure, and weighed the mountains in scales, and the hills in a balance ?" Why did he span the heavens, but that he might mete out the atmosphere in exact proportion to all the rest, 96 THE PHYSICAL GEOGRAPHY OF THE SEA. and impart to it those properties and powers which it was neces- sary for it to have, in order that it might perform all those offices and duties for which he designed it ? Harmonious in their action, the air and sea are obedient to law and subject to order in all their movements ; when we consult them in the performance of their offices, they teach us lessons concerning the wonders of the deep, the mysteries of the sky, the greatness, and the wisdom, and goodness of the Creator. The investigations into the broad-spreading circle of phenomena con- nected with the winds of heaven and the waves of the sea are sec- ond to none for the good which they do and the lessons which they teach. The astronomer is said to see the hand of God in the sky ; but does not the right-minded mariner, who looks aloft as he pon- ders over these things, hear his voice in every wave of the sea that " claps its hands," and feel his presence in every breeze that blows ? RED FOGS AND SEA DUST. 97 CHAPTER IV. RED FOGS AND SEA DUST. Where found, ^ 157.— Tallies on the Wind, 158.— Where taken up, 160.— Hum- boldt's Description, 163. — Information derived from Sea Dust, 165. — Its Bearings upon the Theory of Atmospherical Circulation, 167. — Suggests Magnetic Agency, 170. 157. Seamen tell us of "red fogs" which they sometimes en- counter, especially in the vicinity of the Cape de Verd Islands. In other parts of the sea also they meet showers of dust. What these showers precipitate in the Mediterranean is called " sirocco dust," and in other parts "African dust," because the winds which accompany them are supposed to come from the Sirocco desert, or some other parched land of the continent of Africa. It is of a brick-red or cinnamon color, and it sometimes comes dow^n in such quantities as to cover the sails and rigging, though the vessel may be hundreds of miles from the land. J^ow the patient reader, who has had the heart to follow me in the preceding chapters around with " the wind in his circuits," will perceive that proof is yet wanting to establish it as a fact that tlie northeast and southeast trades, after meeting and rising up in the equatorial calms, do cross over and take the tracks rep- resented by C and G, Plate I. Statements, and reasons, and arguments enough have already been made and adduced to make it highly probable, according to human reasoning, that such is the case ; and though the theoret- ical deductions showing such to be the case be never so good, pos- itive proof that they are true can not fail to be received w^ith de- light and satisfaction. Were it possible to take a portion of this air, as it travels down the southeast trades, representing the general course of atmos- pherical circulation, and to put a tally on it by which we could always recognize it again, then we might hope actually to prove, by evidence the most positive, the channels through which the air of the trade-winds, after ascending at the equator, returns whence it came. G 98 THE PHYSICAL GEOGRAPHY OF THE SEA. But the air is invisible ; and it is not easily perceived hovv^ either marks or taUies may be put upon it, that it may be traced in its paths through the clouds. The skeptic, therefore, who finds it hard to believe that the gen- eral circulation is such as Plate I. represents it to be, might con- sider himself safe in his unbelief were he to declare his willingness to give it up the moment any one should put tallies on the wings of the wind, which would enable him to recognize that air again, and those tallies, when found at other parts of the earth's surface. As difficult as this seems to be, it has actually been done. Ehrenberg, with his microscope, has established, almost beyond a doubt, that the air which the southeast trade-winds bring to the equator does rise up there and pass over into the northern hemi- sphere. 158. The Sirocco, or African dust, which he has been observ- ing so closely, has turned out to be tallies put upon the wind in the other hemisphere ; and this beautiful instrument of his enables us to detect the marks on these little tallies as plainly as though those marks had been written upon labels of w^ood and tied to the wings of the wind. This dust, when subjected to microscopic examination, is foynd to consist of infusoria and organisms whose habitat is not Africa, but South America, and in the southeast trade-wind region of South America. Professor Ehrenberg has examined specimens of sea dust from the Cape de Verds and the regions thereabout, from Malta, Genoa, Lyons, and the Tyrol ; and he has found a similarity among them as striking as it would have been had these specimens been all taken from the same pile. South American forms he recognizes in all of them ; indeed, they are the prevail- ing forms in every specimen he has examined. It may, I think, be now regarded as an established fact, that there is a perpetual upper current of air from South America to North Africa ; and that the volume of air which flows to the north- ward in these upper currents is nearly equal to the volume which flows to the southward with the northeast trade-winds, there can be no doubt. The " rain dust" has been observed most frequently to fall in spring and autumn ; that is, the fall has occurred after the equi- noxes, but at intervals from them varying from thirty to sixty RED FOGS AND SEA DUST. 99 days, more or less. To account for this sort of periodical occur- rence of the falls of this dust, Ehrenberg thinks it "necessary to suppose a dust-cloud to he held constantly swimming in the atmos- phere by co7itinuous cuirents of air^ and lying in the region of the trade-winds^ hut suffering partial and pe^'iodical deviations^ It has already been shown (§ 128) that the rain or calm belt between the trades travels up and down the earth from north to south, making the rainy season wherever it goes. The reason of this will be explained in another place. 159. This dust is probably taken up in the dry, and not m the wet season ; instead, therefore, of its being " held in clouds suf- fering partial and periodical deviations," as Ehrenberg suggests, it more probably comes from one place about the vernal, and from another about the autumnal equinox ; for places w^hich have their rainy season at one equinox have their dry season at the other. 160. At the time of the vernal equinox, the valley of the Lower Oronoco is then in its dry season — every thing is parched up with the drought ; the pools are dry, and the marshes and plains arid wastes. All vegetation has ceased ; the great serpents and rep- tiles have buried themselves for hibernation ;* the hum of insect life is hushed, and the stillness of death reigns through the valley. Under these circumstances, the light breeze, raising dust from lakes that are dried up, and lifting motes from the brown savanr nas, wdll bear them aw^ay like clouds in the air. This is the period of the year when the surface of the earth in this region, strewed with impalpable and feather-light remains of animal and vegetable organisms, is swept over by whirlwinds, gales, and tornadoes of terrific force ; this is the period for the general atmospheric disturbances which have made characteristic the equinoxes. Do not these conditions appear sufficient to afford the " rain dust" for the spring showers ? 161. At the period of the autumnal equinox, another portion of the Amazonian basin is parched with drought, and liable to winds that fill the air with dust, and with the remains of dead animal and vegetable matter ; these impalpable organisms, w^hich each rainy season calls into being, to perish the succeeding season of drought, are perhaps distended and made even lighter by the gases of decomposition which has been going on in the period of drought, * Humboldt. 100 THE PHYSICAL GEOGRAPHY OF THE SEA. 162. May not, therefore, the whirlwinds which accompany the vernal equinox, and sweep over the lifeless plains of the Lower Oronoco, take up the " rain dust" which descends in the northern hemisphere in April and May ? and may it not be the atmospher- ical disturbances which accompany the autumnal equinox that take up the microscopic organisms from the Upper Oronoco and the great Amazonian basin for the showers of October ? 163. The Baron von Humboldt, in his Asjjects of Nature, thus contrasts the wet and the dry seasons there : " When, under the vertical rays of the never-clouded sun, the carbonized turfy covering falls into dust, the indurated soil cracks asunder as if from the shock of an earthquake. If at such times two opposing currents of air, whose conflict produces a rotary motion, come in contact with the soil, the plain assumes a strange and sino-ular aspect. Like conical-shaped clouds, the points of which descend to the earth, the sand rises through the rarefied air on the electrically-charged centre of the w^iirling current, resem- blino- the loud water-spout, dreaded by the experienced mariner. The lowering sky sheds a dim, almost straw-colored light on the desolate plain. The horizon draws suddenly nearer, the steppe seems to contract, and w^ith it the heart of the wanderer. The hot, dusty particles which fill the air increase its suffocating heat, and the east wind, blowing over the long-heated soil, brings with it no refreshment, but rather a still more burning glow. The pools which the yellow, fading branches of the fan-palm had protected from evaporation, now gradually disappear. As in the icy north the animals become torpid with cold, so here, under the influence of the parching drought, the crocodile and the boa become mo- tionless and fall asleep, deeply buried in the dry mud " The distant palm-bush, apparently raised by the influence of the contact of unequally heated and therefore unequally dense strata of air, hovers above the ground, from w^hich it is separated by a narrow intervening margin. Half concealed by the dense clouds of dust, restless with the pain of thirst and hunger, the horses and cattle roam around, the cattle lowing dismally, and the horses stretching out their long necks and snuffing the wind, if haply a moister current may betray the neighborhood of a not wholly dried-up pool "At length, after the long drought, the welcome season of the rain arrives ; and then how suddenly is the scene changed ! RED FOGS AND SEA DUST. 101 "Hardly has the surface of the earth received the refreshing moisture, when the previously barren steppe begins to exhale sweet odors, and to cloth^ itself with killingias, the many pani- cles of the paspulum, and a variety of grasses. The herbaceous mimosas, with renewed sensibility to the influence of light, unfold their drooping, slumbering leaves to greet the rising sun ; and the early song of birds and the opening blossoms of the water plants join to salute the morning," 164. The color of the " rain dust," when collected in parcels and sent to Ehrenberg, is "brick-red," or "yellow ochre ;" when seen by Humboldt in the air, it was less deeply shaded, and is described hy him as imparting a " straw color" to the atmosphere. In the search of spider lines for the diaphragm of my telescopes, I procured the finest and best threads from a cocoon of a mud-red color ; but the threads of this cocoon, as seen singly in the dia- phragm, were of a golden color ; there would seem, therefore, no difficulty in reconciling the difference between the colors of the rain dust, when viewed in little piles by the microscopist, and when seen attenuated and floating in the wind by the great trav- eler. It appears, therefore, that we here have placed in our hands a clew, which, attenuated and gossamer-like though it at first ap- pears, is nevertheless palpable and strong enough to guide us along the " circuits of the wind" till we enter "the chambers of the south." 165. The frequency of the fall of " rain dust" between the par- allels of 17° and 25° north, and in the vicinity of the Cape Verd Islands, is remarked upon with emphasis by the microscopist. It is worthy of remark, because, in connection with the investiga- tions at the Observatory, it is significant. 166. The latitudinal limits of the northern edge of the north- east trade-winds are variable. In the spring they are nearest to the equator, extending sometimes at this season not farther from the equator than the parallel of 15° north. 167. The breadth of the calms of Cancer is also variable ; so also are their limits. The extreme vibration of this zone is be- tween the parallels of 17° and 38° north, according to the season of the year. According to the hypothesis (^ 42) suggested by my researches, 102 THE PHYSICAL GEOGRAPHY OF THE SEA. this IS the zone in which the upper currents of atmosphere that ascended in the equatorial calms, and flowed off to the northward and eastward, are supposed to descend. This, therefore, is the zone in which the atmosphere that bears the " rain dust," or " Af- rican sand," descends to the surface ; and this, therefore, is the zone, it might be supposed, which would be the most liable to showers of this "dust." This is the zone in which the Cape Verd Islands are situated ; they are in the direction which theory gives to the upper current of air from the Oronoco and Amazon with its " rain dust," and they are in the region of the most frequent showers of " rain dust," all of which are in striking conformity with this theory as to the circulation of the atmosphere. It is true that, in the present state of our information, we can not tell why this " rain dust" should not be gradually precipitated from this upper current, and descend into the stratum of trade- winds, as it passes from the equator to higher northern latitudes ; neither can we tell why the vapor which the same winds carry along should not, in like manner, be precipitated on the way ; nor why we should have a thunder-storm, a gale of wind, or the dis- play of any other atmospherical phenomenon to-morrow, and not to-day : all that we can say is, that the conditions of to-day are not such as the phenomenon requires for its own development. 168. Therefore, though we can not tell w^hy the sea dust should not fall aWays in the same place, we may nevertl^eless suppose that it is not always in the atmosphere, for the storms that take it up occur only occasionally, and that when up, and in passing the same parallels, it does not always meet with the conditions — elec- trical and others — favorable to its descent, and that these condi- tions might occur now in this place, now in that. But that the fall does occur always in the same atmospherical vein or general direction, my investigations would suggest, and Ehrenberg's re- searches prove. 169. Judging by the fall of sea or rain dust, we may suppose that the currents in the upper regions of the atmosphere are re- markable for their general regularity, as well as for their general direction and sharpness of limits, so to speak. We may imagine that certain electrical conditions are necessary to a shower of " sea dust" as well as to a thunder-storm ; and that the interval between the time of the equinoctial disturbances RED FOGS AND SEA DUST. 103 in the atmosphere and the occurrence of these showers, though it does not enable us to determine the true rate of motion in the gen- eral system of atmospherical circulation, yet it assures us that it is not less on the average than a certain rate. I do not offer these remarks as an explanation with which we ought to rest satisfied, provided other proof can be obtained ; I rather offer them in the true philosophical spirit of the distin- guished microscopist himself, simply as affording, as far as they are entitled to be called an explanation, that explanation which is most in conformity with the facts before us, and which is sug- gested by the results of a novel and beautiful system of philosoph- ical research. 170. Thus, though we have talhed the air, and put labels on the wind, to " tell whence it cometh and whither it goeth," yet there evidently is an agent concerned in the circulation of the at- mosphere whose functions are manifest, but whose presence has never yet been clearly recognized. 171. When the air which the northeast trade-winds bring dow^n meets in the equatorial calms that which the southeast trade- winds convey, and the two rise up together, what is it that makes them cross ? where is the power that guides that from the north over to the south, and that from the south up to the north ? The conjectures in the next chapter as to " the relation between magnetism and the circulation of the atmosphere" may perhaps throw some light upon the answer to this question. 1^4 THE PHYSICAL GEOGRAPHY OF THE SEA. CHAPTER V. ON THE PROBABLE RELATION BETWEEN MAGNETISM AND THE CIRCULATION OF THE ATMOSPHERE. Reasons for supposing that the Air of the Northeast and of the Southeast Trades cross at the calm Belts, (} 174. — What Observations have shown, 184. — Physical Agencies not left to Chance, 188. — Conjectures, 192. — Reasons for supposing that there is a crossing of Trade-wind Air at the Equator, 194. — Why the extra-trop- ical Reo-ions of the Northern Hemisphere are likened to the Condenser of a Steam- boiler in the South, 199.— Illustration, 200.— A Coincidence, 202.— Proof, 203.— Nature affords nothing in contradiction to the supposed System of Circulation, 204. Objections answered, 205. — Why the Air brought to the Equator by the Northeast Trades will not readily mix with that brought by the Southeast, 207. — Additional Evidence, 209. — Rains for the Mississippi River are not supplied from the Atlan- tic, 210. — Traced to the South Pacific, 213. — Anticipation of Light from the Polar Regions, 216. — Received from the Microscope of Ehrenberg, 217, and the Exper- iments of Faraday, 219. — More Light, 221. — Why there should be a calm Place near each Pole, 222. — Why the Whirlwinds of the North should revolve against the Sun, 223. — Why certain Countries should have scanty Rains, 228. — Magnetism the Agent that causes the Atmospherical Crossings at the calm Places, 231. 172. Oxygen, philosophers say, comprises one fifth part of the atmosphere, and Faraday has discovered that it is magnetic. This discovery presents itself to the mind as a great physical fact, which is perhaps to serve as the keystone for some of the grand and beautiful structures which philosophy is building up for monuments to the genius of the age. 173. Certain facts and deductions elicited in the course of these investigations had directed my mind to the workings in the at- mosphere of some agent, as to whose character and nature I was io-norant. Heat, and the diurnal rotation of the earth on its axis, were not, it appeared to me, sufficient to account for all the cur- rents of both sea and air which investigation w^as bringing to light. 174. For instance, there was reason to suppose that there is a crossino* of winds at the three calm belts ; that is, that the south- east trade-winds, wdien they arrive at the belt of equatorial calms and ascend, cross over and continue their course as an upper cur- rent to the calms of Cancer, while the air that the northeast trade- MAGNETISM AND CIRCULATION OF THE ATMOSPHERE. 105 winds discharge into the equatorial calm belt continues to go south, as an upper current bound for the calms of Capricorn. But what should cause this wind to cross over ? Why should there not be a general mingling in this calm belt of the air brought by the two trade-w^inds, and why should not that which the southeast winds convey there be left, after its ascent, to flow off either to the north or to the south, as chance directs ? 175. In the first place, it was at variance with my belief in the grand design ; for I could not bring myself to believe that the operations of such an important machine as the atmosphere should be left to chance, even for a moment. Yet I knew of no agent which should guide the wind across these calm belts, and lead it out always on the side opposite to that on which it entered ; nev- ertheless, certain circumstances seemed to indicate that such a crossing does take place. 176. Evidence in favor of it seemed to be afforded by this cir- cumstance, viz., our researches enabled us to trace from the belt of calms, near the tropic of Cancer, which extends entirely across the seas, an efflux of air both to the north and to the south ; from the south side of this belt the air flows in a never-ceasing breeze, called the northeast trade-winds, toward the equator. (Plate I.) On the north side of it, the prevailing winds come from it also, but they go toward the northeast. They are the well-known southw-esterly winds which prevail along the route from this country to England, in the ratio of two to one. But why should we suppose a crossing to take place here ? 177. We suppose so, because these last-named winds are going from a warmer to a colder climate ; and therefore it may be in- ferred that nature exacts from them what we know she exacts from the air under similar circumstances, but on a smaller scale, before our eyes, viz., more precipitation than evaporation. 178. But where, it may be asked, does the vapor which these W'inds carry along, for the replenishing of the whole extra-tropical regions of the north, come from ? They did not get it as they came along in the upper regions, a counter-current to the north- east trades. They did not get it from the surface of the sea in the calm belt of Cancer, for they did not tarry long enough there to become saturated with moisture. Thus circumstances again pointed to the southeast trade-wind regions as the place of supply. 106 THE PHYSICAL GEOGRAPHY OF THE SEA. 179. Moreover, these researches afforded grounds for the sup- position that the air of which the northeast trade-winds are com- posed, and which comes out of the same zone of calms as do these southwesterly winds, so far from being saturated with vapor at its exodus, is dry ; for near their polar edge, the northeast trade- winds are, for the most part, dry winds. Reason suggests, and philosophy teaches, that, going from a lower to a higher tempera- ture, the evaporating powers of these winds are increased ; that they have to travel, in their oblique course toward the equator, a distance of nearly three thousand miles ; that, as a general rule, they evaporate all the time, and all the way, and precipitate little or none on their route ; investigations have proved that they are not saturated with moisture until they have arrived fully up to the regions of equatorial calms, a zone of constant precipitation. This calm zone of Cancer borders also, it was perceived, upon a rainy region. 180. Where does the vapor which here, on the northern edge of this zone of Cancer, is condensed into rains, come from? — and where, also — was the oft-repeated question — does the vapor which is condensed into rains for the extra-tropical regions of the north generally come from ? By what agency is it convey- ed across this calm belt from its birth-place between the trop- ics ? 181. I know of no law of nature or rule of philosophy which w^ould forbid the supposition that the air which has been brought along as the northeast trade-winds to the equatorial calms does, after ascending there, return by the counter and upper currents to the calm zone of Cancer, here descend and reappear on the surface as the northeast trade-winds again. I know of no agent in nature which would jjrevent it from taking this circuit, nor do I know of any which w^ould compel it to take this circuit ; but while I know of no agent in nature that would prevent it from taking this circuit, I know, on the other hand, of circumstances which rendered it probable that such, in general, is not the course of atmospherical circulation — that it does not take this circuit. I speak of the rule, not of the exceptions ; these are infinite, and, for the most part, are caused by the land. 182. And I moreover knew of facts which go to strengthen the supposition that the winds w^hich have come in the upper MAGNETISM AND CIRCULATION OF THE ATMOSPHERE. 107 regions of the atmosphere from the equator, do not, after arrivmg at the calms of Cancer, and descending, return to the equator on the surface, but that they continue on the surface toward the pole. But why should they ? What agent in nature is there that can compel these, rather than any other winds, to take such a circuit 1 183. The following are some of the facts and circumstances which give strength to the supposition that these winds do contin- ue from the calm belt of Cancer toward the pole as the prevailino- southwesterly winds of the extra-tropical north : We have seen (Plate I.) that, on the north side of this calm zone of Cancer, the prevailing winds on the surface are from this zone toward the pole, and that these winds return as A through the upper regions from the pole ; that, arriving at the calms of Cancer, this upper current A meets another upper current G from the equator, where they neutralize each other, produce a calm, descend, and come out as surface winds, viz., A as B, or the trade- winds ; and G as H, or the variable winds. 184. Now observations have shown that the winds represented by H are rain winds ; those represented by B, dry winds ; and it is evident that A could not bring any vapors to these calms to. serve for H to make rains of ; for the winds represented by A have already performed the circuit of surface wdnds as far as the pole, during which journey they parted with all their moisture, and, re- turning through the upper regions of the air to the calm belt of Cancer, they arrived there as dry winds. The winds represented by B are dry winds ; therefore it was supposed that these are but a continuation of the winds A. 185. On the other hand, if the winds A, after descending, do turn about and become the surface winds H, they would first have to remain a long time in contact with the sea, in order to be sup- phed with vapor enough to feed the great rivers, and supply the rains for the whole earth between us and the north pole. In this case, we should have an evaporating region on the north as well as on the south side of this zone of Cancer ; but investi- gation shows no such region ; I speak exclusively of the ocean. 186. Hence it was inferred that A and G do come out on the surface as represented by Plate I. But what is the agent that should lead them out by such opposite paths ? 187. According to this mode of reasoning, the vapors which 108 THE PHYSICAL GEOGRAPHY OF THE SEA. supply the rains for H would be taken up in the southeast trade- wind region by F, and conveyed thence by G, and delivered to H. And if this mode of reasoning be admitted as plausible — if it be true that G have the vapor which, by condensation, is to water with showers the extra-tropical regions of the northern hemisphere, Nature, we may be sure, has provided a guide for conducting G across this belt of calms, and for sending it on in the right way. Here it was, then, at this crossing of the winds, that I thought I first saw the foot-prints of an agent whose character I could not comprehend. Could it be the magnetism that resides in the oxy- gen of the air ? 188. Heat and cold, the early and the latter rain, clouds and sunshine, are not, we may rely upon it, distributed over the earth by chance ; they are distributed in obedience to laws that are as certain and as sure in their operations as the seasons in their rounds. If it depended upon chance whether the dry air should come out on this side or on that of this calm belt, or whether the moist air should return or not whence it came — if such were the case in nature, w^e perceive that, so far from any regularity as .to seasons, we should have, or might have, years of droughts the most excessive, and then again seasons of rains the most destruct- ive ; but, so far from this, we find for each place a mean annual proportion of both, and that so regulated withal, that year after year the quantity is preserved with remarkable regularity. 189. Having thus shown that there is no reason for supposing that the upper currents of air, when they meet over the calms of Cancer and Capricorn, are turned back to the equator, but hav- ing shown that there is reason for supposing that the air of each current, after descending, continues on in the direction toward which it was traveling before it descended, we may go farther, and, by a similar train of circumstantial evidence, afforded by these researches and other sources of information, show that the air, kept in motion on the surface by the two systems of trade-winds, when it arrives at the belt of equatorial calms, and ascends, con- tinues on thence, each current toward the pole which it was ap- proaching while on the surface. 190. In a problem like this, demonstration in the positive way is difficult, if not impossible. We must rely for our proof upon philosophical deduction, guided by the lights of reason ; and in all MAGNETISM AND CIRCULATION OF THE ATMOSPHERE. 109 cases in which positive proof can not be adduced, it is permitted to bring in circumstantial evidence. I am endeavoring, let it be borne in mind, to show cause for the conjecture that the magnetism of the oxygen of the atmosphere is concerned in conducting the air which has blown as the southeast trade-winds, and after it has arrived at the belt of equatorial calms and risen up, over into the northern hemisphere, and so on through its channels of circulation, as traced on Plate I. But, in order to show reasonable grounds for this conjecture, I want to establish, by circumstantial evidence and such indirect proof as my investigations afford, that such is the course of the " wind in his circuits," and that the winds represented by F, Plate I., do become those represented by G, H, A, B, and C success- ively. 191. In the first place, F represents the southeast trade-winds — i. e., all the winds of the southern hemisphere as they approach the equator ; and is there any reason for supposing that the atmos- phere does not pass freely from one hemisphere to another ? On the contrary, many reasons present themselves for supposing that it does. 192. If it did not, the proportion of land and water, and conse- quently of plants and warm-blooded animals, being so different in the two hemispheres, we might imagine that the constituents of the atmosphere in them w^ould, in the course of ages, probably become different, and that consequently, in such a case, man could not safely pass from one hemisphere to the other. 193. Consider the manifold beauties in the whole system of terrestrial adaptations ; remember what a perfect and wonderful machine (§ 118) is this atmosphere ; how exquisitely balanced and beautifully compensated it is in all its parts. We know that it is perfect ; that in the performance of its various offices it is never left to the guidance of chance — no, not for a moment. Therefore I was led to ask myself why the air of the southeast trades, when arrived at the zone of equatorial calms, should not, after ascend- ing, rather return to the south than go on to the north. Where and what is the agency by which its course is decided ? 194. Here I found circumstances which again induced me to suppose it probable that it neither turned back to the south nor mingled with the air which came from the regions of the north- 110 THE PHYSICAL GEOGRAPHY OF THE SEA. east trades, ascended, and then flowed indiscriminately to the north or the south. But I saw reasons for supposing that what came to the equato- rial calms as the southeast trade-winds continued to the north as an upper current, and that what had come to the same zone as northeast trade-winds ascended and continued over into the south- ern hemisphere as an upper current, bound for the calm zone of Capricorn. And these are the principal reasons and conjectures upon which these suppositions were based : 195. At the seasons of the year when the sun is evaporating most rapidly in the southern hemisphere, the most rain is falling in the northern. Therefore it is fair to suppose that much of the vapor which is taken up on that side of the equator is precipitated on this. The evaporating surface in the southern hemisphere is greater, much greater, than it is in the northern ; still, all the great rivers are in the northern hemisphere, the Amazon being regarded as common to both ; and this fact, as far as it goes, tends to corrobo- rate the suggestion as to the crossing of the trade-winds at the equatorial calms. 196. Independently of other sources of information, my investi- gations also taught me to believe that the mean temperature of the tropical regions was higher in the northern than in the southern hemisphere, for they show that the difference is such as to draw the equatorial edge of the southeast trades far over on this side of the equator, and to give them force enough to keep the northeast trade-winds out of the southern hemisphere almost entirely. 197. Consequently, as before stated, the southeast trade-winds being in contact with a more extended evaporating surface, and continuing in contact with it for a longer time or through a greater distance, they would probably arrive at the trade-wind place of meeting more heavily laden with moisture than the others. 198. Taking the laws and rates of evaporation into considera- tion, I could find no part of the ocean of the northern hemisphere from which the sources of the Mississippi, the St. Lawrence, and the other great rivers of our hemisphere could be supplied. Hence, by this process of reasoning, I was induced to regard the extra-tropical regions of the northern hemisphere as standing MAGNETISM AND CIRCULATION OF THE ATMOSPHERE. 1 1 1 in the relation of a condenser to a grand steam machine (^ 120), the boiler of which is in the region of the southeast trade-winds, and to consider the trade-winds of this hemisphere as performing the like office for the regions beyond Capricorn. 199. The calm zone of Capricorn is the duphcate of that of Cancer, and the winds flow from it as they do from that, both north and south ; but with this difference : that on the polar side of the Capricorn belt they prevail from the northwest instead of the southwest, and on the equatorial side from the southeast in- stead of the northeast. Now if it be true that the vapor of the northeast trade-winds is condensed in the extra-tropical regions of the southern hemi- sphere, the following path, on account of the effect of diurnal ro- tation of the earth upon the course of the winds, would represent the mean circuit of a portion of the atmosphere moving according to the general system of its circulation over the Pacific Ocean, viz., coming down from the north as an upper current, and ap- pearing on the surface of the earth in about longitude 1 20° west, and near the tropic of Cancer, it would here commence to blow the northeast trade-winds of that region. 200o To make this clear, see Plate VII., on which I have mark- ed the course of such vapor-bearing winds ; A being a breadth or siuath of winds in the northeast trades ; B, the same wind as the upper and counter-current to the southeast trades ; and C, the same w^ind after it has descended in the calm belt of Capricorn, and come out on the polar side thereof, as the rain winds and pre- vailing northw^est winds of the extra-tropical regions of the south- ern hemisphere. This, as the northeast trades, is the evaporating wind. As the northeast trade-wind, it sweeps over a great waste of waters lying between the tropic of Cancer and the equator. 201. Meeting no land in this long oblique track over the tepid waters of a tropical sea, it would, if such were its route, arrive somewhere about the meridian of 140° or ISO^.Avest, at the belt of equatorial calms, which always divides the northeast from the southeast trade-winds. Here, depositing a portion of its vapor as it ascends, it would, with the residuum, take, on account of diurnal rotation, a course in the upper region of the atmosphere to the southeast, as far as the calms of Capricorn. Here it descends 112 THE PHYSICAL GEOGRAPHY OF THE SEA. and continues on toward the coast of South America, in the same direction, appearing now as the prevaihng northwest wind of the extra-tropical regions of the southern hemisphere. Travehng on the surface from warmer to colder regions, it must, in this part of its circuit, precipitate more than it evaporates. 202. Now it is a coincidence, at least, that this is the route by which, on account of the land in the northern hemisphere, the northeast trade-winds have the fairest sweep over that ocean. This is the route by which they are longest in contact with an evaporating surface ; the route by w^hich all circumstances are most favorable to complete saturation ; and this is the route by which they can pass over into the southern hemisphere most heavily laden with vapors for the extra-tropical regions of that half of the globe ; and this is the supposed route which the north- east trade-winds of the Pacific take to reach the equator and to pass from it. 203. Accordingly, if this process of reasoning be good, that portion of South America between the calms of Capricorn and Cape Horn, upon the mountain ranges of which this part of the atmosphere, whose circuit I am considering as a type, first im- pinges, ought to be a region of copious precipitation. Now let us turn to the works on Physical Geography, and see what we can find upon this subject. In Berghaus and Johnston — department Hyetography — it is stated, on the authority of Captain King, R. N., that upw^ard of twelve feet (one hundred and fifty-three inches) of rain fell in forty-one days on that part of the coast of Patagonia which lies within the sweep of the winds just described. So much rain falls there, navigators say, that they sometimes find the water on the top of the sea fresh and sweet. After impinging upon the cold hill-tops of the Patagonian coast, and passing the snow^-clad summits of the Andes, this same wind tumbles down upon the eastern slopes of the range as a dry wind ; as such, it traverses the almost rainless and barren regions of Cis- Andean Patagonia and South Buenos Ayres. 204. These conditions, the direction of the prevailing winds, and the amount of precipitation, may be regarded as evidence af- forded by nature, if not in favor of, certainly not against, the con- jecture that such may have been the voyage of this vapor through MAGNETISM AND CIRCULATION OF THE ATMOSPHERE. 113 the air. At any rate, here is proof of the immense quantity of vapor which these winds of the extra-tropical regions carry along with them toward the poles ; and I can imagine no other place than that suggested, whence these winds could get so much vapor. I am not unaware of the theory, or of the weight attached to it, which requires precipitation to take place in the upper regions of the atmosphere on account of the cold there, irrespective of proximity to mountain tops and snow-clad hills. But the facts and conditions developed by this system of re- search upon the high seas are in many respects irreconcilable with that theory. With a new system of facts before me, I have, independent of all preconceived notions and opinions, set about to seek among them for explanations and reconciliations. These may not in all cases be satisfactory to every one ; in- deed, notwithstanding the amount of circumstantial evidence that has already been brought to show that the air which the north- east and the southeast trade-winds discharge into the belts of equatorial calms, does, in ascending, cross — that from the southern passing over into the northern, and that from the northern pass- ing over into the southern hemisphere (see F and G, B and C, Plate I.) — yet some have imphed doubt by asking the question, *' How are two such currents of air to pass each other ?" And, for the want of light upon this point, the correctness of reasoning, facts, inferences, and deductions have been questioned. 205. In the first place, it may be said in reply, the belt of equa- torial calms is often several hundred miles across, seldom less than sixty ; whereas the depth of the volume of air that the trade-wiads pour into it is only about three miles, for that is supposed to be about the height to which the trade-winds extend. Thus we have the air passing into these calms by an opening on the north side for the northeast trades, and another on the south for the southeast trades, having a cross section of three miles ver- tically to each opening. It then escapes by an opening upward, the cross section of which is sixty or one hundred, or even three hundred miles. A very slow motion upward there will carry off the air in that direction as fast as the two systems of trade-winds, with their motion of twenty miles an hour, can pour it in ; and that curds or columns of air can readily cross each other and pass in different directions without interfering the one with the other, H 114 THE PHYSICAL GEDGRAPHY OF THE SEA. or at least to that degree which obstructs or prevents, we all know. 206. For example, open the window of a warm room in winter, and immediately there are two currents of air ready at once to set through it ; viz., a current of warm air flowing out at the top, and one of cold coming in below. But the brown fields in summer afford evidence on a larger scale, and in a still more striking manner, of the fact that, in na- ture, columns, or. streamlets, or curdles of air do readily move amonof each other without obstruction. That tremulous motion which we so often observe above stubble-fields, barren wastes, or above any heated surface, is caused by the ascent and descent, at one and the same time, of columns of air at different tempera- tures, the cool coming down, the warm going up. They do not readily commingle, for the astronomer, long after nightfall, when he turns his telescope upon the heavens, perceives and laments the unsteadiness they produce in the sky. 207. If the air brought down by the northeast trade-w4nds differ in temperature (and why not?) from that brought by the southeast trades, Ave have the authority of nature for saying that the two currents would not readily commingle. Proof is daily afforded that they would not, and there is reason to believe that the air of each current, in streaks, or patches, or curdles, does thread its way through the air of the other without difficulty. Now, if the air of these two currents differs as to magnetism, might not that be an additional reason for their not mixing, and for their taking the di- rection of opposite poles after ascending? 208. Therefore we may assume it as a postulate which nature concedes, that there is no difficulty as to the two currents of air, which come into those calm belts from different directions, cross- ing over, each i^i its proper direction, without mingling. 209. Thus, having shown that there is nothing to prevent the crossing of the air in these calm belts, I return to the process of reasoning by induction, and offer additional circumstantial evi- dence to prove that such a crossing does take place. Let us therefore catechise, on this head, the waters which the Mississippi pours into the sea, inquiring of them as to the channels among the clouds through which they were brought from the ocean to the fountains of that mighty river. MAGNETISM AND CIRCULATION OF THE ATMOSPHERE 115 It rains more in the valley drained by that river than is evapo- rated from it again. The difference for a year is the volume of water annually discharged by that river into the sea (^S 117). At the time and place that the vapor which supplies this im- mense volume of water was hfted by the atmosphere up from the sea, the thermometer, we may infer, stood higher than it did at the time and place where this vapor w^as condensed and fell down as rain in the Mississippi Valley. 210. I looked to the south for the springs in the Atlantic which supply the fountains of this river with rain. But I could not find spare evaporating surface enough for it, in the first place ; and if the vapor, I could not find the winds which would convey it to the right place. The prevailing winds in the Caribbean Sea and southern parts of the Gulf of Mexico are the northeast trade-winds. They have their offices to perform in the river basins of tropical America, and the rains which they may discharge into the Mississippi Valley now and then are exceptions, not the rule. 211. The winds from the north can not bring vapors from the great lakes to make rains for the Mississippi, for two reasons : 1st. The basin of the great lakes receives from the atmosphere more water in the shape of rain than they give back in the shape of vapor. The St. Lawrence River carries off the excess. 2d. The mean climate of the lake country is colder than that of the Mississippi Valley, and therefore, as a general rule, the tempera- ture of the Mississippi Valley is unfavorable for condensing vapor from that quarter. 212. It can not come from the Atlantic, because the greater part of the Mississippi Valley is to the windward of the Atlantic. The winds that blow across this ocean go to Europe with their vapors ; and in the Pacific, from the parallels of California down to the equator, the direction of the wind at the surface is from, not toward the basin of the Mississippi. Therefore it seemed to be established with some degree of probability, or, if that expres- sion be too strong, with •something like apparent plausibility, that the rain winds of the Mississippi Valley do not, as a general rule, get their vapors from the North Atlantic Ocean, nor from the Gulf of Mexico, nor from the great lakes, nor from that part of the Pa- cific Ocean over which the northeast trade-winds prevail. 115 THE PHYSICAL GEOGRAPHY OF THE SEA. The same process of reasoning which conducted us (^ 203) into the trade-wind region of the northern hemisphere for the sources of the Patagonian rains, now invites us into the trade-wind regions of the South Pacific Ocean to look for the vapor springs of the Mississippi. 213. If the rain winds of the Mississippi Valley come from the east, then we should have reason to suppose that their vapors w^ere taken up from the Atlantic Ocean and Gulf Stream ; if the rain winds come from the south, then the vapor springs might, perhaps, be in the Gulf of Mexico ; if the rain winds come from the north, then the great lakes might be supposed to feed the air with moisture for the fountains of that river ; but if the rains come from the west, where, short of the great Pacific Ocean, should w^e look for the place of evaporation ? Wondering where, I addressed a circular letter to farmers and planters of the Mississippi Valley, requesting to be informed as to the direction of their rain winds. 214. I received replies from Virginia, Mississippi, Tennessee, Missouri, Indiana, and Ohio ; and they all, with the exception of one person in Missouri, said, " The southwest winds bring us our rains." 215. These winds certainly can not get their vapors from the Rocky Mountains, nor from the Salt Lake, for they rain quite as much upon that basin as they evaporate from it again ; if they did not, they would, in the process of time, have evaporated all the water there, and the lake w^ould now be dry. These winds, that feed the sources of the Mississippi with rain, like those between the same parallels upon the ocean, are going from a higher to a lowxr temperature ; and these winds in the Mississippi Valley, not being in contact with the ocean, or with any other evaporating surface to supply them with moisture, must bring with them from some sea or another that which they deposit. Therefore, though it may be urged, inasmuch as the winds v/hich brought the rains to Patagonia came direct from the sea, that they therefore took up their vapors as they came along, yet it can not be so urged in this case ; and if these winds could pass with their vapors from the equatorial calms through the upper regions of the atmosphere to the calms of Cancer, and then as surface winds into the Mississippi Valley, it was not perceived MAGNETISM AND CIRCULATION OF THE ATMOSPHERE. 117 why the Patagonian rain winds should not bring their moisture by a similar route. These last are from the northwest, from warmer to colder latitudes ; therefore, being once charged with vapors, they must precipitate as they go, and take up less moisture than they deposit. 216. This was circumstantial evidence. No fact had yet been elicited to prove that the course of atmospherical circulation sug- gested by my investigations is the actual course in nature. It is a case in which I could yet hope for nothing more direct than such conclusions as might legitimately flow from circumstances. My friend Lieutenant De Haven v/as about to sail in command of the American Arctic Expedition in search of Sir John Frank- lin. Infusoria are sometimes found in sea-dust, rain-drops, hail- stones, or snow-flakes ; and if by any chance it should so turn out that the locus of any of the microscopic infusoria which might be found descending with the precipitation of the Arctic regions should be identified as belonging to the regions of the southeast trade- winds, we should thus add somewhat to the strength of the many clews by w^hich we have been seeking to enter into the chambers of the wind, and to '^ tell whence it cometh and w^iither it goeth." It is not for man to follow the '' wind in his circuits ;" and all that could be hoped was, after a close examination of all the facts and circumstances w^hich these researches upon the sea have placed within my reach, to point out that course which seemed to be most in accordance with them ; and then, having estabhshed a probability, or even a possibility, as to the true course of the at- mospheric circulation, to make it known, and leave it for future investigations to confirm or set aside- 217. It was at this stage of the matter that my friend Baron von Gerolt, the Prussian minister, had the kindness to place in my hand Ehrenberg's work, " Passat-Staub und Blut-Regen." Here I found the clew^ which I hoped, almost against hope, De Haven would place in my hands (§ 216). That celebrated microscopist reports that he found South Amer- ican infusoria in the blood-rains and sea-dust of the Cape Verd Islands — Lyons, Genoa, and other places (^ 158). Thus confirming, as far as such evidence can, the indications of our observations, and increasing the probability that the general course of atmospherical circulation is in conformity with the sug- 118 THE PHYSICAL GEOGRAPHY OF THE SEA. gestions of the facts gathered from the sea as I had interpreted them, viz., that the trade-winds of the southern hemisphere, after arriving at the belt of equatorial calms, ascend and continue in their course toward the calms of Cancer as an upper current from the southwest, and that, after passing this zone of calms, they are felt on the surface as the prevailing southwest winds of the extra- tropical parts of our hemisphere ; and that, for the most part, they bring their moisture v^'ith them from the trade-wind regions of the opposite hemisphere. 218. I have marked on Plate VII. the supposed track of the " Passat-Staub," showing where it was taken up in South Amer- ica, as at P, P, and where it was found, as at S, S ; the part of the line in dots denoting where it was in the upper current, and the unbroken line wdiere it was wafted by a surface current ; also on the same plate is designated the part of the South Pacific in which the vapor-springs for the Mississippi rains are supposed to be. The hands (|^^) point out the direction of the wind. Where the shading is light, the vapor is supposed to be carried by an up- per current. Such is the character of the circumstantial evidence which in- duced me to suspect that some agent, whose office in the grand system of atmospherical circulation is neither understood nor rec- ognized, was at work in these calm belts. 219. Dr. Faraday has shown that, as the temperature of oxygen IS raised, its paramagnetic force diminishes, being resumed as the temperature falls again. " These properties it carries into the atmosphere, so that the latter is, in reality, a magnetic medium, ever varying, from the influence of natural circumstances, in its magnetic power. If a mass of air be cooled, it becomes more paramagnetic ; if heated, it becomes less paramagnetic (or diamagnetic), as compared with the air in a mean or normal condition."* 220. Now, is it not more than probable that here we have, in the magnetism of the atmosphere, that agent which guides the air from the south (^ 217) through the calms of Capricorn, of the equator, and of Cancer, and conducts it into the north ; that agent which causes the atmosphere, with its vapors and infusoria, to flow * Philosophical Magazine and Journal of Science, 4th series, No. 1, January, 1851^ page 73 MAGNETISM AND CIRCULATION OF THE ATMOSPHERE, ng above the clouds from one hemisphere into the other, and whose footprints had become so palpable ? 221. Taking up the theory of Ampere with regard to the mag- netic polarity induced by an electrical current, according as it passes through wire coiled with or coiled against the sun, and ex- panding it in conformity w^ith the discoveries of Faraday and the experiments of a Prussian philosopher,* we perceive a series of facts and principles which, being applied to the circulation of the atmosphere, make the conclusions to which I have been led touch- ing these crossings in the air, and the continual "whirl" of the wind in the Arctic regions against, and in the Antarctic loith the hands of a ivatch, very significant. In this view of the subject, we see light springing up from va- rious sources, by which the shadows of approaching confirma- tion are clearly perceived. One such source of light comes from the observations of my excellent friend Quetelet, at Brussels, which show that the great electrical reservoir of the atmosphere is in the upper regions of the air. It is filled with positive elec- tricity, which increases as the temperature diminishes. 222. May we not look, therefore, to find about the north and south magnetic poles these atmospherical nodes or calm regions w^hich I have theoretically pointed out there ? In other words, are not the magnetic poles of the earth in those atmospherical nodes, the two standing in the relation of cause and effect, the one to the other ? This question w^as first asked several years ago,t and I was then moved to propound it by the inductions of theoretical rea- soning. Observers, perhaps, will never reach those inhospitable regions with their instruments to shed light upon this subject ; but Parry and Barrow have found reasons to believe in the existence of a perpetual calm about the north pole. Professor J. H. Coffin, in an elaborate and valuable paperj on the " Winds of the North- ern Hemisphere," arrives at a like conclusion. In that paper he has discussed the records at no less than five hundred and sev- enty-nine meteorological stations, embracing a totality of observa- * Professor Von Feilitzsch, of the University of Greifswald. Philosophical Magr azine, January, 1851. t Maury's Sailing Directions. t Smithsonian Contributions to Knowledge, vol. vi., 1854. 120 THE PHYSICAL GEOGRAPHY OF THE SEA. tions for two thousand eight hundred and twenty -nine years. He places his "meteorological pole" — pole of the winds — near lati- tude 84° north, longitude 105° w^est. The pole of maximum cold, by another school of philosophers. Sir David Brewster among them, has been placed in latitude 80° north, longitude 100° west ; and the magnetic pole, by still another school,* in latitude 73° 35^ north, longitude 95° 39^ west. 223. Neither of these poles is a point susceptible of definite and exact position. The polar calms are no more a point than the equatorial calms are a line ; and, considering that these poles are areas, not points, is it not a little curious that philosophers in different parts of the world, using different data, and following up investigation each through a separate and independent system of research, and each aiming at the solution of different problems, should nevertheless agree in assigning very nearly the same posi- tion to them all ? Are these three poles grouped together by chance, or by some physical cause ? By the latter, undoubtedly. Here, then, we have another of those gossamer-like clews, that sometimes seem almost palpable enough for the mind, in its hap- piest mood, to lay hold of, and follow up to the very portals of knowledge, where pausing to knock, we may boldly demand that the chambers of hidden things be thrown wide open, that we may see and understand the mysteries of the winds, the frost, and the trembling needle. 224. In the polar calms there is (§ 113) an ascent of air ; if an ascent, a diminution of pressure and an expansion ; and if expan- sion, a decrease of temperature. Therefore w-e have palpably enough a connecting link here between the polar calms and the polar place of maximum cold. Thus we establish a relation be- tween the pole of the winds and the pole of cold, with evident in- dications that there is also a physical connection betw^een these and the magnetic pole. Here the outcroppings of the relation betw^een magnetism and the circulation of the atmosphere again appear. May we not find in such evidence as this, threads, attenuated and almost air drawn though they be when taken singly and alone, yet nevertheless proving, when brought together, to have a con- sistency suflficient, with the lights of reason, to guide us as vve seek to trace the wind in his circuits? The winds (^ 106) approach * Gauss. MAGNETISM AND CIRCULATION OF THE ATMOSPHERE. 121 these polar calms by a circular or spiral motion, traveling in the northern hemisphere against, and in the southern with the hands of a watch. The circular gales of the northern hemisphere are said also to revolve in like manner against the hands of a watch, while those in the southern hemisphere travel the other way. Now, should not this discovery of these three poles, this coinci- dence of revolving winds, with the other circumstances that have been brought to light, encourage us to look to the magnetism of the air for the key to these mysterious but striking coincidences ? Indeed, so w^de for speculation is the field presented by these discoveries, that we may in some respects regard this great globe itself, with its " cups" and spiral wires of air, earth, and water, as an immense " pile" and helix, w^hich, being excited by the natural batteries in the sea and atmosphere of the tropics, excites in turn its oxygen, and imparts to atmospherical matter the properties of magnetism. 225. With the lights which these discoveries cast, we see (Plate I.) why air, which has completed its circuit to the wdiirl* about the Antarctic regions, should then, according to the laws of magnet- ism, be repelled from the south, and attracted by the opposite pole toward the north. And w^hen the southeast and the northeast trade-winds meet in the equatorial calms of the Pacific, would not these magnetic forces be sufficient to determine the course of each current, bring- ing the former, with its vapors of the southern hemisphere, over into this, by the courses already suggested ? 226. This force and the heat of the sun would propel it to the north. The diurnal rotation of the earth propels it to the east ; consequently, its course, first through the upper regions 'of the atmosphere, and then on the surface of the earth, after being conducted by this newdy-discovered agent across the calms of Cancer, w^ould be /rom the southward and w^estward to the north- ward and eastward. These are the w^inds (^ 122) which, on their way to the north from the South Pacific, would pass over the Mississippi Valley, and they appear (§ 214) to be the rain winds there. Whence, then, if not from the trade-wind regions of the South Pacific, can the vapors for those rains come ? * " It whirleth about continually." — Bible. 122 THE PHYSICAL GEOGRAPHY OF THE SEA. 227. According to this view, and not taking into account any of the exceptions produced by the land and other circumstances upon the general circulation of the atmosphere over the ocean, the southeast trade-winds, which reach the shores of Brazil near the parallel of Rio, and which blow thence for the most part over the land, should be the winds which, in the general course of circula- tion, would be carried, after crossing the Andes and rising up in the belt of equatorial calms, toward Northern Africa, Spain, and the South of Europe. They might carry with them the infusoria of Ehrenberg (§ 158), but, according to this theory, they would be wanting in moisture. Now, are not those portions of the Old World, for the most part dry countries, receiving but a small amount of precipitation ? 228. Hence the general rule : those countries to the north of the calms of Cancer, which have large bodies of land situated to the southward and westward of them, in the southeast trade-wind region of the earth, should have a scanty supply of rain, and vice versa. 229. Let us try this rule : The extra-tropical part of New Hol- land comprises a portion of land thus situated in the southern hem- isphere. Tropical India is to the northward and westward of it ; and tropical India is in the northeast trade-wind region, and should give extra-tropical New Holland a slender supply of rain. But what modifications the monsoons of the Indian Ocean may make to this rule, or what effect they may have upon the rains in New Holland, my investigations in that part of the ocean have not been carried far enough for final decision ; though New Holland is a dry country. Referring back to p. 79 for what has been already said concerning the " Meteorological Agencies" (^ 115) of the atmosphere,* it will be observed that cases are there brought for- ward which afford trials for this rule, every one of which holds good. 230. Thus, though it be not proved as a mathematical truth that magnetism is the power which guides the storm from right to left and from left to right, which conducts the moist and the dry air each in its appointed paths, and which regulates the "wind in his circuits," yet that it is such a power is rendered very prob- able ; for, under the supposition that there is such a crossing of the air at the five calm places, as Plate, p. 70, represents (§ 106), we MAGNETISM AND CIRCULATION OF THE ATMOSPHERE. 123 can reconcile a greater number of known facts and phenomena than we can under the supj^osition that there is no such crossing. The rules of scientific investigation always require us, when we enter the domains of conjecture, to adopt that hypothesis by which the greatest number of known facts and phenomena may be rec- onciled ; and therefore we are entitled to assume that this cross- ing does take place, and to hold fast to the theory so maintaining until it is shown not to be sound. 231. That the magnetism of the atmosphere is the agent which guides the air across the calm belts, and prevents that which en- ters them from escaping on the side upon which it entered, we can not, of our own knowledge, positively affirm. Suffice it to say, that we recognize in this property of the oxygen of air an agent that, for aught we as yet know^ to the contrary, may serve as such a guide ; and we do not know of the existence of any other agent in the atmosphere that can perform the offices w^hich the hypothesis requires. Hence the suspicion that magnetism and electricity are among the forces concerned in the circulation of the atmosphere. 124 THE PHYSICAL GEOGRAPHY OF THE SEA. CHAPTER VI. CURRENTS OF THE SEA. Currents of the Sea : Governed by Laws, ^ 232. — The Inhabitants of the Sea the Creatures of Climate, 233. — The Currents of the Sea an Index to its Climates, 235. — First Principles, 236. — Some Currents run up hill, 237. — Currents of the Red Sea, 238. — Top of that Sea an inclined Plane, 240. — How an under Current from it is generated, 245. — Specific Gravity of Sea Waters, 248. — Why the Red Sea is not salting up, 251. — Mediterranean Current : How we know there is an un- der Current from this Sea, 252. — The sunken Wreck which drifted out, 253. — Both Currents caused by the Salts of the Sea, 254. — Currents of the Indian Ocean: Why immense Volumes of warm Water flow from it, 255. — A Gulf Stream along the Coast of China, 256. — Points of Resemblance between it and the Gulf Stream of the Atlantic, 257. — A Current into Behring's Strait, 258. — Geographical Features unfavorable to large Icebergs in the North Pacific, 260. — Necessity for cold to restore the Waste by the wann Currents, and Evaporation, 261. — Argu- ments in favor of return Currents, because Sea W^ater is salt, 262. — Currents of THE Pacific : Its Sargasso Sea, 264. — The Drift on the Aleutian Islands, 265. — The cold China Current, 266. — Humboldt's Current, 267. — Discovery of an im- mense Body of warm Water drifting South, 268. — Currents about the Equator, 270. — Under Currents: Experiments of Lieutenants Walsh and Lee, 271. — Proof of under Currents afforded by Deep Sea Soundings, 272. — Currents caused by Changes in Specific Gravity of Sea Water, 273. — Constituents of Sea Water every where the same ; affords Evidence of a system of Oceanic Circulation, 274. — Currents of the Atlantic : The great Equatorial Current : its Fountain-head, 275. — The Cape St. Roque Current proved to be not a constant Current, 276. — Difficulties of understanding all the Currents of the Sea-shore of the Atlantic can not be accounted for without the aid of under Currents, 277. 232. Let us, in this chapter, set out with the postulate that the sea, as well as the air, has its system (ff circulation, and that this system, whatever it be, and wherever its channels lie, whether in the waters at or below the surface, is in obedience to physical laws. The sea, by the circulation of its waters, has its offices to perform in the terrestrial economy ; and when we see the currents in the ocean running hither and thither, we feel that they were not put in motion without a cause. On the contrary, reason assures us that they move in obedience to some law of Nature, be it re- corded down in the depths below, never so far beyond the reach CURRENTS OF THE SEA. 125 of human ken ; and being a law of Nature, we know who gave it, and that neither chance nor accident had any thing to do with its enactment. Nature grants us all that this postulate demands, repeating it to us in many forms of expression ; she utters it in the blade of green grass which she causes to grow in climates and soils made kind and genial by warmth and moisture, that some current of the sea or air has conveyed far away from under a tropical sun. She murmurs it out in the cooling current of the north ; the whales of the sea tell of it (§ 65), and all its inhabitants proclaim it. 233. The fauna and the flora of the sea are as much the crea- tures of climate {^ 66), and are as dependent for their well-being upon temperature as are the fauna and the flora of the dry land. Were it not so, we should find the fish and the algee, the marine insect and the coral, distributed equally and alike in all parts of the ocean. The polar whale would delight in the torrid zone, and the habitat of the pearl oyster would be also under the iceberg, or in frigid waters colder than the melting ice. 234. Now water, while its capacities for heat are scarcely ex- ceeded by those of any other substance, is one of the most com- plete of non-conductors. Heat does not permeate w^ater as it does iron, for instance, or other good conductors. Heat the top of an iron plate, and the bottom becomes warm ; but heat the top of a sheet of water, as in a pool or basin, and that at the bottom re- mains cool. The heat passes through iron by conduction, but to get through w^ater it requires to be conveyed by a motion, which in fluids we call currents. 235. Therefore the study of the climates of the sea involves a knowledge of its currents, both cold and warm. They are the channels through which the waters circulate, and by means of which the harmonies of old ocean are preserved. 236. Hence, in studying the system of oceanic circulation, we set out with the very simple assumption, viz., that from whatever part of the ocean a current is found to run, to the same part a cur- rent of equal volume is obliged to return ; for upon this principle is based the whole system of currents and counter-currents of the air as well as of the water. (See Appendix B.) 237. It is not necessary to associate with oceanic currents the idea that they must of necessity, as on land, run from a higher to 126 THE PHYSICAL GEOGRAPHY OF THE SEA. a lower level. So far from this being the case, some currents of the sea actually run up hill, while others run on a level. The Gulf Stream is of the first class (^ 10). 238. The currents which run from the Atlantic into the Medi- terranean, and from the Indian Ocean into the Red Sea, are the reverse of this. Here the bottom of the current is probably a water-level, and the top an inclined plane, running down MIL Take the Red Sea current as an illustration. That sea lies, for the most part, within a rainless and riverless district. It may be compared to a long and narrow trough. Being in a rainless dis- trict, the evaporation from it is immense ; none of the water thus taken up is returned to it either by rivers or rains. It is about one thousand miles long ; it lies nearly north and south, and ex- tends from latitude 13° to the parallel of 30° north*. 239. From May to October, the w^ater in the upper part of this sea is said to be tw^o feet lower than it is near the mouth.* This change or diflference of level is ascribed to the effect of the wind, which, prevailing from the north at that season, is supposed to blow the water out. But from May to October is also the hot season ; it is the sea- son w^hen evaporation is going on most rapidly ; and when we consider how dry and how hot the winds are which blow upon this sea at this season of the year, we may suppose the daily evap- oration to be immense ; not less, certainly, than half an inch, and probably twice that amount. We know that the waste from ca- nals by evaporation, in the summer time, is an element which the engineer, when taking the capacity of his feeders into calculation, has to consider. With him it is an important element ; how much more so must the waste by evaporation from this sea be, when we consider the physical conditions under which it is placed. Its feed- er, the Arabian Sea, is a thousand miles from its head ; its shores are burning sands ; the evaporation is ceaseless ; and none of the vapors, which the scorching winds that blow over it carry away, are returned to it again in the shape of rains. 240. The Red Sea vapors are carried off and precipitated else- where. The depression in the level of its head waters in the sum- mer time, therefore, it appears, is owing quite as much to the effect of evaporation as to that of the wind blowing the waters back. * Johnston's Physical Atlas. CURRENTS OF THE SEA. 127 241. The evaporation in certain parts of the Indian Ocean (^ 33) is from three fourths of an inch to an inch daily. Suppose it for the Red Sea in the summer time to average only half an inch a day. Novr, if we suppose the velocity of the current which runs into that sea to average, from mouth to head, twenty miles a day, it would take the water fifty days to reach the head of it. If it lose half an inch from its surface by evaporation daily, it w^ould, by the time it reaches the Isthmus of Suez, lose twenty-five inches from its surface. 242. Thus the waters of the Red Sea ought to be lower at the Isthmus of Suez than they are at the Straits of Babelman- deb. Independently of the w^aters forced out by the wind, they ought to be lower from two other causes, viz., evaporation and temperature, for the temperature of that sea is necessarily low- er at Suez, in latitude 30°, than it is at Babelmandeb, in latitude 13°. 243. To make it quite clear that the surface of the Red Sea is not a sea level, but is an inclined plane, suppose the channel of the Red Sea to have a perfectly smooth and level floor, with no water in it, and a wave ten feet high to enter the Straits of Babel- mandeb, and to flow up the channel at the rate of twenty miles a day for fifty days, losing daily, by evaporation, half an inch ; it is easy to perceive that, at the end of the fiftieth day, this wave would not be so high, by two feet (twenty-five inches), as it was the first day it commenced to flow. 244. The top of that sea, therefore, may be regarded as an in- clined plane, made so by evaporation. 245. But the salt water, which has lost so much of its freshness by evaporation, becomes Salter, and therefore heavier. The light- er water at the Straits can not balance the heavier w^ater at the Isthmus, and the colder and Salter, and therefore heavier water, must either run out as an under current, or it must deposit its sur- plus salt in the shape of crystals, and thus gradually make the bottom of the Red Sea a salt-bed, or it must abstract all the salt from the ocean to make the Red Sea brine — and we know that neither the one process nor the other is going on. Hence we in- fer that there is from the Red Sea an under or outer current, as there is from the Mediterranean through the Straits of Gibraltar, 128 THE PHYSICAL GEOGRAPHY OF THE SEA. and that the surface waters near Suez are Salter than those near the mouth of the Red Sea. 246. And, to show why there should be an outer and under current from each of these two seas, let us suppose the case of a long trough, opening into a vat of oil, with a partition to keep the oil from running into the trough. Now suppose the trough to be filled up with wine on one side of the partition to the level of the oil on the other. The oil is introduced to represent the lighter water as it enters either of these seas from the ocean, and the wine the same water after it has lost some of its freshness by evapora- tion, and therefore has become Salter and heavier. Now suppose the partition to be raised, wdiat would take place ? Why, the oil would run in as an upper current, overflowing the wine, and the wine would run out as an under current. 247. The rivers which discharge in the Mediterranean are not sufficient to supply the waste of evaporation, and it is by a proc- ess similar to this that the salt wdiich is carried in from the ocean is returned to the ocean again ; w^ere it not so, the bed of that sea would be a mass of solid salt. The equilibrium of the seas is preserved, beyond a doubt, by a system of compensation as exqui- sitely adjusted as are those by which the '' music of the spheres" is maintained. (See Appendix C.) 248. The above about under currents is theory : Now let us see the results of actual observation upon the density of water in the Red Sea and the Mediterranean, and upon the under currents that run out from these seas. Four or five years ago, Mr. Morris, chief engineer of the Ori- ental Company's steam-ship Ajdaha, collected specimens of Red Sea water all the way from Suez to the Straits of Babelmandeb, w^hich were afterward examined by Dr. Giraud, who reported the following results :* Latitude. Longitude. Spec. Grav. Saline Cont. o o 1000 parts. No. 1. Sea at Suez — — 1027 41.0 No. 2. Gulf of Suez 27.49 33.44 1026 40.0 No. 3. Red Sea 24.29 36. 1024 39.2 No. 4. do. 20.55 38.18 1026 40.5 No. 5. do. 20.43 40.03 1024 39.8 No. 6. do. 14.34 42.43 1024 39.9 No. 7. do. 12.39 44.45 1023 39.2 Transact, of the Bombay Geograph. Soc, vol. ix., May, 1849, to August, 1850. CURRENTS OF THE SEA. 129 249. These observations agree with the theoretical deductions just announced, and show that the surface waters at the head are heavier and Salter than the surface waters at the mouth of the Red Sea. 250. In the same paper, the temperature of the air between Suez and Aden often rises, it is said, to 90°, " and probably aver- ages little less than 75° day and night all the year round. The surface of the sea varies in heat from 65° to 85°, and the differ- ence between the wet and dry bulb thermometers often amounts to 25° — in the kamsin, or desert winds, to from 30° to 40° ; the average evaporation at Aden is about eight feet for the year." *'Now assuming," says Dr. Buist, "the evaporation of the Red Sea to be no greater than that of Aden, a sheet of water eight feet thick, equal in area to the whole expanse of the sea, will be car- ried off annually in vapor ; or, assuming the Red Sea to be eight hundred feet in depth at an average — and this, most assuredly, is more than double the fact — the whole of it would be dried up, were no water to enter from the ocean, in one hundred years. The waters of the Red Sea, throughout, contain some four per cent, of salt by w^eight — or, as salt is a half heavier than water, some 2.7 per cent, in bulk — or, in round numbers, say three per cent. In the course of three thousand years, on the assumptions just made, the Red Sea ought to have been one mass of solid salt, if there were no current running out." 251. Now we know the Red Sea is more than three thousand years old, and that it is not filled with salt ; and the reason is, that as fast as the upper currents bring the salt in at the top, the under currents carry it out at the bottom. 252. Mediterranean Currents. — With regard to an under current from the Mediterranean, we may begin by remarking that we know that there is a current always setting in at the surface from the Atlantic, and that this is a salt-water current, which carries an immense amount of salt into that sea. We know, iT;oreover, that that sea is riot salting up ; and therefore, inde- pendently of the postulate (§ 236) and of observations (§ 253), we might infer the existence of an under current, through which this salt finds its way out into the broad ocean again.* * Dr. Smith appears to have been the first to conjecture this explanation, which he did in 1G83 {vide Philosophical Transactions). This continual indraught into the I 130 THE PHYSICAL GEOGRAPHY OF THE SEA. With regard to this outer and under current, we have observa- tions telKng of its existence as long ago as 1712. '' In the year 1712," says Dr. Hudson, in a paper conaniunicated to the Philosophical Society in 1724, " Monsieur du L'Aigle, that fortunate and generous commander of the privateer called the Phoenix, of Marseilles, giving chase near Ceuta Point to a Dutch ship bound to Holland, came up with her in the middle of the Gut between TarifFa and Tangier, and there gave her one broadside, which directly sunk her, all her men being saved by Monsieur du L'Aigle ; and a few days after, the Dutch ship, with her cargo of brandy and oil, arose on the shore near Tangier, which is at least four leagues to the westward of the place w^here she sunk, and di- rectly against the strength of the current, which has persuaded many men that there is a recurrency in the deep water in the middle of the Gut that sets outward to the grand ocean, which this accident very much demonstrates ; and, possibly, a great part of the w^ater wdiich runs into the Straits returns that way, and along the two coasts before mentioned ; otherwise, this ship must, of course, have been driven toward Ceuta, and so upward. The water in the Gut must be very deep ; several of the commanders of our ships of w^ar having attempted to sound it with the longest lines they could contrive, but could never find any bottom." In 1828, Dr. Wollaston, in a paper before the Philosophical So- ciety, stated that he found the specific gravity of a specimen of sea water, from a depth of six hundred and seventy fathoms, fifty miles within the Straits, to have a " density exceeding that of dis- !Mediterranean appears to have been a vexed question among the navigators and phi- losophers even of those times. Dr. Smith alludes to several hypotheses which had been invented to solve these phenomena, such as subterraneous vents, cavities, exha- lation by the sun's beams, See, and then offers his conjecture, which, in his own words, is, "that there is an under current, by vv'hich as great a quantity of water is carried out as comes flowing in. To confirm which, besides what I have said above about the difference of tides in the ofling and at the shore in the Downs, which ne- cessarily supposes an under current, I shall present you with an instance of the like nature in the Baltic Sound, as I received it from an able seaman, who was at the making of the trial. He told me that, being there in one of the king's frigates, they went with their pinnace into the mid stream, and were carried violently by the cur- rent ; that, soon after this, they sunk a bucket with a heavy cannon ball to a certain depth of v/ater, which gave a check to the boat's motion ; and, sinking it still lower and lower, the boat was driven ahead to the windward against the upper current : the current alofl, as he added, not being over four or five fathoms deep, and that the lower the bucket was let fall, they found the under current the stronger." CURRENTS OF THE SEA. 131 tilled water by more than four times the usual excess, and accord- ingly leaves, upon evaporation, more than four times the usual quantity of saline residuum. Hence it is clear that an under cur- rent outw^ard of such denser water, if of equal breadth and depth with the current inw^ard near the surface, w^ould carry out as much salt below as is brought in above, although it moved with less than one fourth part of the velocity, and would thus prevent a perpet- ual increase of saltness in the Mediterranean Sea beyond that ex- isting in the Atlantic." The doctor obtained this specimen of sea water from Captain, now Admiral Smyth, of the English navy, who had collected it for Dr. Marcet. Dr. Marcet died before receiving it, and it had remained in the admiral's hands some time before it came into those of WoUaston. It may, therefore, have lost something by evaporation ; for it is difficult to conceive that all the river water, and three fourths of the sea water which runs into the Mediterranean, is evaporated from it, leaving a brine for the under current having four tim.es as much salt as the water at the surface of the sea usually con- tains. Very recently, M. Coupvent des Bois is said to have shown, by actual observation, the existence of an outer and under current from the Mediterranean. However that may be, these facts, and the statements of the Secretary of the Geographical Society of Bombay (§ 250), seem to lectve no room to doubt as to the existence of an under current both from the Red Sea and Mediterranean, and as to the cause of the surface current which flows into them. I think it a matter of demonstration. It is accounted for (§ 245) by the salts of the sea. 253. Writers whose opinions are entitled to great respect difier with me as to the proof of this demonstration. Among these writers are Admiral Smyth, of the British Navy, and Sir Charles Lyell, who also differ with each other. In 1820, Dr. Marcet, be- ing then engaged in studying the chemical composition of sea water, the admiral, with his usual alacrity for doing "a kind turn," undertook to collect for the doctor specimens of Mediterranean water from various depths, especially in and about the Straits of Gibraltar. Among these was the one (^ 252) taken fifty miles within the Straits from the depth of six hundred and seventy 132 THE PHYSICAL GEOGRAPHY OF THE SEA. fathoms (four thousand and twenty feet), which, being four times Salter than common sea water, left, as we have just seen (§ 252), no doubt in the mind of Dr. Wollaston as to the existence of this under current of brine. But the indefatigable admiral, in the course of his celebrated survey of the Mediterranean, discovered that, while mside of the Straits the depth was upward of nine hundred fathoms, yet in the Straits themselves the depth across the shoalest section is not more than one hundred and sixty* fathoms. '' Such being the case, we can now prove," exclaims Sir Charles Lyell,-"that the vast amount of salt brought into the Mediterra- nean does not pass out again by the Strtiits ; for it appears by Cap- tain Smyth's soundings, which Dr. Wollaston had not seen, that between the Capes of Trafalgar and Spartel, which are twenty- two miles apart, and where the Straits are shallowest, the deepest part, which is on the side of Cape Spartel, is only two hundred and twenty fathoms.f It is therefore evident, that if water sinks in certain parts of the Mediterranean, in consequence of the in- crease of its specific gravity, to greater depths than two hundred and twenty fathoms, it can never flow out again into the Atlantic, since it must be stopped by the submarine barrier which crosses the shallowest part of the Straits of Gibraltar. "J 254. According to this reasoning, all the cavities, the hollows and the valleys at the bottom of the sea, especially in the trade- wind region, where evaporation is so constant and great, ought to be salting up or filling up with brine. Is it probable that such a process is actually going on? No. According to this reasoning, the water at the bottom of the great American lakes ought to be salt, for the rivers and the rains, it is admitted, bring the salts from the land and empty them into the sea. It is also admitted that the great lakes would, from this cause, be salt, if they had no sea drainage. The Niagara River passes these river salts from the upper lakes into Ontario, and the St. Lawrence conveys them thence to the sea. Now the basins or bottoms of all these upper lakes are far below the top of the rock over which the Niagara pitches its flood. And, were the position assumed by this writer correct, viz., that if the water in * " The Mediterranean." t One hundred and sixty, Smyth. + Lyell's Principles of Geology, p. 334-5, ninth edition. London, 1853. CURRENTS OF THE SEA. 133 any of these lakes should, in consequence of its specific gravity, once sink below the level of the shoals in the rivers and straits whicli connect them, it never could flow out again, and conse- quently must remain there forever* — were this principle physi- cally correct, would not the w^ater at the bottom of the lakes grad- ually have received salt sufficient, during the countless ages that they have been sending it off to the sea, to make this everlasting- ly pent-up water briny, or at least quite different in its constitu- ents from that of the surface ? We may presume that the water at the bottom of every extensive and quiet sheet of water, whether salt or fresh, is at the bottom by reason of specific gravity ; but that it does not remain there forever we have abundant proof. If so, the Niagara River would be fed by Lake Erie only from that layer of Vv'atcr which is above the level of the top of the rock at the Falls. Consequently, wherever the breadth of that river is no greater than it is at the Falls, we should have a current as rapid as it is at the moment of passing the top of the rock to make the leap. To see that such is not the way of Nature, we have but to look at any common mill-pond when the water is running over the dam. The current in the pond that feeds the overflow is scarcely perceptible, for " still v/ater runs deep." Moreover, we know it is not such a skimming current as the geologist would make' which runs from one lake to another ; for wherever above the Niagara Falls the w^ater is deep, there we are sure to find the current sluggish, in comparison with the rate it assumes as it ap- proaches the Falls ; and it is sluggish in deep places, rapid in shal- low ones, because it is fed from below\ The common "wastes" in our canals teach us this fact. The reasoning of this celebrated geologist appears to be found- ed upon the assumption that when water, in consequence of its specific gravity, once sinks below the bottom of a current where it is shallowest, there is no force of traction in fluids, nor any other power, which can draw this heavy water up again. If such w^ere the case, we could not have deep water immediately inside of the bars which obstruct the passage of the great rivers into the sea. Thus the bar at the mouth of the Mississippi, with only fifteen feet of w^ater on it, is estimated to travel out to sea at rates vary- ing from one hundred to twenty yards a year. * See paragraph quoted (^ 253) from " Lyell's Principles of Geology " 134 THE PHYSICAL GEOGRAPHY OF THE SEA. Ill the place where that bar was when it was one thousand yards nearer to New Orleans than it now is, whether it were fif- teen years ago or a century ago, with only fifteen or sixteen feet of water on it, we have now four or five times that depth. As new bars were successively formed geaward from the old, what dug up the sediment which formed the old, and lifted it up from where specific gravity had placed it, and carried it out to sea over a barrier not more than a few feet from the surface ? Indeed, Sir Charles himself makes this majestic stream to tear up its own bot- tom to depths far below the top of the bar at its mouth. He de- scribes the Mississippi as a river having nearly a uniform breadth to the distance of two thousand miles from the sea.* He makes it cut a bed for itself out of the soil, which is heavier than Admiral Smyth's deep sea water, to the depth of more than two hundred feett below the top of the bar w^hich obstructs its entrance into the sea. Could not the same power which scoops out this solid mat- ter draw the brine up from the pool in the Mediterranean, and pass it out across the barrier in the Straits ? The traction of locomotives on rail-roads and the force of that traction are w^ell understood. Now have not currents in the deep sea power derived from some such force ? Suppose this under current from the Mediterranean to extend one hundred and sixty fathoms down, so as to chafe the barrier across the Straits. Upon the bottom of this current, then, there is a pressure of more than fifty atmospheres. Have we not here a source of power that would be capable of drawing up, by almost an insensibly slow mo- tion, water from almost any depth ? At any rate, it appears that the effect of currents by traction^ or friction, or whatever force, does extend far below the level of their beds in shallow places. Were it not so — were the brine not drawn out again — it would be easy to prove that this indraught into the Mediterranean has taken, even during the period assigned by Sir Charles to the formation of the Delta of the Mississippi — one of the newest formations — salt enough to fill up the whole basin of the Mediterranean with * " From near its mouth at the Balizc, a steam-boat may ascend for two thousand miles with scarcely any perceptible difference in the width of the river." — Lijell, p. 263. t " The Mississippi is continually shifting its course in the great alluvial plain, cut- ting frequently to the depth of one hundred, and even sometimes to the depth of two hundred and fifty feet."— Lyc«, p. 273. CURRENTS OF THE SEA. I35 crystals. Admiral Smyth brought up bottom with his briny sam- ple of deep sea water (six hundred and seventy fathoms), but no salt crystals. The gallant admiral — appearing to withhold his assent both from Dr. Wollaston in his conclusions as to this under current, and from the geologist in his inferences as to the effect of the barrier in the Straits — suggests the probability that, in sounding for the heavy specimen of sea water, he struck a brine spring. But the specimen, according to analysis, was of sea water, and how did a brine spring of sea water get under the sea but through the proc- ess of evaporation on the surface, or by parting wdth a portion of its fresh water in some other way ? If we admit the principle assumed by Sir Charles Lyell, that water from the great pools and basins of the sea can never ascend to cross the ridges which form these pools and basins, then the harmonies of the sea are gone, and we are forced to conclude they never existed. Every particle of water that sinks below a sub- marine ridge is, ij)so facto, by his reasoning, stricken from the channels of circulation, to become thenceforward forever motion- less matter. The consequence would be '' cold obstruction" in the depths of the sea, and a system of circulation between differ- ent seas of the waters only that float above the shoalest reefs and barriers. I do not believe in the existence of any such imperfect terrestrial mechanism, or in any such failures of design. To my mind, the proofs — the theoretical proofs — the proofs derived ex- clusively from reason and analogy — are as clear in favor of this under current from the Mediterranean as they were in favor of the existence of Leverrier's planet before it was seen through the telescope at Berlin. Now suppose, as Sir Charles Lyell maintains, that none of these vast quantities of salt which this surface current takes into the Mediterranean find their way out again. It would not be difficult to show, even to the satisfaction of that eminent geologist, that this indraught conveys salt a^v ay from the Atlantic faster than all the /re^/i- water rivers empty fresh supplies of salt into the ocean. Now, besides this drain, vast quantities of salts are extracted from sea water for madrepores, coral reefs, shell banks, and marl beds ; and by such reasoning as this, which is perfectly sound and good, we establish the existence of this under current, or else we are 136 THE PHYSICAL GEOGRAPHY OF THE SEA. forced to the very unphilosophical conclusion that the sea must be losing its salts, and becoming less and less briny, 255. The Currents of the Indian Ocean. — By carefully ex- amining the physical features of this sea (Plates VIII. and IX.), and studying its conditions, we are led to look for warm currents that have their genesis in this ocean, and that carry from it vol- umes of overheated water, probably exceeding in quantity many times that which is discharged by the Gulf Stream from its fount- ains (Plate VI.). The Atlantic Ocean is open at the north, but tropical countries bound the Indian Ocean in that direction. The w^aters of this ocean are hotter than those of the Caribbean Sea, and the evap- orating force there (§ 146) is much greater. That it is greater we might, without observation, infer from the fact of a higher temperature and a greater amount of precipitation on the neigh- boring shores (§ 139). These two facts, taken together, tend, it would seem, to show that large currents of warm w^ater have their genesis in the Indian Ocean. One of them is the w^ell- known Mozambique current, called at the Cape of Good Hope the LaguUas current. 256. Another of these currents makes its escape through the Straits of Malacca, and, being joined by other warm streams from the Java and China Seas, flows out into the Pacific, like another Gulf Stream, between the Philippines and the shores of Asia. Thence it attempts the great circle route (^ 69) for the Aleutian Islands, tempering climates, and losing itself in the sea on its route toward the northwest coast of America. 257. Between the physical features of this current and the Gulf Stream of the Atlantic there are several points of resem- blance. Sumatra and Malacca correspond to Florida and Cuba ; Borneo to the Bahamas, with the Old Providence Channel to the south, and the Florida Pass to the west. The coasts of China answer to those of the United States, the Philippines to the Ber- mudas, the Japan Islands to Newfoundland. As wdth the Gulf Stream, so also here with this China current, there is a counter- current of cold water between it and the shore. The climates of the Asiatic coast correspond with those of America along the At- lantic, and those of Columbia, Washington, and Vancouver are duplicates of those of Western Europe and the British Islands ; CURRENTS OF THE SEA. I37 the climate of California (State) resembling that of Spain ; the sandy plains and rainless regions of Lower California reminding one of Africa, with its deserts between the same parallels, &c. Moreover, the North Pacific, like the North Atlantic, is envel- oped, where these warm waters go, w^ith mists and fogs, and streak- ed with ligJitning. The Aleutian Islands are as renowned for foo-s and mists as are the Grand Banks of Newfoundland. 258. A surface current flows north through Behring's Strait into the Arctic Sea ; but in the Atlantic the current is from, not into the Arctic Sea : it flows south on the surface, north below ; Behring's Strait being too shallow to admit of mighty under cur- rents, or to permit the introduction from the polar basin of any large icebergs into the Pacific. 259. Behring's Strait, in geographical position, answers to Da- vis's Strait in the Atlantic ; and Alaska, with its Aleutian chain of islands, to Greenland. But instead of there being to the east of Alaska, as there is to the east of Greenland, an escape into the polar basin for these w\arm waters, the Pacific shore-line inter- venes, and turns them down through a sort of North Sea along the western coast of the continent toward Mexico. 260. These contrasts show the principal points of resemblance and of difference between the currents and aqueous circulation in the two oceans. The ice-bearing currents of the North Atlantic are not repeated as to degree in the North Pacific, for there is no nursery for icebergs like the frozen ocean and its arms. The seas of Okotsk and Kamtschatka alone, and not the frozen seas of the Arctic, cradle the icebergs for the North Pacific. There is, at times at least, another current of warm water from the Indian Ocean. It finds its way south midway between Africa and Australia. The whales (Plate IX.) give indications of it. Nor need we be surprised at such a vast flow of warm water as these three currents indicate from the Indian Ocean, when we rec- ollect that this ocean {^ 255) is land-locked on the north, and that the temperature of its waters is frequently as high as 90° Fahr. 261. There must, therefore, be immense volumes of water flow- ing into the Indian Ocean to supply the Vv^aste created by these w^arm currents, and the fifteen or twenty feet of water that obser- vations {^ 33) tell us are yearly carried off from this ocean by evaporation. 138 THE PHYSICAL GEOGRAPHY OF THE SEA. On either side of this warm current that escapes from the inter- tropical parts of the Indian Ocean (§ 260), midway between Africa and Austraha, an ice-bearing current (Plate IX.) is found wending its way from the Antarctic regions with supplies of cold water to modify climates, and restore the aqueous equilibrium in that part of the world. These cold currents sometimes get as far north with their icebergs as 40° south. The Gulf Stream seldom per- mits them to get so near the equator as that in the North Atlan- tic, but I have known the ice-bearing current which passes east of Cape Horn into the South Atlantic to convey its bergs as far as the parallel of 37° south latitude. This is the nearest ap- proach of icebergs to the equator. 262. These currents which run out from the inter-tropical basin of that immense sea — Indian Ocean — are active currents. They convey along immense volumes of water containing vast quanti- ties of salt, and we know that sea water enough to convey back equal quantities of salt, and salt to keep up supphes for the out- ffoino- currents, must flow into or return to the inter-tropical re- gions of the same sea ; therefore, if observations were silent upon the subject, reason would teach us to look for currents here that keep in motion immense volumes of water. 263. The Currents of the Pacific. — The contrast has been drawn (^ 257) between the China or " Gulf Stream" of the North Pacific, and the Gulf Stream of the North Atlantic. The course of the China Stream has never been traced out. There is (Plate IX.), along the coast of California and Mexico, a southwardly movement of waters, as there is along the Vvcst coast of Africa toward the Cape de Verd Islands. 264. In the open space west of this southwardly set along the African coast, there is the famous Sargasso Sea (Plate IX.), which is the general receptacle of the drift-wood and sea-weed of the Atlantic. So, in like manner, to the west from Cahfornia of this other southwardly set, lies the pool into which the drift-wood and sea-weed of the North Pacific are generally gathered. 265. The natives of the Aleutian Islands, where no trees grow, depend upon the drift-wood cast ashore there for all the timber used in the construction of their boats, fishing-tackle, and house- hold gear. Among this timber, the camphor-tree, and other woods of China and Japan, are said to be often recognized. In this fact CURRENTS OF THE SEA. 139 we have additional evidence touching this China Stream, as to which (§ 263) but little, at best, is known. 266. The Cold Asiatic Current. — Inshore of, but counter to the China current, along the eastern shores of Asia, is found (§ 257) a streak, or layer, or current of cold water answering to that between the Gulf Stream and the American coast. This current, like its fellow in the Atlantic, is not strong enough at all times sensibly to affect the course of navigation ; but, like that in the Atlantic, it is the nursery (§ 65) of most valuable fisheries. The fisheries of Japan are quite as extensive as those of New- foundland, and the people of each country are indebted for their valuable supplies of excellent fish to the cold waters which the currents of the sea bring down to their shores. 267. Humboldt's Current. — The currents of the Pacific are but little understood. Among those about which most is thought to be known is the Humboldt Current of Peru, which the great and good man whose name it bears vv^as the first to discover. It has been traced on Plate IH. according to the best information — defective at best — upon the subject. This current is felt as far as the equator. (See Appendix D.) 268. I have, I beheve, discovered the existence of a warm cur- rent in the inter-tropical regions of the Pacific, midway between the American coast and the shore-lines of Australia. 269. This region affords an immense surface for evaporation. No rivers empty into it ; the annual fall of rain, except in the " Equatorial Doldrums," is small, and the evaporation is all that both the northeast and the southeast trade-winds can take up and carry ofF. I have marked on Plate IX. the direction of the sup- posed warm water current which conducts these overheated and briny waters from the tropics in mid ocean to the extra-tropical regions where precipitation is in excess. Here being cooled, and agitated, and mixed up with waiters that are less salt, these over- heated and over-salted waters from the tropics may be replenish- ed and restored to their rounds in the wonderful system of oceanic circulation. 270. There are also about the equator in this ocean some curi- ous currents which I do not understand, and as to which obser- vations are not sufficient yet to afford the proper explanation or description. There are many of them, some of which, at times. 140 THE PHYSICAL GEOGRxVPHY OF THE SEA. run with great force. On a voyage from the Society to the Sand- wich Islands, I encountered one running at the rate of ninety-six miles a day. And what else should we expect in this ocean but a system of currents and counter-currents apparently the most uncertain and complicated ? The Pacific Ocean and the Indian Ocean may, in the view we are about to take, be considered as one sheet of wa- ter. This sheet of water covers an area quite equal in extent to one half of that embraced by the whole surface of the earth ; and, accordinsT to Professor Alexander Keith Johnston, who so states it in the new edition of his splendid Physical Atlas, the total an- nual fall of rain on the earth's surface is one hundred and eighty- six thousand, two hundred and forty cubic imperial miles. Not less than three fourths of the vapor which makes this rain comes from this waste of waters ; but supposing that only half of this quantity, i. e., ninety-three thousand, one hundred and twenty cubic miles of rain falls upon this sea, and that that much, at least, is taken up from it again a^vapor, this would give two hundred and fifty-five cubic miles as the quantity of water wdiich is daily lifted up and poured back again into this expanse. It is taken up at one place and rained down at another, and in this process, therefore, we have agencies for multitudes of partial and conflicting currents, all, in their set and strength, apparently as uncertain as the winds. The better to appreciate the operation of such agencies in pro- ducing currents in the sea, now" here, now there, first this way, and then that, let us, by way of illustration, imagine a district of two hundred and fifty-five square miles in extent to be set apart, in the midst of the Pacific Ocean, as the scene of operations for one day. We must now conceive a machine capable of pumping up, in the twenty-four hours, all the w^ater to the depth of one mile in this district. The machine must not only pump up and bear off this immense quantity of water, but it must discharge it again into the sea on the same day, but at some other place. Now here is a force for creating currents that is equivalent in its results to the effects that would be produced by bailing up, in twenty-four hours, two hundred and fifty-five cubic miles of wa- ter from one part of the Pacific Ocean, and emptying it out again upon another part. The currents that would be created by such an CURRENTS OF THE SEA. 141 operation would overwhelm navigation and desolate the sea ; and, happily for the human race, the great atmospherical machine (^ 90), .which actually does perform every day, on the average, all this lifting up, transporting, and letting down of water upon the face of the grand ocean, does not confine itself to an area of two hund- red and fifty-five square miles, but to an area three hundred thou- sand times as great ; yet, nevertheless, the same quantity of water is kept in motion, and the currents, in the aggregate, transport as much water to restore the equihbrium as they would have to do were all the disturbance to take place upon our hypothetical area of one mile deep over the space of two hundred and fifty-five square miles. Now when we come to recollect that evaporation is lifting up, that the winds are transporting, and that the clouds do let down every day actually such a body of water, but that it is done by little and little at a place, and by hair's breadths at a time, not by parallelopipedons one mile thick — that the evapora- tion is most rapid and the rains most copious, not always at the same place, but now here, now there, we shall see actually existing in nature a force sufiicient to give rise to just such a system of currents as that which mariners find in the Pacific — currents which appear to rise in mid ocean, run at unequal rates, sometimes east, sometimes west, but which always lose themselves where they rise, viz., in mid ocean. 271. Under Currents. — Lieutenant J. C.Walsh, in the United States schooner "Taney," and Lieutenant S. P. Lee, in the United States brig " Dolphin," both, while they were carrying on a sys- tem of observations in connection with the Wind and Current Charts, had their attention directed to the subject of submarine currents. They made some interesting experiments upon the subject. A block of wood was loaded to sinking, and, by means of a fishing- line or a bit of twine, let down to the depth of one hundred or five hundred fathoms (six hundred or three thousand feet). A small float, just sufiicient to keep the block from sinking farther, was then tied to the fine, and the whole let go from the boat. To use their own expressions, " It was wonderful, indeed, to see this harrega move ofi", against wind, and sea, and surface cur- rent, at the rate of over one knot an hour, as was generally the case, and on one occasion as much as 1| knots. The men in the boat 142 THE PHYSICAL GEOGRAPHY OF THE SEA. could not repress exclamations of surprise, for it really appeared as if some monster of the deep had hold of the weight below, and was walking off with it."* Both officers and men w^ere amazed at the sight. 272. The experiments in deep-sea soundings have also thrown much light upon the subject of under currents. There is reason to believe that they exist m all, or almost all parts of the deep sea, for never in any instance yet has the deep-sea line ceased tb run out, even after the plummet had reached the bottom. If the line be held fast in the boat, it invariably parts, showing, when two or three miles of it are out, that the under-currents are sw^eeping against the bight of it with what seamen call a swig- ging fo7xe, that no sounding twine has yet proved strong enough to withstand. Lieutenant J. P. Parker, of the United States frigate Congress, attempted, in 1852, a deep-sea sounding off the coast of South America. He was engaged with the experiment eight or nine hours, during which time a line nearly ten miles long Avas paid out. Night coming on, he had to part the line (which he did simply by attempting to haul it in) and return on board. Exam- ination proved that the ocean there, instead of being over ten miles in depth, was not over three, and that the line was swept out by the force of one or more under currents. But in what di- rection these currents were running is not known. 273. It may, therefore, without doing any violence to the rules of philosophical investigation, be conjectured, that the equilibrium of all the seas is^preserved, to a greater or less extent, by this system of currents and counter-currents at and below the surface. If we except the tides, and the partial currents of the sea, such as those that may be created by the wind, we may lay it down as a rule (§ 34) that edl the currents of the ocean owe their origin to difference of specific gravity between sea w^ater at one place and sea water at another ; for w^herever there is such a difference, whether it be owing to difference of temperature or to difference of saltness, &c., it is a difference that disturbs cquihbrium, and currents are the consequence. The heavier water goes toward the lighter, and the lighter whence the heavier comes ; for two fluids differing in specific gravity (§ 36), and standing at the same * Lieutenant Walsh. CURRENTS OF THE SEA. I43 level, can not balance each other. It is immaterial, as before stated, whether this difference of specific gravity be caused by temperature, by the matter held in solution, or by any other thing ; the effect iS the same, namely, a current. 274. That the sea, in all parts, holds in solution the same kind of solid matter ; that its waters in this place, where it never rains, are not salter than the strongest brine ; and that in another place, where the rain is incessant, they are not entirely without salt, may be taken as evidence in proof of a system of currents or of circulation in the sea, by which its waters are shaken up and kept mixed together as though they were in a phial. Moreover, we may lay it down as a law in the system of oceanic circulation, that every current in the sea has its counter current ; in other words, that the currents of the sea are, like the nerves of the hu- man system, arranged in pairs ; for wherever one current is found carrying off water from this or that part of the sea, to the same part must some other current convey an equal volume of water, or else the first would, in the course of time, cease for the want of water to supply it. 275. Currents of the Atlantic. — The principal currents of the Atlantic have been described in the chapter on the Gulf Stream. Besides this, its eddies and its offsets, are the equatorial current (Plate VI.), and the St. Roque or Brazil Current. Their fountain- head is the same. It is in the warm waters about the equator, between Africa and America. The former, receiving the Amazon and the Oronoco as tributaries by the way, flows into the Carib* bean Sea, and becomes, with the waters (§ 35) in which the vapors of the trade-winds leave their salts, the feeder of the Gulf Stream. The Brazil Current, coming from the same fountain, is supposed to be divided by Cape St. Roque, one branch going to the south under this name (Plate IX.), the other to the westward. This last has been a great bugbear to navigators, principally on account of the difficulties whicK a fev/ dull vessels fallino; to lee- w^ard of St. Roque have found in beating up against it. It was said to have caused the loss of some English transports in the last century, which fell to leeward of the Cape on a voyage to the other hemisphere ; and navigators, accordingly, were advised to shun it as a danger. 276. This current has been an object of special investigation 144 THE PHYSICAL GEOGRAPHY OF THE SEA. duriDfi^ my researches connected with the wind and current charts, and the result has satisfied nie that it is neither a dangerous nor a constant current, notwithstanding older writers. Horsburgh, in his East India Directory, cautions navigators against it ; and Keith Johnston, in his grand Physical Atlas, published in 1848, thus speaks of it : " This current greatly impedes the progress of those vessels which cross the equator west of 23° west longitude, impelling them beyond Cape St. Roque, when they are drawn tow^ard the northern coast of Brazil, and can not regain their course till after weeks or months of delay and exertion." So far from this being the case, my researches abundantly prove that vessels which cross the equator five hundred miles to the w^est of longitude 23° west have no difficulty on account of this current in clearing that cape. I receive almost daily the abstract logs of vessels that cross the equator west of 30° w^est, and in three days from that crossing they are generally clear of that cape. A few of them report the current in their favor ; most of them experience no current at all ; but, now and then, some do find a current set- ting to the northward and westward, and operating against them at the rate of twenty miles a day. The inter-tropical regions of the Atlantic, like those of the other oceans (§ 270), abound with conflicting currents, which no researches yet have enabled the mariner to unravel so that he may at all times know where they are and tell how they run, in order that the navigator may be certain of their help when favorable, or sure of avoiding them if adverse. 277. I may here remark, that there seems to be a larger flow of polar waters into the Atlantic than of other waters from it, and I can not account for the preservation of the equilibrium of this ocean by any other hypothesis than that which calls in the aid of under currents. They, I have no doubt, bear an important part in the system of oceanic circulation. Admiral Sir Francis Beaufort, the venerable hydrographer of England, made, when in command of her Britannic majesty's frigate Frederikstccn, in the Mediterranean, some interesting ex- periments upon under currents, which I should be glad to see re- peated in other parts of the sea, especially between the tropics, in the Atlantic, Pacific, and Indian Oceans, and wherever the water is remarkably transparent. That officer says : CURRENTS OF TPIE SEA. I45 " The counter currents, or those which return beneath the sur-* face of the water, are also very remarkable ; in some parts of the Archipelago they are at times so strong as to prevent the steering of the ship ; and, in one instance, on sinking the lead, when the sea was calm and clear, with shreds of bunting of vari- ous colors attached to every yard of the hne, they pointed in dif- ferent directions all round the compass." These shreds of bunting probably *' tailed out" straight from the line, not in consequence of currents, but by reason of their specific gravity, and their tendency to lie straight out from, rather than to coil around, the line. At any rate, it is an interesting ex- periment, and I hope some of those noble-hearted mariners who are co-operating with me in collecting facts concerning the phys- ical laws of the sea will avail themselves of calms to repeat the experiment. A submarine kite — that is, a contrivance upon the principle of a boy's kite in the air — let down at various depths in the sea, would indicate both the direction and force of the under currents. K 146 THE PHYSICAL GEOGRAPHY OF THE SEA. CHAPTER VII. THE OPEN SEA IN THE ARCTIC OCEAN. How Whales struck on the east Side of the Continent have been taken on the west Side, ^ 278. — Right Whales can not cross the Equator, 279. — How the Existence of a northwest Passage was proved by the Whales, 280. — Other Evidence in Favor of it, 281. — An under Current sets into the Arctic Ocean, 282. — Evidences of a milder Climate near the Pole, 284. — The Water Sky of Lieutenant De liaven, 285. — This open Sea not permanently in one Place, 286. 278. It is the custom among whalers to have their harpoons marked with date and the name of the ship ; and Dr. Scoresby, in his work on Arctic voyages, mentions several mstances of whales that have been taken near the Behring's Strait side with harpoons in them bearing tlie stamp of ships that w^ere known to cruise on the Baffin's Bay side of the American continent ; and as, in one or two instances, a very short time had elapsed between the date of capture in the Pacific and the date Vvhen the fish must have been struck on the Atlantic sicle, it was argued therefore that there was a northwest passage by which the whales passed from one side to the other, since the stricken animal could not have had the harpoon in him long enough to admit of a passage around either Cape Horn or the Cape of Good Hope. The whale-fishing is, among the industrial pursuits of the sea, one of no little importance ; and when the system of investigation out of which the "wind and current charts" have grown was commenced, the haunts of this animal did not escape attention or examination. The log-books of whalers were collected in great numbers, and patiently examined, co-ordinated, and discussed, in order to find out what parts of the ocean are frequented by this kind of whale, what parts b}^ that, and what parts by neither. (See Plate IX.) 279. Log-books containing the records by different ships for hundreds of thousands of days were examined, and the observa- tions in them co-ordinated for this chart. And this investigation, THE OPEN SEA IN THE ARCTIC OCEAN. 147 as Plate IX. shows, led to the discovery that the tropical regions of the ocean are to the right whale as a sea of fire, through which he can not pass, and into which he never enters. The fact was also brought out that the same kind of whale that is found off the shores of Greenland, in Baffin's Bay, &c., is found also in the North Pacific, and about Behring's Strait, and that the right whale of the northern hemisphere is a different animal from that of the southern. 280. Thus the fact was established that the harpooned whales did not pass around Cape Horn or the Cape of Good Hope, for they were of the class that could not cross the equator. In this way we were furnished with circumstantial evidence affording the most irrefragable proof that there is, at times at least, open water communication through the Arctic Sea from one side of the continent to the other, for it is known that the whales can not travel under the ice for such a great distance as is that from one side of this continent to the other. But this did not prove the existence of an open sea there ; it only established the existence — the occasional existence, if you please — of a channel through which whales had passed. There- fore we felt bound to introduce other evidence before we could expect the reader to admit our proof, and to believe with us in the existence of an open sea in the Arctic Ocean. 281. There is an under current setting from the Atlantic through Davis's Strait into the Arctic Ocean, and there is a surface cur- rent setting out. Observations have pointed out the existence of this under current there, for navigators tell of immense icebergs which they have seen drifting rapidly to the north, and against a strong surface current. These icebergs were high above the wa- ter, and their depth below was seven times greater than their height above. No doubt they were drifted by a powerful under current. 282. Now this under current comes from the south, where it is warm, and the temperature of its waters is perhaps not belov/ 32° ; at any rate, they are comparatively warm. There must be a place somewhere in the Arctic seas where this under current ceases to flow north, and begins to flow south as a surface cur- rent ; for the surface current, though its waters are mixed with the fresh waters of the rivers and of precipitation in the polar 148 THE PHYSICAL GEOGRAPHY OF THE SEA. basin, nevertheless bears out vast quantities of salt, which is fur- nished neither by the rivers nor the rains. 283. These salts are supplied by the under current ; for as much salt as one current brings in, other currents (^ 252) must take out, else the polar basin would become a basin of salt ; and where the under current transfers its waters to the surface, there is, it is supposed, a basin in which the waters, as they rise to the surface, are at 30°, or whatever be the temperature of the under current, Avhich we know must be above the freezing point, for the current is of water in a fluid, not in a solid state. An arrangement in nature, by w^hich a basin of considerable area in the frozen ocean could be supplied by water coming in at the bottom and rising up at the top, with a temperature not below 30°, or even 28° — the freezing point of sea water — would go far to mitigate the climate in the regions round about. 284. And that there is a warmer climate somewhere in that in- hospitable sea, the observations of many of the explorers who have visited it indicate. Its existence may be inferred also from the well-known fact that the birds and animals are found at cer- tain seasons migrating to the north, evidently in search of milder climates. The instincts of these dumb creatures are unerring, and we can imagine no mitigation of the climate in that direction, unless it arise from the proximity or the presence there of a large body of open water. It is another furnace (^ 60) in the beauti- ful economy of Nature for tempering climates there. 285. Relying upon a process of reasoning like this, and the de- ductions flowing therefrom. Lieutenant De Haven, when he w^ent in command of the American expedition in search of Sir John Franklin and his companions, was told, in his letter of instruc- tions, to look, when he should get well up into Wellington Chan- nel, for an open sea to the northward and w^estward. He looked, and saw in that direction a " water sky." Captain Penny after- ward w^ent there, found open water, and sailed upon it. 286. The open sea in the Arctic Ocean is probably not always in the same place, as the Gulf Stream (§ 54) is not always in one place. It probably is always where the waters of the under cur- rent are brought to the surface ; and this, we may imagine, would depend upon the freedom of ingress for the under current. Its course may, perhaps, be modified more or less by the ice on the THE OPEN SEA IN THE ARCTIC OCEAN. 149 surface, by changes, from whatever cause, in the course or ve- locity of the surface current, for obviously the under current could not bring more water into the frozen ocean than the surface cur- rent would carry out again, either as ice or water. 287. Every winter, an example of how very close w^arm water in the sea and a very severe climate on the land or the ice may be to each other, is afforded to us in the case of the Gulf Stream, and the Labrador-like climate of New England, Nova Scotia, and Newfoundland. In these countries, in winter, the thermometer frequently sinks far below zero, notwithstanding that the tepid waters of the Gulf Stream may be found with their summer tem- perature within one good day's sail of these very, very cold places. 150 THE PHYSICAL GEOGRAPHY OF THE SEA. CHAPTER VIII. THE SALTS OF THE SEA. What the Salt in the Sea Water has to do with the Currents in the Ocean, ^ 289. — Reasons for supposing the Sea to have its system of Circulation, 290. — Arguments furnished by Coral Islands, 293. — What would be the Effect of no system of Cir- culation for Sea Water 1 295. — Its Components, 297. — The principal Agents from which Dynamical Force in the Sea is derived, 300. — Illustration, 302. — Sea and Fresh Water have different Laws of Expansion, 308. — The Gulf Stream could not exist in a Sea of fresh Water, 309. — The effect of Evaporation in producing Cur- rents, 310. — Hov^ the Polar Sea is supplied with Salt, 323. — The Influence of this under Current upon open Water in the Frozen Ocean, 326. — Sea Shells : The Influence exerted by them upon Currents, 330. — Order among them, 335. — They assist in regulating Climates, 336. — How Sea Shells and Salts act as Compensa- tions in the Machinery by which Oceanic Circulation is conducted, 339. — Whence come the Salts of the Sea ^ 344. 288. In order to comprehend aright the currents of the sea, and to study with advantage its physical adaptations, it is necessary to Understand the effects produced by the salts of the sea upon the equilibrium of its waters ; for wherever equilibrium be destroyed^ whether in the air or water (§ 276), it is restored by motion, and motion among fluid particles gives rise to currents, w^hich, in turn, constitute circulation. This chapter is therefore added as a sort of supplement, which will assist us in elucidating w^hat has been advanced concerning the currents of the sea. 289. The question is often asked, "Why is the sea salt?" I think it can be shown that the circulation of the ocean depends, in a great measure, upon the salts of sea water ; certainly its in- fluences upon climate are greatly extended by reason of its salt- ness. As a general rule, the sea is nearly of a uniform degree of salt- ness, and the constituents of sea w^ater are as constant in their proportions as are the components of the atmosphere. It is true that we sometimes come across arms of the sea, or places in the ocean, where we find the water more salt or less salt than sea THE SALTS OF THE SEA. 151 water is generally ; but this circumstance is due to local causes of easy explanation. For instance : when we come to an arm of the sea, as the Red Sea (^ 238), upon which it never rains, and from which the atmosphere is continually abstracting, by evapor- ation, fresh water from the salt, we may naturally expect to find a greater proportion of salt in the sea water that remains than we do near the mouth of some great river, as the Amazon, or in the regions of constant precipitation, or other parts where it rains toore than it evaporates. Therefore we do not find sea water from all parts of the ocean actually of the same degree of salt- ness, yet we do find, as in the case of the Red Sea, sea water that is continually giving off to evaporation fresh water in large quan- tities ; nevertheless, for such water there is a degree, and a very moderate degree, of saltness which is a maximum ; and we more- over find that, though the constituents of sea water, like those of the atmosphere, are not for every place invariably the same as to their proportions, yet they are the same, or nearly the same, as to their character. 290. When, therefore, we take into consideration the fact that, as a general rule, sea water is, with the exceptions above stated, every where and always the same, and that it can only be made so by being well shaken together, we find grounds on which to base the conjecture that the ocean has its system of circulation, which is probably as complete and not less wonderful than is the circulation of blood through the human system. In order to investigate the currents of the sea, and to catch a glimpse of the laws by which the circulation of its waters is gov- erned, hypothesis, in the present meagre state of absolute knowl- edge with regard to the subject, seems to be as necessary to prog- ress as is a corner-stone to a building. To make progress with such investigations, we want something to build upon. In the ab- sence of facts, w^e are sometimes^permitted to suppose them ; only, in supposing them, we should take not only the possible, but the probable ; and in making the selection of the various hypotheses which are suggested, we are bound to prefer that one by which the greatest number of phenomena can be reconciled. When we have found, tried, and offered such an one, we are entitled to claim for it a respectful consideration at least, until we discover it lead- ing us into some palpable absurdity, or until some other hypoth- 152 THE PHYSICAL GEOGRAPHY OF THE SEA. esis be suggested which will account equally as well, but for a greater number of phenomena. Then, as honest searchers after truth, we should be ready to give up the former, adopt the latter, and to try it until some other better than either of the two be of- fered. 291. With this understanding, I venture to offer an hypothesis with regard to the agency of the salts or solid matter of the sea in imparting dynamical force to the waters of the ocean, and to suggest that one of the purposes which, in the grand design, it was probably intended to accomplish by having the sea salt, and not fresh, was to impart to its waters the forces and powers necessary to make their circulation complete. In the first place, we do but conjecture when we say that there is a set of currents in the sea by which its waters are conveyed from place to place with regularity, certainty, and order. But this conjecture appears to be founded on reason ; for if we take a sample of water which shall fairly represent, in the proportion of its constituents, the average w^ater of the Pacific Ocean, and ana- lyze it, and if we do the same by a similar sample from the At- lantic, we shall find the analysis of the one to resemble that of the other as closely as though the tw^o samples had been taken from the same bottle after having been well shaken. How, then, shall we account for this, unless upon the supposition that sea water from one part of the world is, in the process of time, brought into contact and mixed up with sea water from all other parts of the world ? Agents, therefore, it would seem, are at work, which shake up the waters of the sea as though they were in a bottle, and which, in the course of time, mingle those that are in one part of the ocean with those that are in another as thoroughly and com- pletely as it is possible for man to do in a vessel of his own con- struction. 292. This fact, as to uniformity of components, appears to call for the hypothesis that sea water which to-day is in one part of the ocean, will, in the process of time, be found in another part the most remote. It must, therefore, be carried about by cur- rents ; and as these currents have their offices to perform in the terrestrial economy, they probably do not flow by chance, but in obedience to physical laws ; they no doubt, therefore, maintain the order and preserve the harmony which characterize every de- THE SALTS OF THE SEA. I53 partment of God's handiwork, upon the threshold of which man has as yet been permitted to stand, to observe, and to compre- hend. 293. Nay, having reached this threshold, and taken a survey of the surrounding ocean, we are ready to assert, with all the confi- dence of knowledge, that the sea has a system of circulation for its waters. We rest this assertion upon our faith in the physical adaptations with which the sea is invested. Take, for example, the coral islands, reefs, beds, and atolls with which the Pacific Ocean is studded and garnished. They were built up of materials which a certain kind of insect quarried from the sea w^ater. The cur- rents of the sea ministered to this little insect — they were its hod carriers ; when fresh supplies of solid matter were wanted for the coral rock upon which the foundations of the Polynesian Islands W'ere laid, they brought them ; the obedient currents stood ready with fresh supplies in unfailing streams of sea water from which the solid ingredients had not been secreted. Now, unless the cur- rents of the sea had been employed to carry off from this insect the waters that had been emptied by it of their lime, and to bring to it others charged with more, it is evident the little creature would have perished for want of food long before its task w^as half completed. But for currents, it would have been impaled in a nook of the very drop of water in which it was spawned ; for it would have soon secreted the lime contained in this drop of wa- ter, and then, without the ministering aid of currents to bring it more, it would have perished for the want of food for itself and materials for its edifice ; and thus, but for the benign currents which took this exhausted water away, there we perceive this emptied drop would have remained, not only as the grave of the little architect, but as a monument in attestation of the shocking monstrosity that there had been a failure in the sublime system of terrestrial adaptations — that the sea had not been adapted by its Creator to the well-being of all its inhabitants. Now we do know that its adaptations are suited to all the wants of every one of its inhabitants — to the wants of the coral insect as well as to those of the whale. Hence we say ice know that the sea has its system of circulation, for it transports materials for the coral rock from one part of the world to another ; its currents receive them from the rivers, and hand them over to the little mason for the struct- 154 THE PHYSICAL GEOGRAPHY OF THE SEA. ure of the most stupendous works of solid masonry that man has ever seen — the coral islands of tlie sea. 294. And thus, by a process of reasoning which is perfectly philosophical, we are irresistibly led. to conjecture that there are regular and certciin, if not appointed channels, through which the water travels from one part of the ocean to another, and that those channels belong to an arrangement which may make, and, for aught we know to the contrary, which does make the system of oceanic circulation as complete, as perfect, and as harmonious as is that of the atmosphere or the blood. Every drop of water in the sea is as obedient to law and order as are the members of the heavenly host in the remotest regions of space. For when the morning stars sang together in the almighty anthem, "the waves also lifted up their voice ;" and doubtless, therefore, the harmony in the depths of the ocean is in tune with that which comes from the spheres above. We can not doubt it ; for, w^ere it not so, were there no channels of circulation from one ocean to another, and if, accordingly, the waters of the Atlantic were confined to the Atlantic, or if the waters of the arms and seas of the Atlantic w^ere confined to those arms and seas, and had no channels of circulation by which they could pass out into the ocean, and trav- erse different latitudes and climates — if this were so, then the ma- chinery of the ocean w^ould be as incomplete as that of a watch without a balance-wheel ; for the waters of these arms and seas would, as to their constituents, become, in the process of time, very different from the sea waters in other parts of the world, and their inhabitants would perish for the want of brine of the right strength or of water of the right temperature. 295. For instance, take the Red Sea and the Mediterranean by way of illustration. Upon the Red Sea there is no precipitation ; it is a rainless region ; not a river runs down to it, not a brook empties into it ; therefore there is no process by which the salts and washings of the earth, which are taken up and held in solution by rain or river w^ater, can be brought down into the Red Sea. Its salts come from the ocean, and the air takes up from it, in the process of evaporation, fresh water, leaving behind all the solid matter which this sea holds in solution (^ 239). 296. On the other hand, numerous rivers discharge into the Mediterranean, some of which are filtered through soils and among THE SALTS OF THE SEA. 155 minerals which yield one kind of salts or soluble matter, another river runs through a limestone or volcanic region of country, and brings down in solution solid matter — it may be common salt, sulphate or carbonate of lime, magnesia, soda, potash, or iron — - either or all may be in its waters. Still, the constituents of sea water from the Mediterranean and of sea water from the Red Sea are quite the same. But the waters of the Dead Sea have no con- nection with those of the ocean ; they are cut off from its channels of circulation, and are therefore quite different, as to their com- ponents, from any arm, frith, or gulf of the broad ocean. Its in- habitants are also different from those of the high seas. 297. " The solid constituents of sea water amount to about 3| per cent, of its weight, or nearly half an ounce to the pound. Its saltness may be considered as a necessary result of the present order of things. Rivers which are constantly flowing into the ocean contain salts, varying from ten to fifty, and even one hund- red grains per gallon. They are chiefly common salt, sulphate and carbonate of lime, magnesia,*soda, potash, and iron ; and these are found to constitute the distinguishing characteristics of sea water. The water wdiich evaporates from the sea is nearly pure, containing but very minute traces of salts. Falling as rain upon the land, it washes the soil, percolates through the rocky layers, and becomes charged with saline substances, which are borne sea- ward by the returning currents. The ocean, therefore, is the great depository of every thing that water can dissolve and carry down from the surface of the continents ; and, as there is no chan- nel for their escape, they of course consequently accumulate."! 298„ "'The case of the sea," says Fowner, ''is but a magnified representation of what occurs in every lake into which rivers flow, but from wdiich there is no outlet except by evaporation. Such a lake is invariably a salt lake. It is impossible that it can be otherwise ; and it is curious to observe that this condition disap- pears when an artificial outlet is produced for the waters." 299, How, therefore, shall we account for this sameness of compound, this structure of coral (^ 293), this stabihty as to ani- mal life in the sea, but upon the supposition of a general system of circulation in the ocean, by which, in process of time, water from one part is conveyed to another part the most remote, and * See Appendix E. f Youmans's Chemistry. 156 THE PHYSICAL GEOGRAPHY OF THE SEA. by which a general interchange and comminghng of the waters take place? In like manner, the constituents of the atmosphere, whether it be analyzed at the equator or the poles, are the same. By cutting off and shutting up from the general channels of cir- culation any portion of sea water, as in the Dead Sea, or of at- mospheric air, as in mines or wells, we can easily fill either with gases or other matter that shall very much affect its character, or alter the proportion of its ingredients, and affect the health of its inhabitants. 300. The principal agents that are supposed to be concerned in giving circulation to the atmosphere, and m preserving the ratio among its components, are light, heat, electricity, and magnetism (^ 231). But with regard to the sea, it is not known what office is performed by electricity and magnetism, in giving dynamical force to its waters in their system of circulation. The chief mo- tive power from which marine currents derive their velocity has been ascribed to heat ; but a close study of the agents concerned has suggested that an important — nay, a pow^erful and active agen- cy in the system of oceanic circulation is derived from the salts of the sea w^ater, through the instrumentality of the winds, of marine plants, and animals. These give the ocean great dynamical force, 301. Let us, for the sake of illustrating and explaining this force, suppose the sea in all its parts — in its depths and at the surface, at the equator and about the poles — to be of one uniform temperature, and to be all of fresh water ; and, moreover, that there be neither wind to disturb its surface, nor tides nor rains to raise the level in this part, or to depress it in that. In this case, there w^ould be nothing of heat to disturb its equilibrium, and there would be no motive power (§ 288) to beget currents, or to set the water in motion by reason of the difference of level or of specific gravity due to water at different densities and temperatures. 302. Now let us suppose the winds, for the first time since the creation, to commence to blow upon this quiescent sea, and to ruffle its surface ; they, by their force, w^ould create partial sur- face currents, and thus agitating the waters to a certain depth, would give rise to a feeble and partial aqueous circulation in the supposed sea of fresh water. 303. This, then, is one of the sources w^hence power is given to the system of oceanic circulation ; but, though a feeble one^ it THE SALTS OF THE SEA. I57 is one which exists in reality, and, therefore, need not be regard- ed as hypothetical 304. Let us next call in evaporation and precipitation, with heat and cold — more powerful agents. Suppose the evaporation to commence from this imaginary fresh-water ocean, and to go on as it does from the seas as they are. In those regions, as in the trade-wind regions, where evaporation is in excess of precipitation (^ 126), the general level of this supposed sea would be altered, and, immediately, as much water as is carried off by evaporation would commence to flow in from north and south toward the trade-wind or evaporating region, to restore the level. 305. On the other hand, the winds have taken this vapor, borne it off to the extra-tropical regions, and precipitated it (§ 129), we will suppose, where precipitation is in excess of evaporation. Here is another alteration of sea level by elevation instead of by depres- sion ; and hence we have the motive power for a surface current from each pole toward the equator, the object of which is only to supply the demand for evaporation in the trade-wind regions — de- mand for evaporation being taken here to mean the difference be- tween evaporation and precipitation for any part of the sea. 306. Now imagine this sea of uniform temperature (§ 301) to be suddenly stricken with the invisible wand of heat and cold, and its waters brought to the various temperatures at which they at this instant are standing. This change of temperature would make a change of specific gravity in the waters, which would de- stroy the equilibrium of the whole ocean, upon which (§ 275) a set of currents (^ 277) would immediately commence to flow, viz., a current of cold and heavy water to the warm, and a current of warm and lighter to the cold. The motive power of these would be difference of specific grav- ity due to difference of temperature in fresh water. 307. We have now traced (§ 303 and 306) the effect of two agents, which, in a sea of fresh w^ater, would tend to create cur^ rents, and to beget a system of aqueous circulation ; but a set of currents and a system of circulation which, it is readily perceived^ would be quite different from those which we find in the salt sea. One of these agents would be employed (§ 305) in restoring, by means of one or more polar currents, the water that is taken from one part of the ocean by evaporation, and deposited in another by 158 THE PHYSICAL GEOGRAPHY OF THE SEA. precipitation. The other agent would be employed in restoring, by the forces due difference of specific gravity (^ 306), the equi- librium, which has been disturbed by heating, and of course ex- panding, the waters of the torrid zone on one hand, and by cool- ing, and consequently contracting, those of the frigid zone on the other. This agency would, if it were not modified by others, find expression in a system of currents and counter currents, or rather in a set of surface currents of warm and light water, from the equator toward the poles, and in another set of under currents of cooler, dense, and heavy water from the poles toward the equator. 308. Such, keeping out of view the influence of the winds, which w^e may suppose would be the same, whether the sea were salt or fresh, would be the system of oceanic circulation were the sea all of fresh water. But fresh water, in cooling, begins to expand near the temperature of 40°, and expands more and more till it reaches the freezing point, and ceases to be fluid. This law of expansion by cooling would impart a peculiar feature to the system of oce- anic circulation were the waters all fresh, which it is not neces- sary to notice further than to say it can not exist in seas of salt w^ater, for salt water (^31) contracts as its temperature is lower- ed to its freezing point. Hence, in consequence of its salts, changes of temperature derive increased power to disturb the equi- librium of the ocean. 309. If this train of reasoning be good, we may infer that, in a system of oceanic circulation, the dynamical force to be derived from diff"erence of temperature, where the waters are all fresh, would be quite feeble ; and that, were the sea not salt, we should probably have no such current in it as the Gulf Stream. So far we have been reasoning hypothetically, to show what would be the chief agents, exclusive of the winds, in disturbing the equilibrium of the ocean, were its w^aters fresh and not salt. And whatever disturbs equilibrium there may be regarded as the pri- mum mobile in any system of marine currents. Let us now proceed another step in the process of explaining and illustrating the effect of the salts of the sea in the system of oceanic circulation. To this end, let us suppose this imaginary ocean of fresh water suddenly to become that which we have, viz., an ocean of salt water, which contracts as its temperature is low- ered (§ 308) till it reaches 28° or thereabout. THE SALTS OF THE SEA. I59 310. Let evaporation now commence in the trade-wind region, as it was supposed to do (§ 304) in the case of the fresh-water seas, and as it actually goes on in nature — and what takes place ? Why, a lowering of the sea level, as before. But as the vapor of salt water is fresh, or nearly so, fresh water only is taken up from the ocean ; that which remams behind is therefore more salt. Thus, while the level is lowered in the salt sea, the equilibrium is destroyed because of the saltness of the water ; for the water that remains after the evaporation takes place is, on account of the solid matter held in solution, specifically heavier than it was be- fore any portion of it was converted into vapor. 311. The vapor is taken from the surface water; the surface water thereby becomes more salt, and, under certain conditions, heavier ; when it becomes heavier it sinks ; and hence we have, due to the salts of the sea, a vertical circulation, viz., a descent of heavier — because Salter and cooler — vvater from the surface, and an ascent of water that is lighter — because it is not so salt — from the depths below. 312. This vapor, then, which is taken up from the evaporating regions (^ 126), is carried by the winds through their channels of circulation, and poured back into the ocean where the regions of precipitation are ; and by the regions of precipitation I mean those parts of the ocean, as in the polar basins, where the ocean receives more fresh water in the shape of rain, snow^, &c., than it returns to the atmosphere in the shape of vapor. 313. In the precipitating regions, therefore, the level is de- stroyed, as before explained, by elevation ; and in the evaporating regions, by depression ; w^hich, as already stated (^ 305), gives rise to a system of surface currents, moved by gravity alone, from the poles toward the equator. But we are now considering the effects of evaporation and pre- cipitation in giving impulse to the circulation of the ocean w^here its waters are salt. 314. The fresh water that has been taken from the evaporating regions is deposited upon those of precipitation, which, for illus- tration merely, we will locate in the north polar basin. Among the sources of supply of fresh water for this basin we must in- clude not only the precipitation which takes place over the basin itself, but also the amount of fresh water discharged into it by the 150 THE PHYSICAL GEOGRAPHY OF THE SEA. rivers of the great hydrographical basins of Arctic Europe, Asia, and America. 315. This fresh water, being emptied into the Polar Sea and agitated by the winds, becomes mixed with the salt ; but as the agitation of the sea by the winds extends to no great depth (§ 302), it is only the upper layer of salt water, and that to a moderate depth, which becomes mixed with the fresh. The specific grav> ity of this upper layer, therefore, is diminished just as much as the specific gravity of the sea water in the evaporating regions was increased. And thus we have a surface current of saltish water from the poles toward the equator, and an under current of water Salter and heavier from the equator to the poles. This under current supplies, in a great measure, the salt which the upper current, freighted with fresh water from the clouds and riv- ers, carries back. 316. Thus it is to the salts of the sea that we owe that feature in the system of oceanic circulation which causes an under cur- rent to flow from the Mediterranean into the Atlantic (§ 252), and another (^ 245) from the Red Sea into the Indian Ocean. And it is evident, since neither of these seas is salting up, that just as much, or nearly just as much salt as the under current brings out, just so much the upper currents carry in. 317. We now begin to perceive what a powerful impulse is de- rived from the salts of the sea in giving efTective and active cir- culation to its waters. 318. Hence w^e infer that the currents of the sea, by reason of its saltness, attain their maximum of volume and velocity. Hence, too, we infer that the transportation of warm water from the equa- tor toward the frozen regions of the poles, and of cold water from the frigid toward the torrid zone, is facilitated ; and consequently here, in the saltness of the sea, have we not an agent by which climates are mitigated — by which they are softened and rendered much more salubrious than it would be possible for them to be were the waters of the ocean deprived of their property of saltness? 319. This property of saltness imparts to the waters of the ocean another peculiarity, by which the sea is still better adapted for the regulation of climates, and it is this : by evaporating fresh water from the salt in the tropics, the surface water becomes heavier than the average of sea water (§ 127). This heavy wa- THE SALTS OF THE SEA. 161 ter is also warm water ; it sinks, and being a good retainer, but a bad conductor of heat, this warm water is employed in transport- ing through under currents heat for the mitigation of chmates in far-distant regions. Now this also is a property which a sea of fresh water could not have. Let the winds take up their vapor from a sheet of fresh water, and that at the bottom is not disturb- ed, for there is no change in the specific gravity of that at the sur- face by which that at the bottom may be brought to the top ; but let evaporation go on, though never so gently, from salt water, and the specific gravity of that at the top will soon be so changed as to bring that from the very low^est depths of the sea speedily to the top. 320. If these inferences as to the influence of the salts upon the currents of the sea be correct, the same cause which produces an under current from the Mediterranean, and an under current from the Red Sea into the ocean, should produce an under current from the ocean into the north Polar basin. In each case, the hy- pothesis with regard to the part performed by the salt, in giving vigor to the system of oceanic circulation, requires that, counter to the surface current of water with less salt, there should be an under current of water with more salt in it. That such is the case w^ith regard both to the Mediterranean and the Red Sea, has been amply shown in other parts of this work {^ 252 and 239), and abundantly proved. by other observers. 321. That there is a constant current setting out of the Arctic Ocean through Davis's and other straits thereabout, which con- nect it with the Atlantic Ocean, is generally admitted. Lieuten- ant De Haven, United States Navy, when in command of the American expedition in search of Sir John Franklin, was frozen up with his vessels in the main channel of Welhngton Straits ; and during the nine months that he was so frozen, his vessels, holding their place in the ice, were drifted with it bodily for more than a thousand miles toward the south. The ice in which they were bound was of sea water, and the currents by which they were drifted were of sea water — only, it may be supposed, the latter were not quite so salt as the sea wa- ter generally is. The same phenomenon is repeated in the Sound, where (§ 252) an under current of salt water runs in, and an upper current of brackish water (§ 36 and 51) runs out. L 162 THE PHYSICAL GEOGRAPHY OF THE SEA. 322. Then, since there is salt always flowing out of the north polar basin, we infer that there must be salt always flowing into it, else it would either become fresh, or the whole Atlantic Ocean would be finally silted up with salt. It might be supposed, were there no evidence to the contrary, that this salt was supplied to the Polar seas from the Atlantic around North Cape, and from the Pacific through Behring's Straits, and through no other channels. 323. But, fortunately, Arctic voyagers, who have cruised in the direction of Davis's Straits, have afforded us, by their observations (^ 281), proof positive as to the fact of this other source for sup- plying the Polar seas with salt. They tell us of an under current setting from the Atlantic toward the Polar basin. They describe huge icebergs, with tops high up in the air, and of course the bases of which extend far down into the depths of the ocean, rip- ping and tearing their w^ay, with terrific force and awful violence, through the surface ice or against a surface current, on their way into the Polar basin. Passed Midshipman S. P. Griflin, who commanded the brig Rescue in the American searching expedition after Sir John Franklin, informs me that, on one occasion, the tw^o vessels were endeavoring, when in Baffin's Bay, to warp up to the northward against a strong surface current, which of course was setting to the south ; and that while so engaged, an iceberg, with its top many feet above the water, came " drifting up" from the south, and passed by them " like a shot." Although they were stem- ming a surface current against both the berg and themselves, such was the force and velocity of the under current, that it carried the berg to the northward faster than the crew could warp the vessel against a surface but counter current. Captain Duncan, master of the English whale-ship Dundee, says, at page 76 of his interesting little narrative :* ''' December ISth (1826). It was awful to behold the immense icebergs working their way to the northeast from us, and not one drop of water to be seen ; they were working themselves right through the middle of the ice." And again, at page 92, &c. : * Arctic Regions ; Voyage to Davis's Strait, by Dorea Duncan, Master of the Ship Dundee, 1836, 1827. THE SALTS OF THE SEA. 163 *' February 2Sd. Latitude 68° 37' north, longitude about 63^ west. " The dreadful apprehensions that assailed us yesterday, by the near approach of the iceberg, were this day most awfully ver- ified. About three P.M., the iceberg came in contact with our floe, and in less than one minute it broke the ice ; we were frozen in quite close to the shore ; the floe was shivered to pieces for several miles, causing an explosion like an earthquake, or one hundred pieces of heavy ordnance fired at the same moment. The iceberg, with awful but majestic grandeur (in height and di- mensions resembling a vast mountain), came almost up to our stern, and every one expected it would have run over the ship " The iceberg, as before observed, came up very near to the stern of our ship ; the intermediate space between the berg and the vessel was filled with heavy masses of ice, which, though they had been previously broken by the immense weight of the berg, were again formed into a compact body by its pressure. The berg w^as drifting at the rate of about four knots, and by its force on the mass of ice, was pushing the ship before it, as it ap- peared, to inevitable destruction." " Feb. 24:tJi. The iceberg still in sight, but driving away fast to the northeast." " Feb. 25th, The iceberg that so lately threatened our destruc- tion had driven completely out of sight to the northeast from us." 324. Now, then, whence, unless from the difference of specific gravity due sea water of diflferent degrees of saltness, can we de- rive a motive power with force sufl^icient to give such tremendous masses of ice such a velocity ? 325. What is the temperature of this under current? Be that what it may, it is probably above the freezing point of sea water. Suppose it to be at 32°. (Break through the ice in the northern seas, and the temperature of the surface water is always 28°. At least Lieutenant De Haven so found it in his long imprisonment, and it may be supposed that, as it was with him, so it generally is.) Assuming, then, the water of the surface current which runs out with the ice to be all at 28°, we observe that it is not unreas- onable to suppose that the water of the under current, inasmuch as it comes from the south, and therefore from warmer latitudes. 164 THE PHYSICAL GEOGRAPHY OF THE SEA. IS probably not so cold ; and if it be not so cold, its temperature, before it comes out again, must be reduced to 28°, or whatever be the average temperature of the outer but surface current. Moreover, if it be true, as some philosophers have suggested, that there is in the depths of the ocean a line from the equator to the poles along which the water is of the same temperature all the way, then the question may be asked. Should we not have in the depths of the ocean a sort of isothermal floor, as it were, on the upper side of which all the changes of temperature are due to agents acting from above, and on the lower side of which, the changes, if any, are due to agents acting from below ? 326. This under Polar current water, then, as it rises to the top, and is brought to the surface by the agitation of the sea in the Arctic regions, gives out its surplus heat and warms the at- mosphere there till the temperature of this warm under current water is lowered to the requisite degree for going out on the sur- face. Hence the water-sky of those regions. 327. And the heat that it loses in falling from its normal tem- perature, be that what it may, till it reaches the temperature of 23°, is so much caloric set free in the Polar regions, to temper the air and mitigate the climate there. Now is not this one of those modifications of climate which may be fairly traced back to the effect of the saltness of the sea in giving energy to its circula- tion? Moreover, if there be a deep sea in the Polar basin, which serves as a receptacle for the w^aters brought into it by this under cur- rent, which, because it comes from toward the equatorial regions, comes from a milder climate, and is therefore warmer, we can easily imagine why there might be an open sea in the Polar re- gions— why Lieutenant De Haven, in his instructions, was direct- ed to look for it ; and why both he and Captain Penny, of one of the English searching vessels, found it there. 323. And in accounting for this polynia, we see that its exist- ence is not only consistent with the hypothesis with wdiich we set out, touching a perfect system of oceanic circulation, but that it may be ascribed, in a great degree at least, if not wholly, to the effect produced by the salts of the sea upon the mobility and cir- culation of its waters. Here, then, is an office which the sea performs in the economy THE SALTS OF TPIE SEA. 165 oi the universe by virtue of its saltness, and wiiich it could not perform were its waters altogether fresh. And thus philosophers have a clew placed in their hands which will probably guide them to one of the many hidden reasons that are embraced in the true answer to the question, " Why is the sea salt ?" 329. Sea Shells. — We find in sea water other matter besides common salt. Lime is dissolved by the rains and the rivers, and emptied in vast quantities into the ocean. Out of it, coral islands and coral reefs of great extent — marl-beds, shell-banks, and in- fusorial deposits of enormous magnitude have been constructed by the inhabitants of the deep. These creatures are endowed with the power of secreting, apparently for their own purposes only, solid matter, which the waters of the sea hold in solution. But this power was given to them that they also might fulfill the part assigned them in the economy of the universe. For to them., probably, has been allotted the important office of assisting in giving circulation to the ocean, of helping to regulate the cli- mates of the earth, and of preserving the purity of the sea. 330. The better to comprehend how such creatures m^ay influ- ence currents and climates, let us suppose the ocean to be per- fectly at rest — that throughout, it is in a state of complete equi- librium— that, with the exception of those tenants of the deep which have the power of extracting from it the solid matter held in solution, there is no agent in nature capable of disturbing that equilibrium — and that all these fish, &c., have suspended their se- cretions, in order that this state of a perfect aqueous equilibrium and repose throughout the sea might be attained. In this state of things — the waters of the sea being in perfect equilibrium — a single mollusk or coralline, we will suppose, com- mences his secretions, and abstracts from the sea water (§ 293) solid matter for his cell. In that act, this animal has destroyed the equilibrium of the whole ocean, for the specific gravity of that portion of water from which this solid matter has been ab- stracted is altered. Having lost a portion of its solid contents, it has become specifically lighter than it was before ; it must, there- fore, give place to the pressure which the heavier water exerts to push it aside and to occupy its place, and it must consequently travel about and mingle with the waters of the other parts of the ocean until its proportion of solid matter is returned to it, and 166 THE PHYSICAL GEOGRAPHY OF THE SEA. until it attains the exact degree of specific gravity due sea water generally. 331. How much solid matter does the whole host of marine plants and animals abstract from sea water daily ? Is it a thou- sand pounds, or a thousand millions of tons ? No one can say. But, whatever be its weight, it is so much of the power of gravity applied to the dynamical forces of the ocean. And this power is derived from the salts of the sea, through the agency of sea-shells and other marine animals, that of themselves scarcely possess the power of locomotion. Yet they have power to put the whole sea in motion, from the equator to the poles, and from top to bottom. 332. Those powerful and strange equatorial currents (§ 270), which navigators tell us they encounter in the Pacific Ocean, to what are they due ? Coming from sources unknown, they are lost in the midst of the ocean. They are due, no doubt, to some extent, to the effects of precipitation and evaporation, and the change of heat produced thereby. But we have yet to inquire. How far may they be due to the derangement of equilibrium aris- ing from the change of specific gravity caused by the secretions of the myriads of marine animals that are continually at work in those parts of the ocean ? These abstract from sea water solid matter enough to build continents of. And, also, we have to in- (luire as to the extent to which equilibrium in the sea is disturbed by the salts which evaporation leaves behind. Thus, when we consider the salts of the sea in one point of view, we see the winds and the marine animals operating upon the waters, and, in certain parts of the ocean, deriving from the solid contents of the same those very principles of antagonistic forces which hold the earth in its orbit, and preserve the harmo- nies of the universe. In another point of virw, we see how the sea-breeze and the sea-shell, in performing their appointed offices, act so as to give rise to a reciprocating motion in the waters ; and thus they impart to the ocean dynamical forces also for its circulation. 333. The sea-breeze plays upon the surface ; it converts only fresh water into vapor, and leaves the solid matter behind. The surface water thus becomes specifically heavier, and sinks. On the other hand, the little marine architect below, as he works upon his coral edifice at the bottom, abstracts from the water THE SALTS OF THE SEA. 167 there a portion of its solid contents ; it therefore becomes spe- cifically lighter, and up it goes, ascending to the top with in- creased velocity, to take the place of the descending column, which, by the action of the winds, has been sent down loaded with fresh food and materials for the busy little mason in the depths below. 334. Seeing, then, that the inhabitants of the sea, with their powers of secretion, are competent to exercise at least some de- gree of influence in disturbing equilibrium, are not these crea- tures entitled to be regarded as agents which have their offices to perform in the system of oceanic circulation, and do not they be- long to its physical geography ? It is immaterial how great or how small that influence may be supposed to be ; for, be it great or small, we may rest assured it is not a chance influence, but it is an influence exercised — if exercised at all — by design, and ac- cording to the commandment of Him whose "voice the winds and the sea obey." Thus God speaks through sea-shells to the ocean, 335. It may therefore be supposed that the arrangements in the economy of nature are such as to require that the various kinds of marine animals, w^hose secretions are calculated to alter the specific gravity of sea water, to destroy its equilibrium, to be- get currents in the ocean, and to control its circulation, should be distributed according to order. 336. Upon this supposition — the like of which nature warrants throughout her whole domain — we may conceive how the marine animals of which we have been speaking may impress other fea- tures upon the physical relations of the sea by assisting also to regulate chmates, and to adjust the temperature of certain lati- tudes. For instance, let us suppose the waters in a certain part of the torrid zone to be 70°, but, by reason of the fresh water which has been taken from them in a state of vapor, and conse- quently by reason of the proportionate increase of salts, these wa- ters are heavier than w^aters that may be cooler, but not so salt (^ 35). This being the case, the tendency would be for this warm, but salt and heavy water, to flow off" as an under current tov/ard the Polar or some other reo^ions of lia:hter water. Now if the sea were not salt, there w^ould be no coral islands to beautify its landscape and give variety to its features ; sea- 168 THE PHYSICAL GEOGRAPHY OF THE SEA. shells and marine insects could not operate upon the specific grav- ity of its waters, nor give variety to its climates ; neither could evaporation give dynamical force to its circulation, and they, ceas- ing to contract as their temperature falls below 40°, would give but little impulse to its currents, and thus its circulation would be torpid, and its bosom lack animation. 337. This under current may be freighted with heat to temper some hyperborean region or to soften some extra-tropical cli- mate (^ 64), for we know that such is among the effects of ma- rine currents. At starting, it might have been, if you please, so loaded with solid matter, that, though its temperature were 70°, yet, by reason of the quantity of such matter held in solution, its specific gravity might have been greater even than that of extra- tropical sea w^ater generally at 28°. 338. Notwithstanding this, it may be brought into contact, by the way, with those kinds and quantities of marine organisms that shall abstract solid matter enough to reduce its specific gravity, and, instead of leaving it greater than common sea water at 28°, make it less than common sea v.'ater at 40° ; consequently, in such a case, this warm sea water, when it comes to the cold lati- tudes, w^ould be brought to the surface through the instrumentality of shell-fish, and various other tribes that dwell far down in the depths of the ocean. Thus we perceive that these creatures, though they are regarded as being so low in the scale of creation, may nevertheless be regarded as agents of much importance in the terrestrial economy ; for we perceive that they are capable of spreading over certain parts of the ocean those benign mantles of v/armth which temper the winds, and modify, more or less, all the marine climates of the earth. 339. The makers of nice astronomical instruments, when they have put the different parts of their machinery together, and set it to work, find, as in the chronometer, for instance, that it is sub- ject in its performance to many irregularities and imperfections — that in one state of things there is expansion, and in another state contraction among cogs, springs, and wheels, with an increase or diminution of rate. This defect the makers have sought to over- come ; and, with a beautiful display of ingenuity, they have at- tached to the works of the instrument a contrivance which has had the effect of correcting these irregularities, by counteracting THE SALTS OF THE SEA. I59 the tendency of the mstrument to change its performance with the changing influences of temperature. This contriv^ance is called a compensation ; and a chronometer that is well regulated and properly compensated will perform its office with certainty, and preserve its rate under all the vicissi- tudes of heat and cold to which it may be exposed. 340. In the clock-work of the ocean and the machinery of the universe, order and regularity are maintained by a system of com- pensations. A celestial body, as it revolves around its sun, flies oflf under the influence of centrifugal force ; but immediately the forces of compensation begin to act ; the planet is brought back to its elliptical path, and held in the orbit for which its mass, its motions, and its distance were adjusted. Its compensa.tion is perfect. 341. So, too, with the salts and the shells of the sea in the ma- chinery of the ocean ; from them are derived principles of com- pensation the most perfect ; through their agency the undue ef- fects of heat and cold, of storm and rain, in disturbing the equi- librium, and producing thereby currents in the sea, are compen- sated, regulated, and controlled. 342. The dews, the rains, and the rivers are continually dis- solving certain minerals of the earth, and carrying them off' to the sea. This is an accumulating process ; and if it were not com- pensated, the sea would finally become as the Dead Sea is, sat- urated with salt, and therefore unsuitable for the habitation of many fish of the sea. The sea-shells and marine insects aflford the required compensa- tion. They are the conservators of the ocean. As the salts are emptied into the sea, these creatures secrete them again and pile them up in solid masses, to serve as the bases of islands and con- tinents, to be in the process of ages upheaved into dry land, and then again dissolved by the dews and rains, and washed by the rivers away into the sea. 343. The question as to whence the salts of the sea wxre orig- inally derived, of course has not escaped the attention of philoso- phers. Some have advanced the idea — Darwin, the poet, among others — that they came originally from the land, and were washed into the sea by the rivers and the rains. There seems to be plaus- ibility in this idea ; but there is reason for questioning it, as will 170 THE PHYSICAL GEOGRAPHY OF THE SEA. be seen by the arguments advanced and the facts stated in the Appendix to the second edition. 344. Thus we behold sea-shells and animalcula? in a new light. In every department of nature there is to be found this self-ad- justing principle — this beautiful and exquisite system of compen- sation, by which the operations of the grand machinery of the uni- verse are maintained in the most perfect order. [For another view of the origin of the salts of the sea, adopted upon more matured reflection, see Appendix F.] 344. Thus we behold sea-shells and animalcula^ in a new ho-ht. May we not now cease to regard them as beings which have little or nothing to do in maintaining the harmonies of creation ? On the contrary, do we not see in them the principles of the most ad- mirable compensation in the system of oceanic circulation ? We may even regard them as regulators, to some extent, of climates in parts of the earth far removed from their presence. There is something suggestive, both of the grand and the beautiful, in the idea that, while the insects of the sea are building up their coral islands in the perpetual summer of the tropics, they are also en- gaged in dispensing warmth to distant parts of the earth, and in mitigating the severe cold of the Polar winter. Surely an hypothesis which, being followed out, suggests so much design, such perfect order and arrangement, and so many beauties for contemplation and admiration as does this, which, for the want of a better, I have ventured to offer with regard to the solid matter of the sea water, its salts and its shells — surely such an hypothesis, though it be not based entirely on the results of actual observation, can not be regarded as wholly vain or as ah together profitless. (See Appendix G.) THE EQUATORIAL CLOUD-RING. 171 CHAPTER IX. THE EQUATORIAL CLOUD-RING. • Description of the Equatorial Doldrums, ^ 346. — Oppressive Weather, 348. — The Of- fices performed by Clouds in the terrestrial Economy, 349. — The Barometer and Thermometer under the Cloud-ring, 350. — Its Offices, 353. — How its Vapors arc brought by the Trade- Winds, 361. — Breadth of the Cloud-ring, 363. — How it would appear if seen from one of the Planets, 364. — Observations at Sea interest- ing, 368. 345. Seafaring people have, as if by common consent, divided the ocean off into regions, and characterized them according to the winds; e. g., there are the " trade -wind, regions^' the "varia- bles," the "horse latitudes," the 'doldrums/^ &c. The '^hoiGc latitudes" are the belts of calms and lighi airs {§ lOl) which bor der the Polar edge of the northeast trades. They were so called from the circumstance that vessels formerly bound from New En gland to the West Indies, with a deck load of horses, were often so delayed in this calm belt of Cancer, that, for the want of water for their animals, they were compelled to throw a portion of them overboard. 346. The *' equatorial doldrums'' is another of these calm places (§ 104). Besides being a region of calms and baffling winds^, it is a region noted for its rains and clouds, which make it one of the most oppressive and disagreeable places at sea. The emigran': ships from Europe for Australia have to cross it. They are often baffled in it for two or three weeks ; then the children and the passengers who are of delicate health suffer most. It is a fright- ful grave-yard on the way-side to that golden land. 347. A vessel bound into the southern hemisphere from Europe or America, after clearing the region of variable winds and cross- ing the '^ horse latitudes," enters the northeast trades. Here the mariner finds the sky sometimes mottled with clouds, but for the most part clear. Here, too, he finds his barometer rising and fall- ing under the ebb and flow of a regular atmospherical tide, which gives a high and low barometer every day with such regularity ^72 THE PHYSICAL GEOGRAPHY OF THE SEA. that the time of day within a few minutes may be told by it. The rise and fall of this tide, measured by the barometer, amounts to about one tenth (0.1) of an inch, and it occurs daily and every where betw^een the tropics ; the maximum about lOh. 30m. A.M., the minimum between 4h. and 5h. P.M., with a second maximum and minimum about 10 P.M. and 5 A.M.* The diurnal variation of the needle changes also with the turning of these invisible tides. Continuing his course toward the equinoctial line, he observes his thermometer to rise higher and higher as he approaches it ; at last, entering the region of equatorial calms and rains, he feels the weather to become singularly close and oppressive ; he discovers here that the elasticity of feeling which he breathed from the trade- wind air has forsaken him ; he has entered the doldrums, and is under the '' cloud -ring." Escaping from this gloomy region, and entering the southeast trades beyond, his spirits revive, and he turns to his log-book to see what changes are recorded there. He is surprised to find that, notwithstanding the oppressive weather of the rainy latitudes, both his thermometer and barometer stood, while in them, lower than in the clear weather on either side of them ; that just before entering and just before leaving the rainy parallels, the mercury of the thermometer and barometer invariably stands higher than it does when within them, even though they include the equator. In crossing the equatorial doldrums he has passed a ring of clouds that encircles the earth. 348. I find in the journal of the late Commodore Arthur Sin- clair, kept on board the Unicsd States frigate Congress during a cruise to South America in 1817-18, a picture of the weather under this cloud-ring that is singularly graphic and striking. He encountered it in the month of January, 1818, between the paral- lel of 4° north and the equator, and between the meridians of 1 9P and 23° west. He says of it : " This is certainly one of the most unpleasant regions in our globe. A dense, close atmosphere, except for a fevv^ hours after a thunder-storm, during which time torrents of rain fall, when the air becomes a little refreshed \ but a hot, glowing sun soon heats it again^ and but for your awnings, and the little air put in circu- * See paper on Meteorological Observations in India, by Colonel Sykes, Philosoph- ical Transactions for 1850, part 2d, page 297. THE EQUATORIAL CLOUD-RING. I73 lation by the continual flapping of the ship's sails, it would be al- most insufferable. No person who has not crossed this region can form an adequate idea of its unpleasant effects. You feel a degree of lassitude unconquerable, which not even the sea-bathing, which every where else proves so salutary and renovating, can dispel. Except when in actual danger of shipwreck, I never spent twelve more disagreeable days in the professional part of my life than in these calm latitudes, *'I crossed the line on the 17th of January, at eight A. M., in longitude 21° 20^, and soon found I had surmounted all the difficul- ties consequent to that event ; that the breeze continued to freshen and draw round to the south-southeast, bringing with it a clear sky and most heavenly temperature, renovating and refreshing be- yond description. Nothing was now to be seen but cheerful coun- tenances, exchanged as by enchantment from that sleepy sluggish- ness which had borne us all down for the last two weeks." 349. One need not go to sea to perceive the grand work v/hich the clouds perform in collecting moisture from the crystal vaults of the sky, in sprinkling it upon the fields, and making the hills glad with showers of rain. Winter and summer, " the clouds drop fatness upon the earth." This part of their office is obvious to all, and I do not propose to consider it now. But the sailor at sea ob- serves phenomena and witnesses operations in the terrestrial economy which tell him that, in the beautiful and exquisite ad- justments of the grand machinery of the atmosphere, the clouds have other important offices to perform besides those merely of dispensing showers, of producing the rains, and of weaving man- tles of snow for the protection of our fields in winter. As import- ant as are these offices, the philosophical mariner, as he changes his sky, is reminded that the clouds have commandments to ful- fill, which, though less obvious, are not therefore the less benign in their influences, or the less worthy of his notice. He beholds them at work in moderating the extremes of heat and cold, and in mitigating climates. At one time they spread themselves out ; they cover the earth as with a mantle ; they prevent radiation from its crust, and keep it warm. At another time, they interpose between it and the sun ; they screen it from his scorching rays, and protect the tender plants from his heat, the land from the drought ; or, like a garment, they overshadow the sea, defending its 174 THE PHYSICAL GEOGRAPHY OF THE SEA. waters from the intense forces of evaporation. Having performed these offices for one place, they are evaporated and given up to the sunbeam and the winds again, to be borne on their wings away to other places which stand in need of like offices. Familiar with clouds and sunshine, the storm and the calm, and all the phenomena which find expression in the physical geogra- phy of the sea, the right-minded mariner, as he contemplates " the cloud without rain," ceases to regard it as an empty thing ; he perceives that it performs many important offices ; he regards it as a great moderator of heat and cold — as a *' compensation" in the atmospherical mechanism which makes the performance of the grand machine perfect. 350. Marvelous are the offices and wonderful is the constitu- tion of the atmosphere. Indeed, I know of no subject more fit for profitable thought on the part of the truth-loving, knowledge- seeking student, be he seaman or landsman, than that afforded by the atmosphere and its offices. Of all parts of the physical ma- chinery, of all the contrivances in the mechanism of the universe, the atmosphere, with its offices and its adaptations, appears to me to be the most wonderful, subhme, and beautiful. In its construc- tion, the perfection of knowledge is involved. The perfect man of Uz, in a moment of inspiration, thus demands of his comfort- ers : " But where shall wisdom be found, and where is the place of understanding ? The depth saith, it is not in me ; and the sea saith, it is not with me. It can not be gotten for gold, neither shall silver be weighed for the price thereof. No mention shall be made of coral or of pearls, for the price of wisdom is above rubies. " Whence, then, cometh wisdom, and where is the place of un- derstanding ? Destruction and Death say, we have heard the fame thereof with our ears. " God understandeth the way thereof, and he knoweth the place thereof ; for he looketh to the ends of the earth, and seeth un- der the whole heaven; to make the loeightfor the loinds ; and he weigheth the waters by measure. When he made a decree for the rain, and a way for the lightning of the thunder ; then did he see it, and declare it ; he prepared it, yea, and searched it out."* When the pump-maker came to ask Galileo to explain how it was that his pump would not lift water higher than thirty-two * Job, chapter xxviii. THE EQUATORIAL CLOUD-RING. 175 feet, the philosopher thought, but was afraid to say, it was owing to the " weight of the winds ;" and though the fact that the air has weight is here so distinctly announced, philosophers never knew it until w^ithin comparatively a recent period, and then it was proclaimed by them as a great discovery. Nevertheless, the fact was set forth as distinctly in the book of nature as it is in the book of revelation ; for the infant, in availing itself of atmospherical pressure to suck the milk from its mother's breast, unconsciously proclaimed it. 351. Both the thermometer and the barometer (^ 347) stand lower under this cloud-ring than they do on either side of it. Af- ter having crossed it, and referred to the log-book to refresh his mind as to the observations there entered wdth regard to it, the at- tentive navigator may perceive how this belt of clouds, by screen- ing the parallels over w^hich he may have found it to hang from the sun's rays, not only promotes the precipitation which takes place within these parallels at certain periods, but how, also, the rains are made to change the places upon which they are to fall ; and how, by traveling with the calm belt of the equator up and down the earth, this cloud-ring shifts the surface from which the heating rays of the sun are to be excluded ; and how, by this op- eration, tone is given to the atmospherical circulation of the world, and vigor to its vegetation. Having traveled with the calm belt to the north or south, the cloud-ring leaves the sky about the equator clear ; the rays of the torrid sun pour down upon the crust of the earth there, and raise its temperature to a scorching heat. The atmosphere dances (§ 205-6), and the air is seen trembling in ascending and descend- ing columns, with busy eagerness to conduct the heat off and de- liver it to the regions aloft, where it is required to give momentum to the air in its general channels of circulation. The dry season continues ; the sun is vertical ; and finally the earth becomes parched and dry; the heat accumulates faster than the air can carry it away ; the plants begin to wither, and the animals to per- ish. Then comes the mitigating cloud-ring. The burning rays of the sun are intercepted by it. The place for the absorption and reflection, and the delivery to the atmosphere of the solar heat, is changed ; it is transferred from the upper surface of the earth to the upper surface of the clouds. 352. Radiation from the land and the sea below the cloud-belt 176 THE PHYSICAL GEOGRAPHY OF THE SEA. is thus interrapted, and the excess of heat in the earth is deUvered to the air, and by absorption carried up to the clouds, and there transferred to their vapors to prevent excess of precipitation. 353. In the mean time, the trade-winds north and south are pouring into this cloud-covered receiver, as the calm and rain-belt of the equator may be called, fresh supplies in the shape of cease- less volumes of heated air, w^hich loaded to saturation with vapor has to rise above and get clear of the clouds before it can com- mence the process of coohng by radiation. In the mean time, also, the vapors which the trade-winds bring from the north and the south, expanding and growing cooler as they ascend, are be- ing condensed on the lower side of the cloud stratum, and their latent heat is set free, to check precipitation and prevent a flood. 354. While this process and these operations are going on upon the nether side of the cloud-ring, one not less important is going on upon the upper side. There, from sunrise to sunset, the rays of the sun are pouring down without intermission. Every day, and all day long, they operate with ceaseless activity upon the upper surface of the cloud stratum. When they become too powerful, and convey more heat to the cloud vapors than the cloud vapors can reflect and give ofl" to the air above them, then, with a beau- tiful elasticity of character, the clouds absorb the surplus heat. They melt away, become invisible, and retain, m a latent and harmless state, until it is wanted at some other place and on some other occasion, the heat thus imparted. 355. We thus have an insight into the operations which are go- ing on in the equatorial belt of precipitation, and this insight is sufficient to enable us to perceive that exquisite indeed are the ar- rangements which Nature has provided for supplying this calm belt with heat, and for pushing the snow-line there high up above the clouds, in order that the atmosphere may have room to ex- pand, to rise up, overflow, and course back into its channels of healthful circulation. As the vapor is condensed and formed into drops of rain, a twofold object is accomplished : coming from the cooler regions of the clouds, the rain-drops are cooler than the air and earth below ; they descend, and by absorption take up the heat which has been accumulating in the earth's crust during the dry season, and which can not now escape by radiation. Thus this cloud-ring modifies the climate of all places beneath it ; overshad- owing, at different seasons, all parallels from 5° south to 15° north. THE EQUATORIAL CLOUD-RING. I77 356. In the process of condensation, these rain-drops, on the other hand, have set free a vast quantity of latent heat, which has been gathered up with the vapor from the sea by the trade-w inds and brought hither. The caloric thus liberated is taken by the air and carried up aloft still farther, to keep, at the proper distance from the earth, the line of perpetual congelation. Were it possi- ble to trace a thermal curve in the upper regions of the air to rep- resent this line, we should no doubt find it mounting sometimes at the equator, sometimes on this side, and sometimes on that of it, but always so mounting as to overleap this cloud-ring. This thermal line would not ascend always over the same parallels ; it would ascend over those between which this ring happens to be ; and the distance of this ring from the equator is regulated accord- ing to the seasons. 357. If we imagine the atmospherical equator to be always where the calm belt is which separates the northeast from the southeast trade-winds, then the loop in the thermal curve, which should represent the line of perpetual congelation in the air, would be always found to stride this equator ; and it may be supposed that a thermometer, kept sliding on the surface of the earth so as always to be in the middle of this rain-belt, would show very nearly the same temperature all the year round ; and so, too, w^ould a barometer the same pressure. 358. Its Office. — Returning and taking up the train of contem- plation as to the office which this belt of clouds, as it encircles the earth, performs in the system of oceanic adaptations, we may see how the cloud-ring and calm zone which it overshadows per- form the office both of ventricle and auricle in the immense atmos- pherical heart, where the heat and the forces which give vitality and power to the system are brought into play — where dynamical strength is gathered, and an impulse given to the air sufficient to send it thence through its long and tortuous channels of circulation. 359. Thus this ring, or band, or belt of clouds is stretched around our planet to regulate the quantity of precipitation in the rain-belt beneath it ; to preserve the due quantum of heat on the face of the earth ; to adjust the winds ; and send out for distribu- tion to the four corners, vapors in proper quantities to make up to each river-basin, climate, and season, its quota of sunshine, cloud, and moisture. Like the balance-wheel of a well-constructed chro- M 178 THE PHYSICAL GEOGRAPHY OF THE SEA. nometer, this cloud-ring affords the grand atmospherical machine the most exquisitely arranged self -compensation. If the sun fail in his supply of heat to this region, more of its vapors are con- densed, and heat is discharged from its latent store-houses in quan- tities just sufficient to keep the machine in the most perfect com- pensation. If, on the other hand, too much heat be found to ac- company the rays of the sun as they impinge upon the upper cir- cumference of this belt, then again on that side are the means of self-compensation ready at hand ; so much of the cloud-surface as may be requisite is then resolved into invisible vapor — for of in- visible vapor are made the vessels w^herein the surplus heat from the sun is stored away and held in the latent state until it is call- ed for, when instantly it is set free, and becomes an obvious and active agent in the grand design. 360. That the thermometer stands invariably lower (^ 351) be- neath this cloud-belt than it does on either side of it, has not, so far as my researches are concerned, been made to appear by ac- tual observation, for the observations in my possession have not yet been fully discussed concerning the temperature of the air. But that the temperature of the air at the surface under this cloud- ring is lower, is a theoretical deduction as susceptible of demon- stration as is the rotation of the earth on its axis. Indeed, Nature herself has huncr a thermometer under this cloud-belt that is more perfect than any that man can construct, and its indications are not to be mistaken. 361. Where do the vapors which form this cloud-ring, and which are here condensed and poured down into the sea as rain, come from? They come from the trade-wand regions (§ 115); under the cloud-ring they rise up ; as they rise up, they expand ; and as they expand, they grow cool, form clouds, and then are con- densed into rains ; moreover, it requires no mercurial instrument of human device to satisfy us that the air which brings the vapor for these clouds can not take it up and let it down at the same temperature. Precipitation and evaporation are the converse of each other ; and the same air can not precipitate and evaporate, take up and let down water, at one and the same temperature. As the temperature of the air is raised, its capacity for receiving and retaining water in the state of vapor is increased ; as the tem- perature of the air is lessened, its capacity for retaining that moist- THE EQUATORIAL CLOUD-RING. 179 ure is diminished. These are physical laws, and therefore, when we see water dripping from the atmosphere, we need no nistru- ment to tell us that the elasticity of the vapor so condensed, and falling in drops, is less than was its elasticity when it was taken up from the surface of the ocean as water, and went up mto the clouds as vapor. 362. Hence wc infer that, when the vapors of sea water are condensed, the heat which Avas necessary to sustam them m the vapor state, and which was borrowed from the ocean, is parted with, and that therefore they w^ere subjected, in the act of con- densation, to a lower temperature tham they were in the act of evaporation. Ceaseless precipitation goes on under this cloud- ring. Evaporation under it is suspended almost entirely. We know that the trade-winds encircle the earth ; that they blow per- petually ; that they come from the north and the south, and meet each other near the equator ; therefore we infer that this line of meeting extends around the world. By the rainy seasons of the torrid zone we can trace the declination of this cloud-ring stretch- ed like a girdle round about the earth : it travels up and down the ocean as from north to south and back 363. It is broader than the belt of calms out of which it rises. As the air, with its vapors, rises up in this calm belt and ascends, these vapors are condensed into clouds (§ 361), and this condensa- tion is followed by a turgid intumescence, which causes the clouds to overflow the calm belt, as it were, both to the north and the south. The air flowing off in the same direction assumes the character of winds that form the upper currents that are counter (Plate L) to the trade-winds. These currents carry the clouds still farther to the north and south, and thus make the cloud-ring broader. At least, we infer such to be the case, for the rains are found to extend out into the trade-winds, and often to a consider- able distance both to the north and the south of the calm belt. 364. Were this cloud-ring luminous, and coukl it be seen by an observer from one of the planets, it would present to him an ap- pearance not unlike the rings of Saturn do to us. Such an ob- server would remark that this cloud-rins: of the earth has a motion contrary to that of the axis of our planet itself — that while the earth was revolving rapidly from west to east, he would observe the cloud-ring to go slowly, but only relatively, from east to west. As the winds which bring the cloud-vapor to this region of calms 180 THE PHYSICAL GEOGRAPHY OF THE SEA. rise up with it, the earth is shpping from under them ; and thus the cloud-ring, though really moving from west to east with the earth, goes relatively slower than the earth, and would therefore appear to require a longer time to complete a revolution. 365. But, unlike the rmgs of Saturn through the telescope, the cuter surface, or the upper side to us, of this cloud-ring would ap- pear exceedingly jagged, rough, and uneven. 366. The rays of the sun, playmg^ipon this peak and then upon that of the upper cloud-surface, melt away one set of elevations and create another set of depressions. The whole stratum is, it may be imagined, in the most turgid state ; it is in continued throes when viewed from above ; the heat w^iich is liberated from below in the process of condensation, the currents of warm air as- cending from the earth, and of cool descending from the sky, all, we may well conceive, tend to keep the upper cloud-surface in a perpetual state of agitation, upheaval, and depression. 367. Imagine in such a cloud-stratum an electrical discharge to take place ; the report, being caught up by the cloud-ridges above, is passed from peak to peak, and repeated from valley to valley, until the last echo dies away in the mutterings of the distant thun- der. How^ often do we hear the voice of the loud thunder rum- bling and rolling away above the cloud-surface, like the echo of artillery discharged among the hills ! Hence we perceive or infer that the clouds intercept the prog- ress of sound, as well as of hght and heat, through the atmosphere, and that this upper surface is often like Alpine regions, which echo back and roll along with rumbling noise the mutterings of the dis- tant thunder. 368. It is by trains of reasoning like this that we are continu- a.lly reminded of the interest which attaches to the observations which the mariner is called on to make. There is no expression uttered by Nature which is unworthy of our most attentive consid- eration— for no physical fact is too bald for observation — and mar- iners, by registering in their logs the kind of lightning, whether sheet, forked, or streaked, and the kind of thunder, whether roll- ing, muttering, or sharp, may be furnishing facts which will throw much liffht on the features and character of the clouds m different latitudes and seasons. Physical facts are the language of Nature, and every expression uttered by her is worthy of our most atten- tive consideration. ON THE GEOLOGICAL AGENCY OF THE WINDS. 18] CHAPTER X. ON THE GEOLOGICAL AGENCY OF THE WINDS. To appreciate the Offices of the Winds and Waves, Nature must be regarded as a Whole, <5 369.— Level of the Dead Sea, 370. — Evidences that at former Geolog- ical Periods more Rain fell than now falls upon the Dead Sea and other inland Basins, 371. — Where Vapor for the Rains in the Basin of the American Lake.s comes from, 375. — The Effect produced by the Upheaval of Mountains across the course of vapor-bearing Winds, 376. — ^The Agencies by which the Drainage of Hydrographic Basins may be cut off from the Sea, 380. — Utah an Example, 382. — Effect of the Andes upon vapor-bearing Winds, 383. — Geological Age of the Andes and Dead Sea compared, 391. — Ranges of dry Countries and little Rain, 393. — Rain and Evaporation in the Mediterranean, 399. — Evaporation and Precip- itation in the Caspian Sea equal, 404. — The Quantity of Moisture the Atmosphere keeps in Circulation, 407. — Where Vapor for the Rains that feed the Nile come from, 409. — Lake Titicaca, 420. 369- Properly to appreciate the various offices which the winds and the waves perform, we must regard nature as a whole, for all the departments thereof are intimately connected. If we attempt to study in one of them, we often find ourselves tracing clews which lead us off insensibly into others, and, before we are aware, we discover ourselves exploring the chambers of some other department. The study of drift takes the geologist out to sea, and reminds him that a knowledge of waves, winds, and currents, of navigation and hydrography, are closely and intimately connected with his favorite pursuit. The astronomer directs his telescope to the most remote star, or to the nearest planet in the sky, and makes an observation upon it. He can not reduce this observation, nor make any use of it, until he has availed himself of certain principles of optics ; until he has consulted the thermometer, gauged the atmosphere, and considered the effect of heat in changing its powers of refractioii. In order to adjust the pendulum of his clock to the right length, he has to measure the water of the sea and weigh the earth. H^\, too, must therefore go into the study of the tides ; he must ex- amine the earth's crust, and consider the matter of which it is 182 THE PHYSICAL GEOGRAPHY OF THE SEA. composed, from pole to pole, circumference to centre ; and in doing this, he finds himself, in his researches, right alongside of the navigator, the geologist, and the meteorologist, with a host of other good fellows, each one holding by the same thread, and fol- lowing it up into the same labyrinth — all, it may be, with different objects in view, but nevertheless, each thread will be sure to lead them where there are stores of knowledge for all, and instruction for each one in particular. And thus, in undertaking to explore the physical geography of the sea, I have found myself standing side by side with the geologist on the land, and with him, far aw^ay from the sea-shore, engaged in considering some of the phenome- na which the inland basins of the earth — those immense indenta- tions on its surface that have no sea-drainage — present for con- templation and study. 370. Among the most interesting of these is that of the Dead Sea. Lieutenant Lynch, of the United States Navy, has run a lev- el from that sea to the Mediterranean, and finds the former to be about one thousand three hundred feet below the general sea-level of the earth. In seeking to account for this great difference of water level, the geologist examines the neighboring region, and calls to his aid the forces of elevation and depression which are supposed to have resided in the neighborhood ; he then points to them as the agents which did the work. Truly they are mighty agents, and they have diversified the surface of the earth with the most towering monuments of their power. But is it necessary to suppose that they resided in the vicinity of this region? May they not have come from the sea, and been, if not in this case, at least in the case of other inland basins, as far removed as the other hemisphere ? This is a' question w^hich I do not pretend to answer definitely. But the inquiry as to the geological agency of the winds in such cases is a question which my investigations have suggested. It has its seat in the sea, and therefore I propound it as one which, in accounting for the formation of this or that inland basin, is worthy, at least, of consideration. 371. Is there any evidence that the annual amount of precipi- tation upon the water-shed of the Dead Sea, at some former pe- riod, was greater than the annual amount of evaporation from it now is ? If yea, from what part of the sea did the vapor that sup- plied the excess of that precipitation come, and what has cut off ON THE GEOLOGICAL AGENCY OF THE WINDS. 183 that supply ? The mere elevation and depression of the lake ba- sin (§ 370) would not cut it off. 372. If we estabhsh the fact that the Dead Sea at a former pe- riod did send a river to the ocean, we carry along with it the ad- mission that when that sea overflowed into that river, then the water that fell from the clouds over the Dead Sea basin was more than the winds could convert into vapor and carry away again ; the river carried off the excess to the ocean whence it came (§ 116). 373. In the basin of the Dead Sea, in the basin of the Caspian, of the Sea of Aral, and in the other inland basins of Asia, we are entitled to infer that the precipitation and evaporation are at this time exactly equal. Were it not so, the level of these seas would be rising or sinking. If the precipitation were in excess, these seas would be gradually becoming fuller ; and if the evaporation were in excess, they would be gradually drying up ; but observa- tion does not show, nor history tell us, that either is the case. As far as we know, the level of these seas is as permanent as that of the ocean, and it is difficult to reahze the existence of subterrane- an channels between them and the great ocean. Were there such a channel, the Dead Sea being the lower, it would be the recipi- ent of ocean waters ; and we can not conceive how it should be such a recipient without ultimately rising to the level of its feeder.- 374. It may be that the question suggested by my researches has no bearing upon the Dead Sea ; that local elevations and sub- sidences alone were concerned in placmg the level of its waters where it is. But is it probable that, throughout all the geological periods, during all the changes which have taken place in the dis- tribution of land and water surface over the earth, the winds, which in the general channels of circulation pass over the Dead Sea, have alone been unchanged ? Throughout all ages, periods, and formations, is it probable that the winds have brought us just as much moisture to that sea as they now bring, and have just taken up as much water from it as they now carry off? Ob- viously and clearly not. The salt-beds, the w^ater-marks, the geological formations, and other facts traced by Nature's own hand upon the tablets of the rock — all indicate plainly enough that not only the Dead Sea, but the Caspian edso, had upon them, in former periods, more abundant rains than they now have. Where X84 THE PHYSICAL GEOGRAPHY OF THE SEA. did the vapor for those rains come from ? and what has stopped the supply ? Surely not the elevation or depression of the Dead Sea basin. 375. My researches w^ith regard to the winds have suggested the probability (§ 121) that the vapor w^hich is condensed into rains for the lake valley, and which the St. Lawrence carries off to the Atlantic Ocean, is taken up by the southeast trade-winds of the Pacific Ocean. Suppose this to be the case, and that the winds which bring this vapor arrive with it in the lake country at a mean dew-point of 50°. This would make the southwest winds the rain winds for the lakes generally, as well as for the Missis- sippi Valley ; they are also, speaking generally, the rain winds of Europe, and, I have no doubt, of extra-tropical Asia also. 376. Now suppose a certain mountain range, hundreds of miles to the southwest of the lakes, but across the path of these winds, were to be suddenly elevated, and its crest pushed up into the re- gions of snow, having a mean temperature of 30° Fahrenheit. The winds, in passing that range, would be subjected to a mean dew-point of 30° ; and, not meeting with any more evaporating surface between such range and the lakes (§ 125), they would have no longer any moisture to deposit at the supposed lake tem- perature of 50° ; for they could not yield their moisture to any thing above 30°. Consequently, the amount of precipitation in the lake country would fall oflf; the winds which feed the lakes would cease to bring as much water as the lakes now give to the St. Lawrence. In such a case, that river and the Niagara would drain them to the level of their bed ; evaporation would be increased by reason of the dryness of the atmosphere and the want of rain, and the lakes would sink to that level at which, as in the case of the Caspian Sea, the precipitation and evaporation would finally become equal. 377. There is a self-regulating principle that would bring about this equality ; for as the water in the lakes becomes lower, the area of its surface would be diminished, and the amount of vapor taken from it w^ould consequently become less and less as the sur- face was lowered, until the amount of water evaporated would become equal to the amount rained down again, precisely in the same way that the amount of water evaporated from the sea is exactly equal to the whole amount poured back into it by the ON THE GEOLOGICAL AGENCY OF THE WINDS. 185 rains, the fogs, and the dews.* Thus the great lakes of this con- tinent would remain inland seas at a permanent level ; the salt brought from the soil by the washings of the rivers and rains would cease to be taken off to the ocean as it now is ; and final- ly, too, the great American lakes, in the process of ages, would become first brackish, and then briny. 378. Now suppose the water-basins which hold the lakes to be over a thousand fathoms (six thousand feet) deep. We know they are not more than four hundred and twenty feet deep ; but suppose them to be six thousand feet deep. The process of evap- oration, after the St. Lawrence had gone dry, might go on until one or two thousand feet or more were lost from the surface, and we should then have another instance of the level of an inland w^ater-basin being far below the sea-level, as in the case of the Dead Sea ; or it would become a rainless district, when the lakes themselves would go dry. 379. Or let us take another case for illustration. Corallines are at work about the Gulf Stream ; they have built up the Flor- ida Reefs on one side, and the Bahama Banks on the other. Sup- pose they should build up a dam across the Florida Pass, and ob- struct the Gulf Stream ; and that, in like manner, they were to connect Cuba with Yucatan, by damming up the Yucatan Pass, so that the w^aters of the Atlantic should cease to flow into the Gulf of Mexico. What should we have ? The depth of the marine basin which holds the waters of that Gulf is, in the deepest part, about a mile. The officers of the United States ship Albany have run a line of deep-sea soundings from west to east across the Gulf; the greatest depth they re- ported was about six thousand feet. Subsequent experiments, however, induce the belief that the depth is not quite so great. We should therefore have, by stopping up the channels between the Gulf and the Atlantic, not a sea-level in the Gulf, but we should have a mean level between evaporation and precipitation. If the former were in excess, the level of the Gulf waters would sink down until the surface exposed to the air would be just suffi- cient to return to the atmosphere, as vapor, the amount of water discharged by the rivers — the Mississippi and others — into the Gulf. As the waters were lowered, the extent of evaporating * The quantity of dew in England is about five inches during a year. — Glaishcr. 186 THE PHYSICAL GEOGRAPHY OF THE SEA. surface would grow less and less, until Nature should establish the proper ratio between the ability of the air to take up and the capacity of the clouds to let down. Thus we might have a sea whose level would be much farther below the water-level of the ocean than is the Dead Sea. 3S0. There is still another process, besides the two already al- luded to, by which the drainage of these inland basins may, through the agency of the winds, have been cut off from the great salt seas, and that is by the elevation of continents from the bot- tom of the sea in distant regions of the earth, and the substitution caused thereby of dry land instead of water for the winds to blow upon. 381. Now suppose that a continent should rise up in that part of the ocean, wherever it may be, that supplies the clouds with the vapor that makes the rain for the hydrographic basin of the great American lakes. What would be the result ? Why, surely, fewer clouds and less rain, which would involve a change of cli- mate in the lake country ; an increase of evaporation from it, be- cause a decrease of precipitation upon it ; and, consequently, a diminution of cloudy screens to protect the waters of the lakes from being sucked up by the rays of the sun ; and consequently, too, there would follow a low stage for water-courses, and a low- ering of the lake-level would ensue. So far, I have instanced these cases only hypothetically ; but, both in regard to the hydrographical basins of the Mexican Gulf and American lakes, I have confined myself strictly to analogies. Mountain ranges have been upheaved across the course of the winds, and continents have been raised from the bottom of the sea ; and, no doubt, the influence of such upheavals has been felt in remote regions by means of the winds, and the efTects which a greater or less amount of moisture brought by them would produce. 382. In the case of the Salt Lake of Utah, we have an example of drainage that has been cut off, and an illustration of the process by which Nature equalizes the evaporation and precipitation. To do this, in this instance, she is salting up the basin which received the drainage of this inland w^ater-shed. Here we have the ap- pearance, I am told, of an old channel by which the water used to flow from this basin to the sea. Supposing there was such a time and such a water-course, the water returned through it to ON THE GEOLOGICAL AGENCY OF THE WINDS. 187 the ocean was the amount by which the precipitation used to ex- ceed the evaporation over the whole extent of country drained through this now dry bed of a river. The winds have had some- thing to do with this ; they arc the agents which used to bring more moisture from the sea to this water-shed than they took away ; and they are the agents which now carry off from that valley more moisture than is brought to it, and which, there- fore, are making a salt-bed of places that used to be covered by water. In like manner, there is evidence that the great Amer- ican lakes formerly had a drainage with the Gulf of Mexico. Steamers have been actually known, in former years, and in times of freshets, to pass from the Mississippi River over into the lakes. At low water, the bed of a dry river can be traced between them. Now the Salt Lake of Utah is to the southward and westward of our northern lake basin; that is the quarter (^ 214) w^hence the rain winds have been supposed to come. May not the same cause which lessened the precipitation or increased the evaporation in the Salt Lake water-shed, have done the same for the water-shed of the great American system of lakes ? If the mountains to the west — the Sierra Nevada, for instance — stand higher now than they formerly did, and if the winds which fed the Salt Lake valley with precipitation had, as (^ 212) I sup- pose they have, to pass the summits of the mountains, it is easy to perceive why the winds should not convey as much vapor across them now as they did when the summit of the range was lower and not so cool. 383. The Andes, in the trade-wind region of South America, stand up so high, that the wind, in order to cross them, has to part with all its moisture (§ 133), and consequently there is, on the west side, a rainless region. Now suppose a range of such mount- ains as these to be elevated across the track of the w^inds which supply the lake country with rains ; it is easy to perceive how the whole country watered by the vapor which such winds bring, would be converted into a rainless region. I have used these hypothetical cases to illustrate a position which any philosopher, who considers the geological agency of the winds, may wdth propriety consult, when he is told of an in- land basin the water-level of which, it is evident, was once higher than it now is ; and that position is that, though the evidences of 188 THE PHYSICAL GEOGRAPHY OF THE SEA. a hio-her water-level be unmistakable and conclusive, it does not follow, therefore, that there has been a subsidence of the lake basin itself, or an upheaval of the water-shed drained by it. 384. The cause which has produced this change in the water- level, instead of being local and near, may be remote ; it may have its seat in the obstructions to ''the winds in his circuits," which have been interposed in some other quarter of the world, which obstructions may prevent the winds from taking up or from bearing off their wonted supplies of moisture for the region whose water-level has been lowered. 385. Having therefore, I hope, made clear the meaning of the question proposed, by showing the manner in which winds may be- come important geological agents, and having explained how the upheaving of a mountain range in one part of the world may, through the winds, bear upon the physical geography of the sea, affect climates, and produce geological phenomena in another, I return to the Dead Sea and the great inland basins of Asia, and ask. How far is it possible for the elevation of the South American continent, and the upheaval of its mountains, to have had any ef- fect upon the water-level of those seas ? There are indications (§ 374) that they all once had a higher water-level than they now have, and that formerly the amount of precipitation was greater than it now^ is ; then what has become of the sources of vapor ? What has diminished its supply ? Its supply would be diminished (^ 381) by the substitution of dry land in those parts of the ocean which used to supply that vapor ; or the quantity of vapor depos- ited in the hydrographical basins of those seas would have been lessened if a snow-capped range of mountains (§ 376) had been elevated across the path of these winds, between the places where they were supplied with vapor and these basins. 386. A chain of evidence which it would be difficult to set aside is contained in the chapters beginning severally at p. 66, 97, and 104, going to show that the vapor which supplies the ex- tra-tropical regions of the north with rains comes, in all probabil- ity, from the trade-wind regions of the southern hemisphere. 387. Now if it be true that the trade-winds from that part of the world take up there the water which is to be rained in the extra-tropical north, the path ascribed to the southeast trades of Africa and America, after they descend and become the prevail- ON THE GEOLOGICAL AGENCY OF THE WINDS. 189 ing southwest winds of the northern hemisphere, should pass over a region of less precipitation generally than they would do if, while performing the office of southeast trades, they had blown over water instead of land. The southeast trade-winds, with their load of vapor, whether great or small, take, after ascending in the equatorial calms, a northeasterly direction ; they continue to flow in the upper regions of the air in that direction until they cross the tropic of Cancer. The places of least rain, then, between this tropic and the pole, should be precisely those places which depend for their rains upon the vapor which the winds that blow over southeast trade-wind Africa and America convey. 388. Now% if we could trace the path of the winds through the extra-tropical regions of the northern hemisphere, we should be able to identify the track of these Andean winds by the foot-prints of the clouds ; for the path of the winds which depend for their moisture upon such sources of supply as the dry land of Central South America and Africa can not lie through a country that is watered well. 389. It is a remarkable coincidence, at least, that the countries in the extra-tropical regions of the north that are situated to the northeast of the southeast trade-winds of South Africa and Amer- ica— that these countries, over which theory makes these winds to blow, include all the great deserts of Asia, and the districts of least precipitation in Europe. A line from the Galapagos Islands through Florence in Italy, another from the mouth of the Amazon through Aleppo in Holy Land (Plate VII.), would, after passing the tropic of Cancer, mark upon the surface of the earth the route of these winds ; this is that " lee country" (§ 137) which, if such be the system of atmospherical circulation, ought to be scantily sup- plied with rains. Now the hyetographic map of Europe, in John- ston's beautiful Physical Atlas, places the region of least precipita- tion between these two lines (Plate YIL). 390. It would seem that Nature, as if to reclaim this " lee" land from the desert, had stationed by the way-side of these winds a succession of inland seas, to serve them as relays for supplying with moisture this thirsty air. There is the Mediterranean Sea, the Caspian Sea, and the Sea of Aral, all of Avhich are situated ex- actly in this direction, as though these sheets of water were de- signed, in the grand system of aqueous arrangements, to supply 190 THE PHYSICAL GEOGRAPHY OF THE SEA. with fresh vapor, winds that had akeady left rain enough behind them to make an Amazon and an Oronoco of. 391. Now that there has been such an elevation of land out of the water, we infer from the fact that the Andes were once cov- ered by the sea, for their tops are now crowned with the remains of marine animals. When they and their continent were sub- merged— admitting that Europe in general outline was then as it now is — it can not be supposed, if the circulation of vapor were then such as it is supposed now to be, that the climates of that part of the Old World which is under the lee of those mountains were then as scantily supplied with moisture as they now are. When the sea covered South America, the winds had nearly all the waters which now make the Amazon to bring away with them, and to distribute among the countries situated along the route (Plate VII.) ascribed to them. 392. If ever the Caspian Sea exposed a larger surface for evap oration than it now does — and no doubt it did ; if the precipitation in that valley ever exceeded the evaporation from it, as it does in all valleys drained into the open sea, then there must have been a change of hygrometrical condition there. And admitting the va- por-springs for that valley to be situated in the direction supposed, the rising up of a continent from the bottom of the sea, or the up- heaval of a range of mountains in certain parts of America, Africa, or Spain, across the route of the winds w^hich brought the rain for the Caspian water-shed, might have been sufficient to rob them of the moisture which they were wont to carry away and precip- itate upon this great inland basin. See how the Andes have made Atacama a desert, and of Western Peru a rainless country ; these regions have been made rainless simply by the rising up of a mountain range between them and the vapor-springs in the ocean which feed with moisture the winds that blow over these now rain- less regions. 393. That part of Asia, then, which is under the lee of south- ern trade-wind Africa, lies to the north of the tropic of Cancer, and between two lines, the one passing through Cape Palmas and Me- dina, the other through Aden and Delhi. Being extended to the equator, they will include that part of it which is crossed by the continental southeast trade-winds of Africa, after they have trav- ersed the greatest extent of land surface (Plate VII.). ON THE GEOLOGICAL AGENCY OF THE WINDS. igj 394. The range which hes between the tw^o lines that represent the course of the American wdnds with their vapors, and the two hnes which represent the course of the African winds with their vapors, is the range which is under the lee of winds that have, for the most part, traversed water-surface, or the ocean, in their cir- cuit as southeast trade-winds. But a bare inspection of Plate VII . will show that the southeast trade-winds w^hich cross the equator betw*fien longitude 15° and 50° west, and which are supposed to blow over into this hemisphere between these two ranges, have traversed land as well as water ; and the Trade-wind Chart* shows that it is precisely those winds which, in the summer and fall, are cgnverted into southwest monsoons for supplying the whole extent of Guinea with rains to make rivers of. Those winds, therefore, it would seem, leave much of their moisture behind them, and pass along to their channels in the grand system of circulation, for the most part, as dry winds. Moreover, it is not to be supposed that the channels through which the winds blov/ that cross the equa- tor at the several places named, are as sharply defined in nature as the lines suggested, or as Plate VII. would represent them to be. 395. The whole region of the extra-tropical Old World that is included within the ranges marked, is the region which has most land to windward of it in the southern hemisphere. Now it is a curious coincidence, at least, that all the great extra-tropical des- erts of the earth, wdth those regions in Europe and Asia which have the least amount of precipitation upon them, should lie within this range. That they are situated under the lee of the southern continents, and have but little rain, may be a coincidence, I ad- mit ; but that these deserts of the Old World are placed where they are is no coincidence — no accident : they are placed where they are, and as they are, by design ; and in being so placed, it was intended that they should subserve some grand purpose in the ter- restrial economy. Let us see, therefore, if we can discover any other marks of that design — any of the purposes to be subserved by such an arrangement — and trace any connection between that arrangement and the supposition which I maintain as to the place where the winds that blow^ over those regions derive their vapors. 396. It will be remarked at once that all the inland seas of A.sia, and all those of Europe except the semi-fresh-water gulfs of * Series of Maury's Wind and Current Charts. 192 THE PHYSICAL GEOGRAPHY OF THE SEA. the north, are within this range. The Persian Gulf and the Red Sea, the Mediterranean, the Black, and the Caspian, all fall within it. And why are they planted there ? Why are they arranged to the northeast and southwest under this lee, and in the very direc- tion in which theory makes this breadth of thirsty winds to pre- vail ? Clearly and obviously, one of the j^urposes in the divine economy w^as, that they might replenish with vapor the winds which are almost vaporless w^hen they arrive at these regions in the general system of circulation. And why should these winds be almost vaporless ? They are almost vaporless because their route, in the general system of circulation, is such, that they are not brought into contact with a water-surface from which the net- ful supplies of vapor are to be had ; or, being obtained, the sup- plies have since been taken aw^ay by the cool tops of mountain ranges over which these winds have had to pass. 397. In the Mediterranean, the evaporation is greater than the precipitation. Upon the Red Sea there never falls a drop of rain ; it is all evaporation. Are we not, therefore, entitled to regard the Red Sea as a make-weight, thrown in to regulate the proportion of cloud and sunshine, and to dispense rain to certain parts of the earth in due season and in proper quantities ? Have we not, in these two facts, evidence conclusive that the winds which blow^ over these two seas come, for the most part, from a dry country — from regions which contain few or no pools to furnish supplies of vapor ? 398. Indeed, so scantily supplied with vapor are the winds which pass in the general channels of circulation over the water-shed and sea-basin of the Mediterranean, that they take up there more water as vapor than they deposit. But, throwing out of the ques- tion w^iat is taken up from the surface of the Mediterranean itself, these winds deposit more w^ater on the water-shed w^hose drainage leads into that sea than they take up from it again. The excess is to be found in the rivers which discharge into the Mediterrane- an ; but so thirsty are the winds which blow across the bosom of that sea, that they not only take up again all the water that those rivers pour into it, but they are supposed by philosophers (§ 252) to create a demand for an immense current from the Atlantic to supply the waste. 399. It is estimated that three* times as much water as the * Vide article " Physical Geography," Encyclopsedia Britannica. ON THE GEOLOGICAL AGENCY OF THE WINDS. 193 Mediterranean receives from its rivers is evaporated from its sur- face. This may be an over-estimate, but the fact that evapora- tion from it is in excess of the precipitation, is made obvious by the current v^^hich the Atlantic sends into it through the Straits of Gibraltar ; and the difference, we may rest assured, whether it be much or little, is carried off to modify climate elsewhere — to re- fresh with show^ers and make fruitful some other part of the earth. 400. The great inland basin of Asia, in which are Aral and the Caspian Seas, is situated on the route which this hypothesis re- quires these thirsty winds from southeast trade-wind Africa and America to take ; and so scant of vapor are these winds when they arrive in this basin, that they have no moisture to leave behind ; just as much as they pour down they take up again and carry off. We know (§ 116) that the volume of water returned by the rivers, the rains, and the dews, into the whole ocean, is exactly equal to the volume which the whole ocean gives back to the atmosphere ; as far as our knowledge extends, the level of each of these two seas is as permanent as that of the great ocean itself. Therefore, the volume of water discharged by rivers, the rains, and the dews, into these two seas, is exactly equal to the volume which these two seas give back as vapor to the atmosphere. 401. These winds, therefore, do not begin permanently to lay down their load of moisture, be it great or small, until they cross the Oural Mountains. On the steppes of Issam, after they have supplied the Amazon and the other great equatorial rivers of the south, we find them first beginning to lay down more moisture than they take up again. In the Obi, the Yenesi, and the Lena, is to be found the volume which contains the expression for the load of water which these winds have brought from the southern hemi- sphere, from the Mediterranean, and the Red Sea ; for in these almost hyperborean river-basins do we find the first instance in which, throughout the entire range assigned these winds, they have, after supplying the Amazon, &c., left more water behind them than they have taken up again and carried off. The low temperatures of Siberian Asia are quite sufficient to extract from these winds the remnants of vapor which the cool mountain-tops and mighty rivers of the southern hemisphere have left in them. 402. Here I may be permitted to pause, that I may call atten- tion to another remarkable coincidence, and admire the marks of N 194 THE PHYSICAL GEOGRAPHY OF THE SEA. design, the beautiful and exquisite adjustments that we see here provided, to insure the perfect workings of the great aqueous and atmospherical machine. This coincidence — may I not call it cause and effect ? — is between the hygrometrical conditions of all the countries within, and the hygrometrical conditions of all the countries without, the range included within the lines which I have drawn (Plate VII.) to represent the route in the northern hemi- sphere of the southeast trade-winds after they have blown their course over the land in South Africa and America. Both to the right and left of this range are countries included between the same parallels in which it is, yet these countries all receive more water from the atmosphere than they give back to it again ; they all have rivers running into the sea. On the one hand, there is in Europe the Rhine, the Elbe, and all the great rivers that empty into the Atlantic ; on the other hand, there are in Asia the Ganges, and all the great rivers of China ; and in North America, in the latitude of the Caspian Sea, is our great system of fresh-water lakes ; all of these receive from the atmosphere immense volumes of wa.ter, and pour it back into the sea in streams the most magnificent. 403. It is remarkable that none of these copiously-supplied wa- ter-sheds have, to the southwest of them in the trade-wdnd regions of the southern hemisphere, any considerable body of land ; they are, all of them, under the lee of evaporating surfaces, of ocean waters in the trade-wind regions of the south. Only those coun- tries in the extra-tropical north which I have described as lying under the lee of trade-wind South America and Africa are scanti- ly supplied with rains. Pray examine Plate VII. in this connec- tion. It tends to confirm the views taken in Chapter V., p. 115. 404. The surface of the Caspian Sea is about equal to that of our lakes ; in it, evaporation is just equal to the precipitation. Our lakes are between the same parallels, and about the same distance from the western coast of America that the Caspian Sea is from the western coast of Europe ; and yet the waters dis- charged by the St. Lawrence give us an idea of how greatly the precipitation upon it is in excess of the evaporation. To wind- ward of the lakes, and in the trade-wind regions of the southern hemisphere, is no land ; but to windward of the Caspian Sea, and in the trade-wind region of the southern hemisphere, there is land. Therefore, supposing the course of the vapor-distributing ON THE GEOLOGICAL AGENCY OF THE WINDS 195 winds to be such as I maintain it to be, ought they not to carry more Wciter from the ocean to the American lakes than it is pos- sible for them to carry from the land — from the interior of South Africa and America — to the valley of the Caspian Sea ? 405. In like manner {§ 228), extra-tropical New Holland and South Africa have each land — not water — to the windward of them in the trade-wind regions of the northern hemisphere, where, ac- cording to this hypothesis, the vapor for their rains ought to be taken up : they are both countries of little rain ; but extra-tropical South America has, in the trade-wind region to windward of it in the northern hemisphere, a great extent of ocean, and the amount of precipitation (§ 141) in extra-tropical South America is wonder- ful. The coincidence, therefore, is remarkable, that the countries in the extra-tropical regions of this hemisphere, which lie to the northeast of large districts of land in the trade-wind regions of the other hemisphere, should be scantily supplied with rains ; and like- wise, that those so situated in the extra-tropical south, with regard to land in the trade-wind region of the north, should be scantily supplied with rains. Having thus remarked upon the coincidence, let us turn to the evidences of design, and contemplate the beautiful harmony dis- played in the arrangement of the land and water, as we find them along this conjectural "wind-road." (Plate VH.) 406. Those who admit design among terrestrial adaptations, or have studied the economy of cosmical arrangements, will not be loth to grant that by design the atmosphere keeps in circulation a certain amount of moisture ; that the water of which this moist- ure is made is supplied by the aqueous surface of the earth, and that it is to be returned to the seas again through rivers and the process of precipitation ; that a permanent increase or decrease of the quantity of water thus put and kept in circulation by the winds would be followed by a corresponding change of hygromet- rical conditions, which would draw after it permanent changes of climate ; and that permanent changes of climate would involve the ultimate well-being of myriads of organisms, both in the veg- etable and animal kingdoms. 407. The quantity of moisture that the atmosphere keeps in circulation is, no doubt, just that quantity which is best suited to the well-being, and most adapted to the proper development of 190 THE PHYSICAL GEOGRAPHY OF THE SEA. the vegetable and animal kingdoms ; and that quantity is depend- ent upon the arrangement and the proportions that we see in na- ture between the land and the water — between mountain and des- ert, river and sea. If the seas and evaporating surfaces were changed, and removed from the places they occupy to other places, the principal places of precipitation probably would also be changed : whole families of plants would wither and die for want of cloud and sunshine, dry and wet, in proper proportions and in due season ; and, with the blight of plants, whole tribes of animals would also perish. Under such a chance arrangement, man would no longer be able to rely upon the early and the latter rain, or to count with certainty upon the rains being sent in due season for seed-time and harvest. And that the rain will be sent in due season, we are assured from on high ; and when we recol- lect who it is that ^^ sendeth" it, we feel the conviction strong w^ithin us that He that sendeth the rain has the winds for his messengers ; and that they may do his bidding, the land and the sea were arranged, both as to position and relative proportions, where they are, and as they are. 40S. It should be borne in mind that the southeast trade-winds, after they rise up at the equator (Plate I.), have to overleap the northeast trade-winds. Consequently, they do not touch the earth until near the tropic of Cancer (see the bearded arrows, Plate VII.) — more frequently to the north than to the south of it ; but for a part of every year, the place where these vaulting southeast trades first strike the earth, after leaving the other hemisphere, is very near this tropic. On the equatorial side of it, be it remem- bered, the northeast trade-winds blow ; on the polar side, what were the southeast trades, and what are now the prevailing south- westerly winds of our hemisphere, prevail. Now examine Plate VII., and it will be seen that the upper half of the Red Sea is north of the tropic of Cancer ; the lower half is to the south of it ; that the latter is within the northeast trade-wind region ; the former, in the region where the southwest passage winds are the prevailing winds. 409. The River Tigris is probably evaporated from the upper half of this sea by these winds ; while the northeast trade-winds take up from the lower half those vapors which feed the Nile with rain, and which the clouds deliver to the cold demands of the ON THE GEOLOGICAL AGENCY OF THE WINDS. 197 Mountains of the Moon. Thus there are two "wind-roads'' cross- ing this sea : to the windward of it, each road runs through a rain- less region ; to the leeward there is, in each case, a river to cross. 410. The Persian Gulf lies, for the most part, in the track of the southwest winds : to the windward of the Persian Gulf is a desert ; to the leeward, the River Indus. This is the route by which theory would require the vapor from the Red Sea and Per- sian Gulf to be conveyed ; and this is the direction in which we find indications that it is conveyed. For to leew^ard do we find, in each case, a river, telling to us, by signs not to be mistaken, that it receives more water from the clouds than it gives back to the winds, 411. Is it not a curious circumstance, that the winds which travel the road suggested from the southern hemisphere should, when they touch the earth on the polar side of the tropic of Can- cer, be so thirsty, more thirsty, much more, than those which trav- el on either side of their path, and which are supposed to have come from southern seas, not from southern lands ? 412. The Mediterranean has to give those winds three times as much vapor as it receives from them (§ 399) ; the Red Sea gives them as much as they can take, and receives nothing back in re- turn but a little dew (§ 238) ; the Persian Gulf also gives more than it receives. What becomes of the rest ? Doubtless it is . given to the winds, that they may bear it oif to distant regions, and make lands fruitful, that but for these sources of supply would be almost rainless, if not entirely arid, waste, and barren. 413. These seas and arms of the ocean now present themselves to the mind as counterpoises in the great hygrometrical machinery of our planet. As sheets of water placed w^here they are, to bal- ance the land in the trade- wind region of South America and South Africa, they now present themselves. When the founda- tions of the earth were laid, Ave know who it was that "measured the vraters in the hollow of his hand, and meted out the heavens with a span, and comprehended the dust of the earth in a meas- ure, and weighed the mountains in scales, and the hills in a bal- ance ;" and hence we know^ also that they are arranged both ac- cording to proportion and to place. 414. Here, then, we see harmony in the winds, design m the mountains, order in the sea, arrangement in the dust, and form for the desert. Here are signs of beauty and works of grandeur ; and 198 THE PHYSICAL GEOGRAPHY OF THE SEA. we may now fancy that, in this exquisite system of adaptations and compensations, we can ahiiost behold, in the Red and Medi- terranean Seas, the very waters that were held in the hollow of the Almighty hand when he weighed the Andes and balanced the hills of Africa in his comprehensive scales. 415. In that great inland basin of Asia which holds the Caspian Sea, and embraces an area of one million and a half of geo- graphical square miles, we see the water-surface so exquisitely adjusted that it is just sufficient, and no more, to return to the at- mosphere as vapor exactly as much moisture as the atmosphere lends in rain to the rivers of that basin. 416. Thus we are entitled to regard (^ 390) the Mediterranean, the Red Sea, and Persian Gulf as relays, distributed along the route of these thirsty winds from the continents of the other hemi- sphere, to supply them with vapors, or to restore to them that which they have left behind to feed the sources of the Amazon, the Ni- ger, and the Congo. The hypothesis that the winds from South Africa and America do take the course through Europe and Asia which I have mark- ed out for them (Plate VIL), is supported by so many coincidences, to say the least, that we are entitled to regard it as probably cor- rect, until a train of coincidences as striking can be adduced to show that such is not the case. 417. Returning once more to a consideration of the geological agency of the winds in accounting for the depression of the Dead Sea, we now see the fact most strikingly brought out before us, that if the Straits of Gibraltar were to be barred up, so that no water could pass through them, we should have a great depression of water-level in the Mediterranean. Three times as much water is evaporated from that sea as is returned to it through the rivers. A portion of water evaporated from it is probably rained down and returned to it through the rivers ; but, supposing it to be barred up, as the demand upon it for vapor would exceed the supply by rains and rivers, it would commence to dry up. As it sinks down, the area exposed for evaporation would decrease, and the supplies to the rivers would diminish, until finally there would be estab- lished between the evaporation and precipitation an equilibrium, as in the Dead and Caspian Seas ; but, for aught we know, the water-level of the Mediterranean might, before this equilibrium ON THE GEOLOGICAL AGENCY OF THE WINDS. 199 were attained, have to reach a stage far below that of the Dead Sea level. The Lake Tadjura is now in the act of attaining such an equi- librium. There are connected with it the remains of a channel by which the water ran into the sea ; but the surface of the lake is now five hundred feet below the sea-level, and it is salting up. If not in the Dead Sea, do we not, in the valley of this lake, find outcropping some reason for the question, What have the winds had to do with the phenomena before us ? 418. The winds, in this sense, are geological agents of great power. It is not impossible but that they may afford us the means of comparing, directly, geological events which have taken place in one hemisphere, with geological events in another : e. g., the tops of the Andes were once at the bottom of the sea. Which is the oldest formation, that of the Dead Sea or the Andes ? If the former be the older, then the climate of the Dead Sea must have been hygrometrically very different from what it now is. 419. In regarding the winds as geological agents, we can no longer consider them as the type of instability. We should rather treat them in the light of ancient and faithful chroniclers, which, upon being rightly consulted, will reveal to us truths that Na- ture has written upon their wings in characters as legible and en- during as any with which she has ever engraved the history of geological events upon the tablet of the rock. 420. The waters of Lake Titicaca, which receives the drain- age of the great inland basin of the Andes, are only brackish, not salt. Hence w^e may infer that this lake has not been standing long enough to become briny, like the waters of the Dead Sea ; consequently, it belongs to a more recent period. On the other hand, it will also be interesting to hear that my friend, Captain Lynch, informs me that, in his exploration of the Dead Sea, he saw what he took to be the dry^bed of a river that once flowed from it. And thus we have two more links, stout and strong, to add to the chain of circumstantial evidence going to sustain the testimony of this strange and fickle witness which I have called up from the sea to testify in this presence concerning the works of Nature, and to tell us which be the older — the Andes, watching the stars with their hoary heads, or the Dead Sea, sleeping upon its ancient beds of crystal salt. 200 THE PHYSICAL GEOGRAPHY OF THE SEA. CHAPTER XL THE DEPTHS OF THE OCEAN. The Depth of blue Water unknown, <^ 421.— Results of former Methods of Deep-sea Soundings not entitled to Confidence, 422. — Attempts by Sound and Pressure, 423. The Myths of the Sea, 424. — Common Opinion as to its Depths, 425. — Interest- ing Subject, 427. — The deepest Soundings reported, 428. — Plan adopted in the American Navy, 429. — Soundings to be made from a Boat, 431. — Why the Sound- ing-twine will not stop running out when the Plummet reaches Bottom, 432.— In- dications of under Currents, 433. — Rate of Descent, 434. — Brooke's Deep-sea Sounding Apparatus, 437. — The greatest Depths at which Bottom has been found, 438. 421. Until the commencement of the plan of deep-sea sound- ings, as now conducted in the American Navy, the bottom of what the sailors call " blue water" was as unknow^n to us as is the inte- rior of any of the planets of our system. Ross and Dupetit Then- ars, with other officers of the English, French, and Dutch navies, had attempted to fathom the deep sea, some with silk threads, some with spun-yarn (coarse hemp threads twisted together), and some with the common lead and line of navigation. All of these attempts were made upon the supposition that when the lead reached the bottom, either a shock would be felt, or the line, be- coming slack, would cease to run out. 422. The series of systematic experiments recently made upon this subject shows that there is no reliance to be placed on such a supposition, for the shock caused by striking bottom can not be communicated through very great depths, and therefore it does not follow that the line will become slack and cease to run out when the plummet reaches the bottom. Furthermore, the lights of ex- perience show that, as a general rule, the under currents of the deep sea have force enough to take the line out long after the plummet has ceased to do so. Consequently, there is but little re- liance to be placed upon deep-sea soundings of former methods, when the depths reported exceeded eight or ten thousand feet. 423. Attempts to fathom the ocean, both by sound and pressure, had been made, but in " blue water*" every trial was only a failure THE DEPTHS OF THE OCEAN. 201 repeated. The most ingenious and beautiful contrivances for deep-sea soundings were resorted to. By exploding heavy charges of powder in the deep sea, w^hen the winds were hushed and all was still, the echo or reverberation from the bottom might, it was held, be heard, and the depth determined from the rate at which sound travels through water. But, though the explosion took place many feet below the surface, echo was silent, and no answer was received from the bottom. Ericsson and others constructed deep- sea leads having a column of air in them, which, by compression, would show the aqueous pressure to which they might be subject- ed. This was found to answer well for ordinary purposes, but in the depths of " blue water," where the pressure would be equal to several hundred atmospheres, the trial was more than this instru- ment could stand. Mr. Baur, an ingenious mechanician of New York, constructed, according to a plan which I furnished him, a deep-sea sounding apparatus. To the lead was attached, upon the principle of the screw propeller, a small piece of clock-work for registering the number of revolutions made by the little screw during the descent ; and, it having been ascertained by experiment in shoal water that the apparatus, in descending, would cause the propeller to make one revolution for every fathom of perpendicular descent, hands provided with the power of self-registration were attached to a dial, and the instrument was complete. It worked beautifully in moderate depths, but failed in blue w^ater, from the difficulty of hauling it up if the line used were small, and from the difficulty of getting it down if the line used w^ere large enough to give the re- quisite strength for hauling up. 424. But, notw^ithstanding these failures, there was encourage- ment, for greater difficulties had been overcome in other depart- ments of physical research. Astronomers had measured the vol- umes and w^eighed the masses of the most distant planets, and in- creased thereby the stock of human knowledge. Was it credita- ble to the age that the depths of the sea should remain in the cat- egory of an unsolved problem ? It was a sealed volume, abounding in knowledge and instruction that might be both useful and profit- able to man. The seal which covered it was of rolling waves many thousand feet in thickness. Could it not be broken ? Cu- riosity had always been great, yet neither the enterprise nor the 202 THE PHYSICAL GEOGRAPHY OF THE SEA. ingenuity of man had as yet proved itself equal to the task. No one had succeeded in penetrating, and bringing up from beyond the depth of two or three hundred fathoms below the aqueous cover- ing of the earth, any specimens of solid matter for the study of phi- losophers. The sea, with its myths, has suggested attractive themes to all people in all ages. Like the heavens, it affords an almost endless variety of subjects for pleasing and profitable contemplation, and there has remained in the human mind a longing to learn more of its wonders and to understand its mysteries. The Bible often al- ludes to them. Are they past finding out ? How deep is it ? and what is at the bottom of it ? Could not the ingenuity and appli- ances of the age throw some light upon these questions ? The government was liberal and enlightened ; times seemed propitious ; but when or how to begin, after all these failures, with this interesting problem, was one of the difliculties first to be over- come. 425. It was a common opinion, derived chiefly from a supposed physical relation, that the depths of the sea are about equal to the heights of the mountains. But this conjecture w^as, at best, only a speculation. Though plausible, it did not satisfy. There were, in the depths of the sea, untold wonders and inexplicable myste- ries. Therefore the contemplative mariner, as in mid ocean he looked down upon the gentle bosom of the sea, continued to expe- rience sentiments akin to those which fill the mind of the devout astronomer when, in the stillness of the night, he looks out upon the stars, and w^onders. 426. Nevertheless, the depths of the sea still remained as fath- omless and as mysterious as the firmament above. Indeed, tele- scopes of huge proportions and of vast space-penetrating powers had been erected here and there by the munificence of individuals, and attempts made with them to gauge the heavens and sound out the regions of space. Could it be more difficult to sound out the sea than to gauge the blue ether and fathom the vaults of the sky ? The result of the astronomical undertakings* lies in the discovery that what, through other instruments of less power, appeared as clusters of stars, were, by these of larger powers, separated into groups, and what had been reported as nebula? could now be re- * See the works of Herschel and Ross, and their telescopes. THE DEPTHS OF THE OCEAN. 203 solved into clusters ; that, in certain directions, li. iibyss beyond these faint objects is decked with other nebulae, which these great instruments may bring to light, but can not resolve ; and that there are still regions and realms beyond, wdiich the rays of the bright- est sun in the sky have neither the intensity nor the force to reach, much less to penetrate. 427. So, too, with the bottom of the sea, and the knowledge- seeking mariner. Though nothing thence had been brought to light, exploration had invested the subject with additional inter- est, and increased the desire to know more. In this state of the case, the idea of a common twine thread for a sounding-hne, and a cannon ball for a sinker, was suggested. It was a beautiful con- ception ; for, besides its simplicity, it had in its favor the greatest of recommendations — it could be readily put into practice. Well-directed attempts to fathom the ocean began now to be made, and the public mind was astonished at the vast depths that were at first reported. 428. Lieutenant Walsh, of the United States schooner " Taney," reported a cast with the deep-sea lead at thirty-four thousand feet without bottom. His sounding-line was an iron wire more than eleven miles in length. Lieutenant Berryman, of the United States brig " Dolphin," reported another unsuccessful attempt to fathom mid ocean with a line thirty-nine thousand feet in length. Captain Denham, of her Britannic majesty's ship " Herald," re- ported bottom in the South Atlantic at the depth of forty-six thou- sand feet ; and Lieutenant J. P. Parker, of the United States frig- ate " Congress," afterward, in attempting to sound near the same region, let go his plummet, and saw a line fifty thousand feet long run out after it as though the bottom had not been reached. The three last-named attempts were made with the sounding twine of the American Navy, which has been introduced in con- formity w^th a very simple plan for sounding out the depths of the ocean. It involved for each cast only the expenditure of a cannon ball, and twine enough to reach the bottom. This plan was in- troduced as a part of the researches conducted at the National Ob- servatory, and w^hich have proved so fruitful and beneficial, con- cerning the winds and currents, and other phenomena of the ocean. These researches had already received the approbation of the Con- gress of the United States ; for that body, in a spirit worthy of the 204 THE PHYSICAL GEOGRAPHY OF THE SEA. representatives of a free and enlightened people, had authorized the Secretary of the Navy to employ three public vessels to assist in perfecting the discoveries, and in conducting the investigations connected therew^ith. 429. The plan of deep-sea soundings finally adopted, and nov\^ in practice, is this : Every vessel of the Navy that v^^ill, when she puts to sea, is, if she desires it, furnished with a sufficient quantity of sounding-twine, carefully marked at every length of one hun- dred fathoms — six hundred feet — and wound on reels of ten thou- sand fathoms each. It is made the duty of the commander to avail himself of every favorable opportunity to try the depth of the ocean, whenever he may find himself out upon " blue w^ater." For this purpose he is to use a cannon ball of thirty-two pounds as a plummet. Having one end of the twine attached to it, the can- non ball is to be thrown overboard from a boat, and suffered to take the twine from the reel as fast as it will. The reel is made to turn easily. A silk thread, or the common wrapping-twine of the shops would, it was thought, be strong enough for this purpose ; for it was supposed there would be no strain upon the line, except the very slight one required to drag it down, and the twine having nearly the specific gravity of sea wa- ter, this strain w^ould, it w^as imagined, be very slight. Moreover, when the shot reached the bottom, the line, it was thought (§ 421 ), would cease to run out ; then breaking it off", and seeing how much remained upon the reel, the depth of the sea could be ascer- tained at any place and time, simply at the expense of one cannon ball and a few pounds of common twine. 430. But practical difficulties that were not suspected at all were lurking in the way, and afterward showed themselves at ev- ery attempt to sound ; and it was before these practical difficul- ties had been fairly overcome that the great soundings (§ 428) were reported. In the first place, it was discovered that the line, once started and dragged down into the depths of the ocean, never would cease to run out (§ 422), and, consequently, that there was no means of knowing when, if ever, the shot had reached the bot- tom. And, in the next place, it was ascertained that the ordinary twine (^ 427) would not do ; that the sounding-line, in going down, was really subjected to quite a heavy strain, and that, consequent- ly, the tvvine to be used must be strong ; it must be subjected to THE DEPTHS OF THE OCEAN. 205 a test which requh-ed it to bear a weight of at least sixty pounds freely suspended in the air. So we had to go to Avork anew, and make several hundred thousand fathoms of sounding-twine espe- cially for the purpose. It was small, and stood the test required, a pound of it measuring about six hundred feet in length. 431. The officers intrusted with the duty soon found that the soundings could not be made from the vessel with any certainty as to the depth. It was necessary that a boat should be lowered, and the trial be made from it ; the men with their oars keeping the boat from drifting, and maintaining it in such a position that the line should be " up and down" the while. 432. That the line would continue to run out after the cannon ball had reached bottom, was explained by the conjecture that there is in the ocean, as in the air, a system of currents and counter currents one above the other, and that it was one or more of these submarine currents, operating upon the bight of the line, which caused it to continue to run out after the shot had reached the bottom. In corroboration of this conjecture, it was urged, with a truth-like force of argument, that it was these under currents, operating with a swigging force upon the bights of the line — for there mio^ht be several currents runnino^ in different directions, and operating upon it at the same time — wdiich caused it to part when- ever the reel w^as stopped and the line held fast in the boat. 433. A powerful train of circumstantial evidence was this (and it was derived from a source wholly unexpected), going to prove the existence of that system of oceanic circulation which the cli- mates, and the offices, and the adaptations of the sea require, and which its inhabitants (§ 293) in their mute way tell us of. This system of circulation commenced on the third day of cre- ation, with the "gathering together of the waters," which were " called seas," and doubtless will continue as long as sea water shall possess the properties of saltness and fluidity. 434. In making these deep-sea soundings, the practice is to time the hundred fathom marks as they successively go out ; and by always using a line of the same size and "make," and a sinker of the same shape and weight, w^e at last established the law of descent. Thus the mean of our experiments gave us, for the sink- er and twine used, 206 THE PHYSICAL GEOGRAPHY OF THE SEA. 2 m. 21 s. as the average time of descent from 400 to 500 fathoms. 3 m. 26 s. " " " 1000 to 1100 4 m. 29 s. " " " 1800 to 1900 435. Now, by aid of the law here indicated, w^e could tell very nearly when the ball ceased to carry the line out, and when, of course, it began to go out in obedience to the current and drift alone ; for currents would sweep the line out at a uniform rate, while the cannon ball would drag it out at a decreasing rate. 436. The development of this law certainly was an achieve- ment, for it enabled us to show that the depth of the sea at the places named (§ 428) was not as great as reports made it. These researches were interesting ; the problem in hand was important, and it deserved every effort that ingenuity could suggest for re- ducing it to a satisfactory solution. 437. As yet, no specimens of the bottom had been brought up. The line was too small, the shot was too heavy, and it could not be weighed. In this state of the case. Passed Midshipman J. M. Brooke, United States Navy, who, at the time, was associated with me on duty at the Observatory, proposed a contrivance by w^hich the shot, on striking the bottom, would detach itself from the line, and send up a specimen of the bottom. This beautiful contrivance, called Brooke's Deep-sea Sounding Apparatus, is represented in Plates II. and III. opposite. A is a cannon ball, having a hole through it for the rod B. Plate II. represents the rod, B ; the shngs, D D, with the shot slung, and in the act of being lowered down. Plate III. repre- sents the apparatus in the act of striking the bottom, and shows how the shot is detached, and how specimens of the bottom are brought up, by adhering to a little soap or tallow,* called " arm- ing," in the cup, C, at the lower end of the rod, B. With this con- trivance specimens of the bottom have been brought up from the 'depth of more than two miles. 438. The greatest depths at which the bottom of the sea has been reached with the plummet are in the North Atlantic Ocean, and the places where it has been fathomed do not show it to be deeper than twenty-five thousand feet. The deepest place in this ocean (Plate XI.) is probably between the parallels of 35° and 40° north latitude, and immediately to the * A Stell wagon cup is found to answer better. THE DEPTHS OF THE OCEAN. 207 PLATE H PLATE HL BROOKE'S DEEP-SEA SOUNDING APPAJRATUS. southward of the Grand Banks of Newfoundland. No satisfactory- deep-sea soundmgs, either in the Pacific or Indian Oceans, have as yet been made by those who are co-operating in this admirable plan of research.* A few have been made in the South Atlantic, but not enough to justify deduction as to its depths or the shape of its floor. * Since the above was written, I have received a letter from Captain Ringgold, commanding the Surveying Expedition in the Pacific, informing me that, on his way out, he had obtained, in the southern hemisphere, a deep-sea sounding, with bottom at the depth of eight thousand fathoms. The notes and details of this cast have not yet been received. 208 THE PHYSICAL GEOGRAPHY OF THE SEA. CHAPTER XII. THE BASIN OF THE ATLANTIC. .late XL, ^ 439.— Height of Chimborazo above the Bottom of the Sea, 440.— Orog- raphy of Oceanic Basins, 441. — The deepest Place in the Atlantic, 442. — The Bot- tom OF THE Atlantic : The UtiUty of Deep-sea Soundings, 445. — A telegraphic Plateau across the Atlantic, 446. — Specimens from it, 447. — A microscopic Exam- ination of them, 448. — Brooke's Deep-sea Lead presents the Sea in a new Light, 453. — The Agents at work upon the Bottom of the Sea, 454. — How the Ocean is prevented from growing saltcr, 458. — Knowledge of our Planet to be derived from the Bottom of the Sea, 460. 439. The Basin of the Atlantic, according to the deep-sea soundings made by the American Navy, in the manner described in the foregoing chapter, is shown on Plate XL This plate refers chiefly to that part of the Atlantic which is included within our hemisphere. 440. In its entire length, the basin of this sea is a long trough, separating the Old World from the New, and extending probably from pole to pole. This ocean-furrow was scored into the solid crust of our planet by the Almighty hand, that there the waters which "he called seas" might be gathered together, so as to " let the dry land ap- pear," and fit the earth for the habitation of man. From the top of Chimborazo to the bottom of the Atlantic, at the deepest place yet reached by the plummet in the North At- lantic, the distance, in a vertical line, is nine miles. Could the waters of the Atlantic be drawn off, so as to expose to view this great sea-gash, which separates continents, and extends from the Arctic to the Antarctic, it would present a scene the most rugged, grand, and imposing. The very ribs of the solid earth, with the foundations of the sea, would be brought to light, and we should have presented to us at one view, in the empty cradle of the ocean, " a thousand fearful wrecks," with that dreadful array of dead men's skulls, great anchors, heaps of pearl and inestmia- ble stones, which, in the poet's eye, he scattered in the bottom of the sea, making it hideous with sights of ugly death. THE BASIN OF THE ATLANTIC. 209 441. To measure the elevation of the mountain-top above the sea, and to lay down upon our maps the mountain ranges of the earth, is regarded in geography as an important thing, and rightly so. Equally important is it, in bringing the physical geography of the sea regularly v^^ithin the domains of science, to present its orography, by mapping out the bottom of the ocean so as to show the depressions of the solid parts of the earth's crust there below the sea-level. 442. Plate XL presents the second attempt at such a map. It relates exclusively to the bottom of that part of the Atlantic Ocean which lies north of 10° south. It is stippled with four shades ; the darkest (that which is nearest the shore-line) shows where the wa- ter is less than six thousand feet deep ; the next, where it is less than twelve thousand feet ; the third, where it is less than eighteen thousand ; and the fourth, or lightest, where it is not over twenty- four thousand feet deep. The blank space south of Nova Scotia and the Grand Banks includes a district within which very deep w^ater has been reported, but from casts of the deep-sea lead which upon discussion do not appear satisfactory. The deepest part of the North Atlantic (^ 438) is probably some- where between the Bermudas and the Grand Banks, but how deep it may be yet remains for the cannon ball and sounding-twine to determine. 443. The waters of the Gulf of Mexico are held in a basin about a mile deep in the deepest part. 444. The Bottom of the Atlantic, or its depressions below the sea-level, are given, perhaps, on this plate with as much accu- racy as the best geographers have been enabled to show^ on a map the elevations above the sea-level of the interior either of Africa or Australia. 445. " What is to be the use of these deep-sea soundings ?" is a question that often occurs ; and it is as difficult to be answered in categorical terms as Franklin's question, " What is the use of a new-born babe ?" Every physical fact, every expression of na- ture, every feature of the earth, the work of any and all of those agents which make the face of the world what it is, and as we see it, is interesting and instructive. Until we get hold of a group of physical facts, we do not know what practical bearings they may have, though right-minded men know that they contain many O 210 THE PHYSICAL GEOGRAPHY OF THE SEA. precious jewels, which science or the expert hand of philosophy will not fail to bring out, polished, and bright, and beautifully adapted to man's purposes. Already we are obtaining practical answers to this question as to the use of deep-sea soundings ; for as soon as they were announced to the public, they forthwith as- suiAed a practical bearing in the minds of men with regard to the question of a submarine telegraph across the Atlantic. 446. There is at the bottom of this sea, between Cape Race in Newfoundland and Cape Clear in Ireland, a remarkable steppe, which is already known as the telegraphic plateau. A company is now engaged with the project of a submarine telegraph across the Atlantic. It is proposed to carry the wires along this plateau from the eastern shores of New^foundland to the western shores of Ireland. The great circle distance between these two shore- lines is one thousand six hundred miles, and the sea along the route is probably nowhere more than ten thousand feet deep. This company, it is understood, consists of men of enterprise and wealth, who, should the mquiries that they are now making prove satisfactory, are prepared to undertake the establishment forth- with of a submarine telegraph across the Atlantic. 447. It was upon this plateau that Brooke's soundmg apparatus (§ 437) brought up its first trophies from the bottom of the sea- These specimens Lieutenant Berryman and his officers judged to be clay ; but they took the precaution to label them, carefully to preserve them, and, on their return to the United States, to send them to the proper bureau. They were divided : a part was sent for examination to Professor Ehrenberg, of Berlin, and a part to Professor Bailey, of West Point — eminent microscopists both. I have not heard from the former, but the latter, in November, 1853, thus responded ' 448- " I am greatly obliged to you for the deep soundings you sent me last week, and I have looked at them with great interest. They are exactly what I have wanted to get hold of. The bottom of the ocean at the depth of more than two miles I hardly hoped ever to have a chance of examining ; yet, thanks to Brooke's con- trivance, we have it clean and free from grease, so that it can at once be put under the microscope. I w^as greatly delighted to find that all these deep soundings are filled with microscopic shells ; not a particle of sand or gravel exists in them. They are THE BASIN OF THE ATLxVNTIC. 211 chiefly made up of perfect little calcareous shells {Fora7nimferce), and contain, also, a small number of silicious shells (Diatomacece). " It is not probable that these animals lived at the depths where these shells are found, but I rather thmk that they inhabit the wa- ters near the surface ; and when they die, their shells settle to the bottom. With reference to this point, I shall be very glad to ex- amine bottles of w^ater from various depths which were brought home by the Dolphin, and any similar materials, either ' bottom,' or water from other localities. I shall study them carefully The results already obtained are of very great interest, and have many important bearings on geology and zoology '' I hope you will induce as many as possible to collect sound- ings with Brooke's lead, in all parts of the world, so that we can map out the animalcula^ as you have the whales. Get your wha- lers also to collect mud from pancake ice, &c., in the Polar re- gions: this is always full of interesting microscopic forms." 449. These little mites of shells seem to form but a slender' clew indeed by which the chambers of the deep are to be thread- ed, and mysteries of the ocean revealed ; yet the results are sug- gestive ; in right hands and to right minds, they are guides to both lio^ht and knowledo^e. The first noticeable thing the microscope gives of these speci- mens is, that all of them are of the animal, not one of the mineral kingdom. 450. The ocean teems with life, we know. Of the four ele- ments of the old philosophers — fire, earth, air, and water — perhaps the sea most of all abounds with living creatures. The space oc- cupied on the surface of our planet by the diflferent families of animals and their remains is inversely as the size of the individ- ual. The smaller the animal, the greater the space occupied by his remains. Though not invariably the case, yet this rule, to a certain extent, is true, and will, therefore, answer our present purposes, which are simply those of illustration. Take the ele- phant and his remains, or a microscopic animal and his, and com- pare them. The contrast, as to space occupied, is as striking as that of the coral reef or island with the dimensions of the whale. The grave-yard that would hold the corallines is larger than the grave-yard that would hold the elephants. 451. We notice another practical bearing in this group of phys- 212 THE PHYSICAL GEOGRAPHY OF THE SEA. ical facts that Brooke's apparatus fished up from the bottom of the deep sea. Bailey, with his microscope {^ 448), could not detect a 'single particle of sand or gravel among these little mites of shells. They were from the great telegraphic plateau (^ 446), and the inference is that there, if any where, the waters of the sea are at rest. There w^as not motion enough there to abrade these very delicate organisms, nor current enough to sweep them about and mix up with them a grain of the finest sand, nor the smallest particle of gravel torn from the loose beds of debris that here and there strew the bottom of the sea. This plateau is not too deep for the Avire to sink down and rest upon, yet it is not so shallow that currents, or icebergs, or any abrading force can derange the wire after it is once lodged. 452. As Professor Bailey remarks, the animalculse, whose re- mains Brooke's lead has brought up from the bottom of the deep sea, probably did not live or die therq.. They would have had no light there, and, had they lived there, their frail little textures would have been subjected in their growth to a pressure upon them of a column of water twelve thousand feet high, equal to the weight of four hundred atmospheres. They probably lived and sported near the surface, where they could feel the genial influence of both lisfht and heat, and were buried in the lichen caves below after death. 453. Brooke's lead and the microscope, therefore, it would seem, are about to teach us to regard the ocean in a new light. Its bosom, which so teems with animal life ; its face, upon which time writes no wrinkles — makes no impression — are, it w^ould now seem, as obedient to the great law of change as is any department whatever, either of the animal or the vegetable kingdom. It is now suggested that, henceforward, we should view the surface of the sea as a nursery teeming with nascent organisms, its depths as the cemetery for families of living creatures that outnumber the sands on the sea-shore for multitude. Where there is a nursery, hard by there will be found also a grave-yard — such is the condition of the animal world. But it never occurred to us before to consider the surface of the sea as ene wide nurgery, its every ripple a cradle, and its bottom one vast burial-place. 454. On those parts of the Solid portions of the earth's crust THE BASIN OF THE ATLANTIC. 213 which are at the bottom of the atmosphere, various agents are at work, levehng both upward and downward. Heat and cold, rain and sunshine, the winds and the streams, all assisted by the forces of gravitation, are unceasingly wasting away the high places on the land, and as perpetually filling up the low. But in contemplating the leveling agencies that are at work upon the solid portions of the crust of our planet which are at the bottom of the sea, one is led, at first thought, almost to the con- clusion that these leveling agents are pow^erless there. 455, In the deep sea there are no abrading processes at work ; neither frosts nor rains are felt there, and the force of gravitation is so paralyzed down there that it can not use half its poAver, as on the dry land, in tearing the overhanging rock from the preci- pice and casting it down into the valley below. When considering the bottom of the ocean, we have, in the im. agination, been disposed to regard the waters of the sea as a great cushion, placed between the air and the bottom of the ocean to pro- tect and defend it from these abrading agencies of the atmosphere. The geological clock may, we thought, strike new periods ; its hands may point to era after era ; but, so long as the ocean remains in its basin, so long as its bottom is covered with blue water, so long must the deep furrows and strong contrasts in the solid crust below stand out bold, ragged, and grand. Nothing can fill up the hollows there ; no agent now^ at work, that we know of, can de- scend into its depths, and level oif the floors of the sea. 456. But it now seems that w^e forgot these oceans of animalcu- Ige, that make the surface of the sea sparkle and glow with life. They are secreting from its surface solid matter for the very pur- pose of filling up those cavities below. These little marine insects are building their habitations at the surface, and when they die, their remains, in vast multitudes, sink down and settle upon the bottom. They are the atoms of -which mountains are formed — plains spread out. Our marl-beds, the clay in our river-bottoms, large portions of many of the great basins of the earth, are com- posed of the remains of just such little creatures as these, which the ingenuity of Brooke and the industry of Berryman have ena- bled us to fish up from the depth of more than two miles (twelve thousand feet) below the sea-level. These fo7'a7?ii?iifer 60, therefore, when living, may have been pre- 214 THE PHYSICAL GEOGRAPHY OF THE SEA. paring the ingredients for the fruitful soil of a land that some earthquake or upheaval, in ages far away in the future, may be sent to cast up from the bottom of the sea for man's use. The study of these ''sunless treasures," recovered with so much ingenuity from the rich bottom of the sea, suggests new view^s concerning the physical economy of the ocean. 457. In the chapter on the Salts of the Sea, p. 150, I endeav- ored to show how sea-shells and marine insects may, by reason of the offices which they perform, be regarded as compensations in that exquisite system of physical machinery by which the har- monies of nature are preserved. But the treasures of the lead and revelations of the microscope present the insects of the sea in a new and still more striking light. V/e behold them now serving not only as compensations by wdiich the motions of the water in its channels of circulation are regu- lated and climates softened, but acting also as checks and bal- ances by which the equipoise between the solid and the fluid matter of the earth is preserved. Should it be established that these microscopic creatures Hve at the surface, and are only buried at the bottom of the sea, we may then view them as conservators of the ocean ; for, in the of- fices which they perform, they assist to preserve its status by maintaining the purity of its waters. It is admitted (^ 343) that the salts of the sea come from the land, and that they consist of the soluble matter which the rains wash out from the fields, and which the rivers bring down to the sea. The waters of the Mississippi and the Amazon, together with all the streams and rivers of the world, both great and s.mall, hold in solution large quantities of lime, soda, iron, and other matter. They discharge annually into the sea an amount of this sohible matter which, if precipitated and collected into one solid mass, would no doubt surprise and astonish the boldest speculator with its magnitude. 458. This soluble matter can not be evaporated. Once in the ocean, there it must remain ; and as the rivers are continually pouring in fresh supplies of it, the sea, it has been argued, must continue to become more and more salt. Now the rivers convey to the sea this solid matter mixed with THE BASIN OF THE ATLANTIC. 215 fresh water, which, being hghter than that of the ocean, remains for a considerable time at or near the surface. Here the micro- scopic organisms of the deep-sea lead arc continually at work, se- creting this same lime and soda, &c., and extracting from the sea water all this solid matter as fast as the rivers bring it down and empty it into the sea. Thus we haul up from the deep sea specimens of dead animals, and recognize in them the remains of creatures which, though invis- ible to the naked eye, have nevertheless assigned to them a most important office in the physical economy of the universe, viz., that of regulating the saltness of the sea (§ 342). This view suggests many contemplations. Among them, one in which the ocean is presented as a vast chemical bath, in which the solid parts of the earth are washed, filtered, and precipitated again as solid matter, but in a new form, and with fresh properties. Doubtless it is only a re-adaptation, though it may be in an im- proved form, of old, and, perhaps, effete matter, to the uses and well-being of man. These are speculations merely ; they may be fancies without foundation, but idle they are not, I am sure ; for when we come to consider the agents by which the physical economy of this our earth is regulated, by which this or that result is brought about and accomplished in this beautiful system of terrestrial arrange- ments, w^e are utterly amazed at the offices which have been per- formed, the work which has been done, by the animalculae of the water. 459. But whence come the little calcareous shells which Brooke's lead has brought up, in proof of its sounding, from the depth of two miles and a quarter ? Did they live in the surface waters immediately above ? or is their habitat in some remote part of the sea, whence, at their death, the currents were sent forth as pall-bearers, with the command, to deposit their remains where the plummet found them ? 460. In this view, these little organisms become doubly inter- esting. When dead, the descent of the shell to its final resting- place Vv^ould not, it may be supposed, be very rapid. It would partake of the motion of the sea water in which it lived and died, and probably be carried along with it in its channels of circula, tion for many a long mile. 216 THE PHYSICAL GEOGRAPHY OF THE SEA. The microscope, under the eye of Ehrenberg, has enabled us (^ 158) to put talUes on the wings of the wind, to learn of them somewhat concerning its " circuits." Now, may not these shells, which were so fine and impalpable that the officers of the Dolphin took them to be a mass of unctu- ous clay — may not, I say, these, with other specimens of sound- ings yet to be collected, be all converted by the microscope into tallies for the waters of the different parts of the sea, by which the channels through which the circulation of the ocean is car- ried on are to be revealed ? Suppose, for instance, that the dwelling-place of the little shells which compose this specimen from that part of the ocean be ascer- tained, by referring to living types, to be the Gulf of Mexico or some other remote region ; that the habitat and the burial-place, in every instance, be far removed from each other — by what agen- cy, except through that of currents, can we suppose these little creatures — themselves not having the powers of locomotion — to come from the place of their birth, or to travel to that of their burial ? Man can never see — he can only touch the bottom of the deep sea, and then only with the plummet. Whatever it brings up thence is to the philosopher matter of powerful interest ; for by such information alone as he may gather from a most careful ex- amination of such matter, the amount of human knowledge con- cerning nearly all that portion of our planet which is covered by the sea must depend. Every specimen of bottom from the deep sea is, therefore, tc be regarded as probably containing something precious in the way of contribution to the sources of human knowledge. THE WINDS. 217 CHAPTER XIIL THE WINDS. Plate VIII., f^.^ I V ^'tl'y^ ^^t I X- St Helena 1 *f5?Grn^iH"ope ISOTHERMAL CHART OF THE ATLAMTIO OCBAM FOR MARCH AXD SEPTEMBER. March. ----- September. _EWKNIY_JIL S BO 115 8l5 SJO 2l5 Zip ll5 iTo |5 ^^'^ ^l" ^^ ''" THE CLIMATES OF THE OCEAN. 231 CHAPTER XIV, THE CLIMATES OF THE OCEAN. Gulf Stream likened to the Milky Way, <5> 492. — March and September the hottest Months in the Sea, 496. — How the Isothermal Lines move up and down the Ocean, 498. — A Line of invariable Temperature, 508. — How the western Half of the At- lantic is heated up, 509. — The Relation between a Shore-line in one part of the World and Climates in another, 512. — The Climate of Patagonia, 516. — The Sum- mer of the northern Hemisphere warmer than the Summer of the southern, indi- cated by the Sea, 521. — How the cold Waters from Davis's Straits press upon the Gulf Stream, 522. — How the different Isotherms travel from North to South wit> the Seasons, 523.— The Polar and Equatorial Drift, 524. 492. Thermal charts, showing the temperature of the surface of the Atlantic Ocean by actual observ^ations made indiscrimin- ately all over it, and at all times of the year, have been published by the National Observatory. The isothermal lines which these charts enable us to draw% and some of which are traced on Plate IV., afford the navigator and the philosopher much valuable and interesting information touching the circulation of the oceanic wa- ters, including the phenomena of the cold and warm sea currents ; they also cast light upon the climatology of the sea, its hyeto- graphic peculiarities, and the climatic conditions of various regions of the earth ; they show that the profile of the coast-line of inter- tropical America assists to give expression to the mild climate of Southern Europe ; they also increase our knowdedge concerning the Gulf Stream, for it enables us to mark out, for the mariner's guidance, the " Milky Way" in the ocean, the waters of which teem, and sparkle, and glow with life and incipient organisms as they run across the Atlantic. In them are found the clusters and nebulae of the sea which stud and deck the great highway of ships on their voyage between the Old World and the New ; and these lines assist to point out for the navigator their limits and his way. They show this via lactea to have a vibratory motion that calls to mind the graceful wavings of a pennon as it floats gently to the breeze. Indeed, if we imagine the head of the Gulf Stream to be hemmed in by the land in the Straits of Bemini, and to be sta- tionary there, and then liken the tail of the Stream itself to an im- 232 THE PHYSICAL GEOGRAPHY OF THE SEA. mense pennon floating gently in the current, such a motion as such a streamer may be imagined to have— very much such a motion — do my researches show the tail of the Gulf Stream to have. Run- ning between banks of cold water {^ 1), it is pressed now from the north, now from the south, according as the great masses of sea matter on either hand may change or fluctuate in temperature. 493. In September, when the waters in the cold regions of the north have been tempered, and made warm and light by the heat of summer, its limits on the left (Plate VI ) are as denoted by the line of arrows , but after this great sun-swing, the waters on the left side begin to lose their heat, grow cold, become heavy, and press the hot waters of this stream within the channel marked out for them. 494. Thus it acts like a pendulum, slowly propelled by heat on one side and repelled by cold on the other. In this view, it be- comes the chronograph of the sea, keeping time for its inhabitants, and marking the seasons for the great whales ; and there it has been for all time vibrating to and fro, swinging from north to south and from south to north, a great self-regulating, self-compensating pendulum. 495. In seeking information concerning the climates of the ocean, it is well not to forget this remarkable contrast between its climatology and that of the land, viz. : on the land, February and August are considered the coldest and the hottest months ; but to the inhabitants of the sea, the annual extremes of cold and heat occur in the months of March and September. On the dry land^ after the winter "is past and gone," the solid parts of the earth continue to receive from the sun more heat in the day than they radiate at night, consequently there is an accumulation of caloric^ which continues to increase until August. The summer is now at its height ; for, with the close of this months the solid parts of the earth's crust and the atmosphere above begin to dispense with their heat faster than the rays of the sun can impart fresh sup- plies, and, consequently, the climates which they regulate grow cooler and cooler until the dead of winter again. 496. But at sea a different rule seems to prevail. Its waters are the store-houses in which the surplus heat of summer is stored away against the severity of winter, and its waters continue to grow warmer for a month after the weather on shore has begun THE CLIMATES OF THE OCEAN. 233 to get cool This brings the highest temperature to the sea in September, the lowest in March. Plate IV. is intended to show the extremes of heat and cold to which the ivaters — not the ice — of the sea are annually subjected, and therefore the isotherms of 40°, 50°, 60°, 70°, and 80^ have been drawn for March and Sep- tember, the months of extreme heat and extreme cold to the in- habitants of the " great deep." Corresponding isotherms for any other month will fall between these, taken by pairs. Thus the isotherm of 70*^ for July will fall nearly between the same iso- therms (70°) for March and September. 497. xi careful study of this plate, and the contemplation of the benign influences of tlie sea upon the climates wdiich we enjoy, suggest many beautiful thoughts ; for by such study we get a glimpse into the arrangements and the details of that exquisite machinery in the ocean which enables it to perform all its offices, and to answer with fidelity its marvelous adaptations. 498 How, let us inquire, does the isotherm of 80°, for instance, get from its position in March to its position in September ? Is it wafted along by currents, that is, by water which, after having been heated near the equator to 80°, then flows to the north with this temperature ? Or is it carried there simply by the rays of the sun, as the snow-line is carried up the mountain in summer ? We have reason to believe that it is carried from one parallel to another by each of these agents acting together, but mostly through the instrumentality of currents, for currents are the chief agents for distributing heat to the various parts of the ocean. The sun with his rays would, were it not for currents, raise the water in the torrid zone to blood heat ; but before that can be done, they run off with it to the poles, softening, and mitigating, and temper- ing climates by the way. The provision for this is as beautiful as it is benign ; for, to answer a physical adaptation, it is provided by a law of nature that when the -temperature of water is raised, it shall expand ; as it expands, it must become lighter, and just in proportion as its specific gravity is altered, just in that proportion is equilibrium in the sea destroyed. Arrived at this condition, it is ordained that this hot water shall obey another law of nature, which requires it to run away, and hasten to restore that equilib- rium. Were these isothermal lines moved only by the rays of the sun, they would shde up and down the ocean like so many paral- 234 THE PHYSICAL GEOGRAPHY OF THE SEA. lels of latitude — at least there would be no breaks in them, like that which we see in the isotherm of 80° for September It appears from this line that there is a part of the ocean near the equator, and about midway the Atlantic, which, w^ith its waters, never does attain the temperature of 80° in September. Moreover, this iso- therm of 80° will pass, in the North Atlantic, from its extreme southern to its extreme northern declination — nearly tv^^o thou- sand miles — in about three months. Thus it travels at the rate of about twenty-two miles a day. Surely, without the aid of cur- rents, the rays of the sun could not drive it along that fast. 499. Being now left to the gradual process of cooling by evap- oration, atmospherical contact, and radiation, it occupies the other eight or nine months of the year in slowly returning south to the parallel whence it commenced to flow northw^ard. As it does not cool as rapidly as it was heated, the disturbance of equilibrium by alteration of specific gravity is not so sudden, nor the current wdiich is required to restore it so rapid. Hence the slow rate of move- ment at which this line travels on its march south. 500. Between the meridians of 25° and 30° west, the isotherm of 60° in September ascends as high as the parallel of 56°. In October it reaches the parallel of 50° north. In November it is found betw^een the parallels of 45° and 47°, and by December it has nearly reached its extreme southern descent between these meridians, which it accomplishes in January, standing then near the parallel of 40°. It is all the rest of the year in returning northward to the parallel whence it commenced its flow to the south in September. 501. Now it will be observed that this is the season — from September to December — immediately succeeding that in which the heat of the sun has been playing with greatest activity upon the polar ice. Its melted w^aters, which are thus put in motion in June^ July, and August, would probably occupy the fall months in reaching the parallels indicated. These waters, though cold, and rising gradually in temperature as they flow south, are probably fresher, and if so, probably lighter than the sea water ; and there- fore it may well be that both the warmer and cooler systems of these isothermal lines are made to vibrate up and down the ocean principally by a gentle surface current in the season of quick mo- tion, and in the season of the slow motion principally by a grad- THE CLIMATES OF THE OCEAN. 235 ual process of calorific absorption on the one hand, and by a grad- ual process of cooling on the other. 502. We have precisely such phenomena exhibited by the wa- ters of the Chesapeake Bay as they spread themselves over the sea in winter. At this season of the year, the charts show that water of very low temperature is found projecting out and over- lapping the usual limits of the Gulf Stream. The outer edge of this cold water, though jagged, is circular in its shape, having its centre near the mouth of the Bay. The waters of the Bay, being fresher than those of the sea, may, therefore, though colder, be lighter than the warmer waters of the ocean. And thus we have repeated here, though on a smaller scale, the phenomenon as to the flow of cold waters from the north, which force the surface iso- therm of 60° from latitude 56° to 40° during three or four months. 503. Changes in the color or depth of the water, and the shape of the bottom, &c., would also cause changes in the temperature of certain parts of the ocean, by increasing or diminishing the ca- pacities of such parts to absorb or radiate heat ; and this, to some extent, would cause a bending, or produce irregular curves in the isothermal lines. 504. After a careful study of this plate, and the Thermal Charts of the Atlantic Ocean, from which the materials for this plate were derived, I am led to infer that the mean temperature of the atmos- phere between the parallels of 56° and 40° north, for instance, and over that part of the ocean in which Vv-e have been considering the fluctuations of the isothermal line of 60°, is at least 60° of Fah- renheit, and upward, from January to August, and that the heat which the waters of the ocean derive from this source — atmos- pherical contact and radiation — is one of the causes which move the isotherm of 60° from its January to its September parallel. 505. It is well to consider another of the causes which are at work upon the currents in this part of the ocean, and which tend to give the rapid southwardly motion to the isotherm of 60°. We know the mean dew-point must always be below the mean tem- perature of any given place, and that, consequently, as a general rule, at sea the mean dew-point due the isotherm of 60° is higher than the mean dew-point along the isotherm of 50°, and this, again, higher than that of 40° — this than 30°, and so on. Now suppose, merely for the sake of illustration, that the mean dew-point for 236 THE PHYSICAL GEOGRAPHY OF THE SEA. each isotherm be 5° lower than the mean temperature, we should then have the atmosphere which crosses the isotherm of 60°, with a mean dew-point of 55°, gradually precipitating its vapors until it reaches the isotherm of 50°, with a mean dew-point of 45° ; by which difference of dew-point the total amount of precipitation over the entire zone between the isotherms of 60° and 50° has exceeded the total amount of evaporation from the same surface. The prevailing direction of the winds to the north of the fortieth parallel of north latitude is from the southward and westward (Plate VIII.) ; in other words, it is from the higher to the lower isotherms. Passing, therefore, from a higher to a lower tempera- ture over the ocean, the total amount of vapor deposited by any given volume of atmosphere, as it is blown from the vicinity of the tropical toward that of the polar regions, is greater than that which is taken up again. 506. The area comprehended on Plate VIII. between the iso- therms of 40° and 50° Fahrenheit is less than the area compre- hended between the isotherms 50° and 60°, and this, again, less than the area between this last and 70°, for the same reason that the area between the parallels of latitude 50° and 60° is less than the area between the parallels of latitude 40° and 50° ; therefore, more rain to the square inch ought to fall upon the ocean between the colder isotherms of 10° diiference, than between the w^armer isotherms of the same difference. This is an interesting and an important view, therefore let me make myself clear : the aqueous isotherm of 50°, in its extreme northern reach, touches the paral- lel of 60° north. Now between this and the equator there are but three isotherms, 60°, 70°, and 80°, with the common differ- ence of 10°. But between the isotherm of 40° and the pole, there are at least five others, viz., 40°, 30°, 20°, 10°, 0°, with a com- mon difference of 10°. Thus, to the north of the isotherm 50°, the vapor which would saturate the atmosphere from zero, and perhaps far below, to near 40°, is deposited, while to the south of 50° the vapor which would saturate it from the temperature of 50° up to that of 80° can only be deposited. At least, such would be the case if there were no irregularities of heated plains, mount- ain ranges, land, &c., to disturb the laws of atmospherical circu- lation as they apply 'to the ocean. 507. Having therefore, theoretically, at sea more rain in high • THE CLIMATES OF THE OCEAJN. 237 latitudes, we should have more clouds ; and therefore it would re- quire a longer time for the sun, with his feeble rays, to raise the temperature of the cold water, which, from September to January, has brought the isotherm of 60° from latitude 56° to 40°, than it did for these cool surface currents to float it down. After this southward motion of the isotherm of 60° has been checked in De- cember by the cold, and after the sources of the current which brought it down have been bound in fetters of ice, it pauses in the long nights of the northern winter, and scarcely commences its return till the sun recrosses the equator, and increases its power as well in intensity as in duration. Thus, in studying the physical geography of the sea, we have the eflfecis of night and day, of clouds and sunshine, upon its cur- rents and its climates, beautifully developed. These effects are modified by the operations of certain powerful agents w^hich re- side upon the land ; nevertheless, feeble though those of the for- mer class may be, a close study of this plate will indicate that they surely exist. 508. Now, returning toward the south : we may, on the other hand, infer that the mean atmospherical temperature for the par- allels between which the isotherm of 80° fluctuates is below 80°, at least for the nine months of its slow motion. This vibratory motion suggests the idea that there is, probably, somewhere be- ' tween the isotherm of 80° in Aus^ust and the isotherm of 60° in January, a line or belt of invariable or nearly invariable temper- ature, which extends on the surface of the ocean from one side of the x'^.tlantic to the other. This line or band may have its cycles also, but they are probably of long and uncertain periods. 509. The fact has been pretty clearly established by the dis- coveries to which the wind and current charts have led, that the western half of the Atlantic Ocean is heated up, not by the Gulf Stream alone, as is generally supposed, but by the great equato- rial caldron to the west of longitude 35°, and to the north of Cape St. Roque, in Brazil. The lowest reach of the 80° isotherm for September — if we except the remarkable equatorial flexure (Plate IV.) which actually extends from 40° north to the line — to the west of the meridian of Cape St. Roque, is above its highest reach to the east of that meridian. And now that we have the fact, how obvious, beautiful, and striking is the cause ! 238 THE PHYSICAL GEOGRAPHY OF THE SEA. Cape St. Roque is in 5° south. Now study the configuration of the Southern American Continent from this Cape to the Wind- ward Islands of the West Indies, and take into account also cer- tain physical conditions of these regions : the Amazon, always at a high temperature because it runs from west to east, is pouring an immense volume of warm water into this part of the ocean. As this water and the heat of the sun raise the temperature of the ocean along the equatorial sea-front of this coast, there is no es- cape for the liquid element, as it grows warmer and lighter, except to the north. The land on the south prevents the tepid waters from spreading out in that direction as they do to the east of 35° west, for here there is a space, about 18 degrees of longitude broad, in which the sea is clear both to the north and south. 510. They must consequently flow north. A mere inspection of the plate is sufficient to make obvious the fact that the warm Vv'aters which are found east of the usual limits assigned the Gulf Stream, and betw^een the parallels of 30° and 40° north, do not come from the Gulf Stream, but from this great equatorial cal- dron, w^iich Cape St. Roque blocks up on the south, and which forces its overheated waters up to the fortieth degree of north lat- itude, not through the Caribbean Sea and Gulf Stream, but over the broad surface of the left bosom of the Atlantic Ocean. 511. Here w^e are again tempted to pause and admire the beau- tiful revelations which, in the benign system of terrestrial adapta- tion, these researches into the physics of the sea unfold and spread out before us for contemplation. In doing this, we shall have a free pardon from those at least who delight " to look through na- ture up to nature's God." What two things in nature can be apparently more remote in their physical relations to each other, than the climate of Western Europe and the profile of a coast-line in South America ? Yet this plate reveals to us not only the fact that these relations be- tw^een the two are the most intimate, but makes us acquainted with the arrangements by which such relations are established. 512. The barrier which the South American shore-line opposes to the escape, on the south, of the hot waters from this great equa- torial caldron of St. Roque, causes them to flow north, and in September, as the winter approaches, to heat up the western half of the Atlantic Ocean, and to cover it with a mantle of warmth THE CLIMATES OF THE OCEAN. 239 above summer heat as far up as the parallel of 40°. Here heat to temper the winter climate of Western Europe is stored away as in an air-chamber to furnace-heated apartments ; and during the winter, when the fire of the solar rays sinks down, the west- w^ardly winds and eastwardly currents are sent to perform their office in this benign arrangement. Though unstable and capri- cious to us they seem to be, they nevertheless " fulfill His com- mandments" with regularity and perform their oflices with cer- tainty. In tempering the climates of Europe wdth heat in winter that has been bottled away in the waters of the ocean during sum- mer, they are to be regarded as the flues and the regulators for distributing at the right time, and at the right places, in the right quantities. 513. By March, when "the winter is past and gone," the fur- nace which had been started by the rays of the sun in the pre- vious summer, and which, by autumn, had heated up the ocean in our hemisphere, has gone down. The caldron of St. Roque, ceasing in activity, has failed in its supplies, and the chambers of warmth upon the northern sea, having been exhausted of their heated water, which has been expended in the manner already ex- plained, have contracted their limits. The surface of heated wa- ter which, in September, was spread out over the western half of the Atlantic, from the equator to the parallel of 40° north, and which raised this immense area to the temperature of 80° and up- ward, is not to be found in early spring on this side of the parallel of 8° north. 514. The isotherm of 80° in March, after quitting the Caribbean Sea, runs parallel with the South American coast toward Cape St. Roque, keeping some 8 or 10 degrees from it. Therefore the heat dispensed over Europe from this caldron falls off in March. But a.t this season the sun comes forth with fresh supplies ; he then crosses the line and passes^ over into the northern hemi- sphere ; observations show that the process of heating the water in this great caldron for the next winter is now about to commence. 515. In the mean time, so benign is the system of cosmical ar- rangements, another process of raising the temperature of Europe commences. The land is more readily impressed than the sea by the heat of the solar rays ; at this season, then, the summer cli- mate due these transatlantic latitudes is modified by the action of 240 THE PHYSICAL GEOGRAPHY OF THE SEA. the sun's rays directly upon the land. The land receives heat from them, but, instead of having the capacity of w^ater for retain- ing it, it imparts it straightway to the air ; and thus the proper cli- mate, because it is the climate which the Creator has, for his own wise purposes, allotted to this portion of the earth, is maintained until the marine caldron of Cape St. Roque is again heated and brought into the state for supplying the means of maintaining the needful temperature in Europe during the absence of the sun in the other hemisphere. 516. In like manner, the Gulf of Guinea forms a caldron and a furnace, and spreads out over the South Atlantic an air-chamber for heating up in winter and keeping warm the extra-tropical re- gions of South America. Every traveler has remarked upon the mild climate of Patagonia and the Falkland Islands. " Temperature in high southern latitudes," says a very close observer, who is co-operating w-ith me in collecting materials, " differs greatly from the temperature in northern. In southern latitudes there seem to be no extremes of heat and cold, as at the north. Newport, R. I., for instance, latitude 41° north, longitude 71° w^est, and Rio Negro, latitude 41° south, and longitude 63° west, as a comparison : in the former, cattle have to be stabled and fed during the winter, not being able to get a living in the fields on account of snow^ and ice. In the latter, the cattle feed in the fields all winter, there being plenty of vegetation and no use of hay. On the Falkland Islands (latitude 51-2° south), thou- sands of bullocks, sheep, and horses are running wild over the country, gathering a living all through the w-inter." 517. The water in the equatorial caldron of Guinea can not escape north — the shore-line will not permit it. It must, there- fore, overflow to the south, as that of St. Roque does to the north, carrying to Patagonia and the Falkland Islands, beyond 50° south, the winter climate of Charleston, South Carolina, on our side of the North Atlantic, or of the " Emerald Island" on the other. All geographers have noticed, and philosophers have frequently remarked upon the conformity, as to the shore-line profile, of 'equa- torial America and equatorial Africa. 518. It is true, we can not now tell the reason, though explana- tions founded upon mere conjecture have been offered, why there should be this sort of jutting in and jutting out of the shore-line, as THE CLIMATES OF THE OCEAN. 241 at Cape St. Roque and the Gulf of Guinea, on opposite sides of the Atlantic ; but one of the purposes, at least, which this peculiar con- figuration was intended to subserve, is without doubt now revealed to us. 519. We see that, by this configuration, two cisterns of hot w^ater are formed in this ocean; one of which distributes heat and warmth to western Europe ; the other, at the opposite season, tempers the climate of eastern Patagonia. Phlegmatic must be the mind that is not impressed w^th ideas of grandeur and simplicity as it contemplates that exquisite de- sign, those benign and beautiful arrangements, by which the cli- mate of one hemisphere is made to depend upon the curve of that line against which the sea is made to dash its waves in the other. Impressed w^ith the perfection of terrestrial adaptations, he who studies the economy of the great cosmical arrangements is re- minded that not only is there design in giving shore-lines their profile, the land and the water their proportions, and in placing the desert and the pool w^here they are, but the conviction is forced upon him also, that every hill and valley, with the grass upon its sides, have each its office to perform in the grand design. 520. March is, in the southern hemisphere, the first month of autumn, as September is with us ; consequently, we should ex- pect to find in the South Atlantic as large an area of water of 80° and upward in March, as we should find in the North Atlantic for September. But do w^e ? By no means. The area on this side of the equator is nearly double that on the other. 521. Thus we have the sea as a witness to the fact that the wmds (^ 196) had proclaimed, viz., that summer in the northern hemisphere is hotter than summer in the southern, for the rays of the sun raise on this side of the equator double the quantity of sea surface to a given temperature that they do on the other side ; at least this is the case in the Atlantic. Perhaps the breadth of the Pacific Ocean, the absence of large islands in the temperate re- gions north, the presence of New Holland, w^ith Polynesia in the South Pacific, may make a diflference there. But of this I can not now speak, for thermal charts of that ocean have not yet been prepared. 522. Pursuing the study of the climates of the sea, let us now turn to Plate YL Here we see at a glance how the cold waters, Q 242 THE PHYSICAL GEOGRAPHY OF THE SEA. as they come down from the Arctic Ocean through Davis's Straits, press upon the warm waters of the Gulf Stream, and curve their channel into a horse-shoe. Navigators have often been struck with the great and sudden changes in the temperature of the wa- ter hereabouts. In the course of a single day's sail in this part of the ocean, changes of 15°, or 20°, and even of 30°, have been observed to take place in the temperature of the sea. The cause has puzzled navigators long, but how obvious is it not now made to appear ! This " bend" is the great receptacle of the icebergs which drift down from the north ; covering frequently an area of hund- reds of miles in extent, its waters differ as much as 20°, 25°, and in rare cases even as m.uch as 30° of temperature from those about it. Its shape and place are variable. Sometimes it is like a pen- insula, or tongue of cold water projected far down into the waters of the Gulf Stream. Sometimes the meridian upon which it is inserted into these is to the east of 40°, sometimes to the west of 50° longitude. By its discovery we have clearly unmasked the very seat of that agent which produces the Newfoundland fogs. It is spread out over an area frequently embracing several thou- sand square miles in extent, covered with cold water, and sur- rounded on three sides, at least, with an immense body of warm. May it not be that the proximity to each other of these tw^o very unequally heated surfaces out upon the ocean would be attended by atmospherical phenomena not unlike those of the land and sea breezes ? These warm currents of the sea are powerful meteoro- logical agents. I have been enabled to trace, in thunder and lights ning, the influence of the Gulf Stream in the eastern half of the Atlantic, as far north as the parallel of 55° north ; for there, in the dead of winter, a thunder-storm is not unusual. 523. These isothermal lines of 50°, 60°, 70°, 80°, &c., may illustrate for us the manner in which the climates in the ocean are regulated. Like the sun in the ecliptic, they travel up and down the sea in declination, and serve the monsters of the deep for signs and for seasons. 524. It should be borne in mind that the lines of separation, as drawn on Plate IX., between the cool and warm waters, or, more properly speaking, between the channels representing the great polar and equatorial flux and reflux, are not so sharp in nature as this plate would represent them. In the first place, the plate rep- THE CLIMATES OF THE OCEAN. 243 resents the mean or average limits of these constant flows — polar and equatorial ; whereas, with almost every wind that blows, and at every change of season, the line of meeting between their w^a- ters is shifted. In the next place, this line of meeting is drawn with a free hand on the plate, as if to represent an average ; whereas there is reason to believe that this line in nature is vari- able and unstable as to position, and as to shape rough and jag- ged, and oftentimes deeply articulated. In the sea, the line of meeting between waters of different temperatures and density is not unlike the sutures of the skull-bone on a grand scale — very rough and jagged ; but on the plate it is a line drawn with a free hand, for the purpose of showing the general direction and po- sition of the channels in the sea, through which its great polar and equatorial circulation is carried on. 525. Now, continuing for a moment our examination of Plate IV., w^e are struck with the fact that most of the thermal lines there drawn run from the western side of the Atlantic tow^ard the east- ern, in a northeastwardly direction, and that, as they approach the shores of this ocean on the east, they again turn down for lower latitudes and w^armer climates. This feature in them indicates, more surely than any direct observations upon the currents can do, the presence, along the African shores in the North Atlantic, of a large volume of cooler waters. These are the waters which, having been first heated up in the caldron (§ 509) of St. Roque, in the Caribbean Sea, and Gulf of Mexico, have been made to run to the north, charged with heat and electricity to temper and reg- ulate climates there. Having performed their offices, they have cooled down ; but, obedient still to the " Mighty Voice" which the winds and the waves obey, they now return by this channel along the African shore to be again replenished with warmth, and to keep up the system of beneficent and wholesome circulation de- signed for the ocean. 244 THE PHYSICAL GEOGRAPHY OF THE SEA. CHAPTER XV. THE DRIFT OF THE SEA. Object of Plate IX., <$> 528. — The Eastern Edge of the Gulf Stream sometimes visi- ble, 529.— The Polar Drift about Cape Horn, 533.— How the Polar Waters drift into the South Atlantic, and force the Equatorial aside, 535. — How this is accom- pliohed, 537. — A Harbor in a Bend of the Gulf Stream for Icebergs, 539. — Why Icebergs are not found in the North Pacific, 540. — The Womb of the Sea, 541. — Drift of warm Waters out of the Indian Ocean, 543. — A Suggestion from Lieu- tenant Jansen, of the Dutch Navy, 544. — A Current of warm Water sixteen hund- red Miles wide, 545. — The Pulse of the Sea, 546. — How the Gulf Stream beats ■ Time, 547.— The Circulation of the Sea likened to that of the Blood, 548.— The Fish : Number of Vessels engaged in the Fisheries of the Sea, 551. — The Sperm Whale delights in warm Water, 552. — The Torrid Zone impassable to the Right WTjale, 553. 526. There is a movement of the waters of the ocean which, though it be a translation, yet does not amount to what is known to the mariner as current, for our nautical instruments and the art of navigation have not been brought to that state of perfection which will enable navigators generally to detect as currents the flow to which I allude as drift. 527. If we imagine an object to be set adrift in the ocean at the equator, and if we suppose that it be of such a nature that it would obey only the influence of sea water, and not of the winds, this object, I imagine, would, in the course of time, find its way to the icy barriers about the poles, and again back among the tepid wa- ters of the tropics. Such an object would illustrate the drift of the sea, and by its course w-ould indicate the route which the sur- face waters of the sea follow in their general channels of circula- tion to and fro between the equator and the poles. 528. The object of Plate IX., therefore, is to illustrate, as far as the present state of my researches enables me to do, the cir- culation of the ocean, as influenced by heat and cold, and to in- dicate the routes by which the overheated waters of the torrid zone escape to cooler regions, on one hand, and on the other, the great channel ways through which the same waters, after having THE DRIFT OF THE SEA. 245 been deprived of this heat in the extra-tropical or polar regions, return again toward the equator ; it being assumed that the drift or flow is from the poles when the temperature of the surface water is helow, and from the equatorial regions when it is above that due the latitude. Therefore, in a mere diagram, as this plate is, the numerous eddies and local currents which are found at sea are disregarded. 529. Of all the currents in the sea, the Gulf Stream is the best defined ; its Hmits, especially those of the left bank, are always well marked, and, as a rule, those of the right bank, as high as the parallel of the thirty-fifth degree of latitude, are quite distinct, be- ing often visible to the eye. The Gulf Stream shifts its channel {§ 53), but nevertheless its banks are often very distinct. As I write these remarks, the abstract log of the ship Herculean (Will- iam M. Chamberlain), from Callao to Hampton Roads, in May, 1854, is received. On the eleventh of that month, being in latitude 33° 39^ north, longitude 74° 56'' west (about one hundred and thirty miles east of Cape Fear), he remarks : " Moderate breezes, smooth sea, and fine weather. At ten o'clock fifty minutes, entered into the southern (right) edge of the Stream, and in eight minutes the water rose six degrees ; the edge of the stream w^as visible, as far as the eye could see, by the great rippling and large quantities of Gulf weed — more '■ weed' than I ever saw before, and I have been many times along this route in the last twenty years.'" 530. In this diagram, therefore, I have thought it useless to at- tempt a delineation of any of those currents, as the Rennell Cur- rent of the North Atlantic, the " connecting current" of the South, '' Mentor's Counter Drift," Rossel's Drift of the South Pacific, &c., which run now this way, now that, and which are frequently not felt by navigators at all. 531. In overhauling the log-books for data for this chart, I have followed vessels with the water thermometer to and fro across the seas, and taken the registrations of it exclusively for my guide, without regard to the reported set of the currents. When, in any latitude, the temperature of the water has appeared too high or too low^ for that latitude, the inference has been that such water w^as warmed or cooled, as the case may be, in other latitudes, and that it has been conveyed to the place where found through the great 246 THE PHYSICAL GEOGRAPHY OF THE SEA. channels of circulation in the ocean. If too warm, it is supposed (§528) that it had its temperature raised in warmer latitudes, and therefore the channel in which it is found leads from the equato- rial regions. 532. On the other hand, if the water be too cool for the latitude, then the inference is that it has lost its heat in colder climates, and therefore is found in channels which lead from the polar regions. The arrow-heads point to the direction in w^hich the waters are supposed to flow. Their rate, according to the best information that I have obtained, is, at a mean, only about four knots a day — rather less than more. 533. Accordingly, therefore, as the immense volume of water in the Antarctic regions is cooled down, it commences to flow" north. As indicated by the arrow-heads, it strikes against Cape Horn, and is divided by the continent, one portion going along the west coast as Humboldt's Current (§ 267) ; the other, entering the South At- lantic, flows up into the Gulf of Guinea, on the coast of Africa. 'Now, as the waters of this polar flow approach the torrid zone, they grow w^armer and warmer, and finally themselves become tropical in their temperature. They do not then, it may be supposed, stop their flow ; on the contrary, they keep moving, for the very cause which brought them from the extra-tropical regions now operates to send them back. This cause is to be found in the difference of the specific gravity at the two places. If, for instance, these wa- ters, when they commence their flow from the hyperborean re- gions, were at 30°, their specific gravity will correspond to that of sea w^ater at 30°. But when they arrive in the Gulf of Guinea or the Bay of Panama, having risen by the way to 80°, or perhaps 85°, their specific gravity becomes such as is due sea water of this temperature ; and, since fluids diff'ering in specific gravity can no more balance each other on the same level than can unequal weights in opposite scales, this hot water must now return to re- store that equilibrium which it has destroyed in the sea by rising from 30° to 80° or 85°. 534. Hence it will be perceived that these masses of water Avhich are marked as cold are not always cold. They gradually pass into warm ; for in traveling from the poles to the equator they partake of the temperature of the latitudes through which they flow, and grow warm. THE DRIFT OF THE SEA. 247 535. Plate IX., therefore, is only introduced to give general ideas ; nevertheless, it is very instructive. See how the influx of cold water into the South Atlantic appears to divide the warm w^ater, and squeeze it out at the sides, along the coasts of South Africa and Brazil. So, too, in the North Indian Ocean, the cold water again compelling the warm to escape along the land at the sides, as well as occasionally in the middle. 536. In the North Atlantic and North Pacific, on the contrary, the warm water appears to divide the cold, and to squeeze it out along the land at the sides. The impression made by the cold current from Baffin's Bay upon the Gulf Stream is strikingly beau- tiful. 537. Why is it that these polar and equatorial waters should appear now to divide and now to be divided ? The Gulf Stream has revealed to us a fact in which the answer is involved. We learn from that stream that cold and warm sea waters are, in a measure (§ 53), like oil and vinegar ; that is, there is among the particles of sea water at a high temperature, and among the par- ticles of sea water at a low temperature, a peculiar molecular ar- rangement that is antagonistic to the free mixing up of cold and hot together. At any rate, that salt waters of different tempera- tures do not readily intermingle at sea is obvious. 538. Does not this same repugnance exist, at least in degree, be- tween these bodies of cold and warm water of the plate ? And if so, does not the phenomenon w^e are considering resolve itself into a question of masses ? The volume of warm water in the North Atlantic is greater than the volume of cold water that meets and opposes it ; consequently, the warm thrusts the cold aside, divid- ing and compelling it to go round. The same thing is repeated in the North Pacific, w^hereas the converse obtains in the South Atlantic. Here the great polar flow, after having been divided by the American Continent, enters the Atlantic, and filling up nearly the whole of the immense space between South America and Africa, seems to press the w^arm waters of the tropics aside, compelling them to drift along the coast on either hand. 539. Another feature of the sea expressed by this plate is a sort of reflection or recast of the shore-line in the temperature of the water. This feature is most striking: in the North Pacific and Indian Ocean. The remarkable intrusion of the cool into the vol- 248 THE PHYSICAL GEOGRAPHY OF THE SEA. ume of warm waters to the southward of the Aleutian Islands, is not unlike that which the cool waters from Davis's Straits make in the Atlantic upon the Gulf Stream. As I write, I receive from Captain N. B. Grant the abstract log of the American ship Lady Arbella, bound from Hamburg to New York, in May, 1854. In sailing throuo^h this " horse-shoe," or bend in the Gulf Stream (^ 522), he passed, from daylight to noon, twenty-four large *' bergs," besides several small ones, "the whole ocean, as far as the eye could reach, being literally covered with them." " I should," he continues, "judge the average height of them above the surface of the sea to be about sixty feet ; some five or six of them were at least twice that height, and, with their frozen peaks jutting up in the most fantastic shapes, presented a truly sublime spectacle." 540. This " horse-shoe" of cold in the warm water of the North Pacific, though extending 5 degrees farther toward the south, can not be the harbor for such icebergs. The cradle of those of the Atlantic was perhaps in the Frozen Ocean, for they may have come thence through Baffin's Bay. But in the Pacific there is no nursery for them. The water in Behring's Strait is too shallow to let them pass from that ocean into the Pacific, and the climates of Russian America do not favor the formation of large bergs. But, though we do not find in the North Pacific the physical con- ditions which generate icebergs like those of the Atlantic, we find them as abundant with fogs. The line of separation between the warm and cold water assures us of these conditions. 541. What beautiful, grand, and benign ideas do we not see ex- pressed in that immense body of warm waters which are gathered together in the middle of the Pacific and Indian Oceans !=^ It is the womb of the sea. In it, coral islands innumerable have been fashioned, and pearls formed in " great heaps ;" there, multitudes of living things, countless in numbers and infinite in variety, are hourly conceived. With space enough to hold the four conti- nents and to spare, its tepid waters teem with nascent organ- isms.! They sometimes swarm so thickly there that they change * See Appendix I. t " It is the realm of reef-building corals, and of the wondrously-beautiful assem- blage of animals, vertebrate and invertebrate, that live among them or prey upon them. The brightest and most definite arrangements of color are here displayed. It is the Vat of maximum development of the majority of marine genera. It has but few re- THE DRIFT OF THE SEA. 249 the color of the sea, makmg it crimson, brown, black, or white,* according to their own hues. These patches of colored water sometimes extend, especially in the Indian Ocean, as far as the eye can reach. The question, "What produces them?" is one that has elicited much discussion in seafaring circles. The Brus- sels Conference deemed them an object worthy of attention, and recommended special observations w4th regard to them. The discolorations of which I speak are no doubt caused by organisms of the sea, but whether w^holly animal or wholly vege- table, or whether sometimes the one and sometimes the other, has not been satisfactorily ascertained. I have had specimen? of the coloring matter sent to me from the pink-stained patches of the sea. They w^ere animalculae w^ell defined. Quantities of slimy, red coloring matter are, at certain seasons of the year, washed up along the shores of the Red Sea, which Dr. Ehrenberg, after an examination under the microscope, pronounces to be a very deli- cate kind of sea weed : from this matter that sea derives its name. So also the Yellow Sea. Along the coasts of China, yellowish col- ored spots are said not to be uncommon. I know of no examina- tion of this coloring matter, however. In the Pacific Ocean I have often observed these discolorations of the sea. Red patches of w^ater are most frequently met with, but I have also observed white or milky appearances, which at night I have know^n greatly to alarm navigators, they taking them for shoals. 542. These teeming waters bear off through their several chan- nels the surplus heat of the tropics, and disperse it among the icebergs of the Antarctic. See the immense equatorial flow to the east of New Holland. It is bound for the ic}^ barriers of that unknown sea, there to temper climates, grow cool, and return again, refreshing man and beast by the way, either as the Hum- boldt Current, or the ice-bearing current which enters the Atlantic around Cape Horn, and changes into warm again as it enters the Gulf of Guinea. It was owing to this great southern flow from the coral regions that Captain Ross was enabled to penetrate so much farther south than Captain Wilkes, on his voyage to the lations of identity with other provinces. The Red Sea and Persian Gulf arc its off- sets."— From Professor Forbes's Paper on the " Distribution of Marine Life." Plate 31st, Johnston's Physical Atlas, 2d ed. : Wm. Blackwood & Sons, Edinburgh and London, 1854. . * See Appendix K 250 THE PHYSICAL GEOGRAPHY OF THE SEA. Antarctic, and it is upon these waters that that sea is to be pene- trated, if ever. The North Pacific, except in the narrow passage between Asia and America, is closed to the escape of these w^arm waters into the Arctic Ocean. The only outlet for them is to the south. They go down toward the Antarctic regions to dispense their heat and get cool ; and the cold of the Antarctic, therefore, it may be inferred, is not so bitter as is the extreme cold of the Frozen Ocean of the north. 543. The w^arm flow to the south from the middle of the In- dian Ocean is remarkable. Masters who return their abstract losrs to me mention sea w^eed, which I suppose to be brought down by this current, as far as 45° south. There it is generally, but not always, about 5 degrees warmer than the ocean along the same parallel on either side. 544. But the most unexpected discovery of all is that of the warm flow along the west coast of South Africa, its junction with the Lagullas current, called, higher up, the Mozambique, and then their starting off as one stream to the southward. The prevalent opinion used to be that the Lagullas current, which has its genesis in the Red Sea (^ 55), doubled the Cape of Good Hope, and then joined the great equatorial current of the Atlantic to feed the Gulf Stream. But my excellent friend Lieutenant Marin Jansen, of the Dutch Navy, suggested to me a few months ago that this was probably not the case. This induced a special investigation, and I found as he suggested, and as is represented on Plate IX. Cap- tain N. B. Grant, in the admirably well-kept abstract log of his voyage from New York to Australia, found this current remarka- bly developed. He was astonished at the temperature of its w^a- ters, and did not know how to account for such a body of warm water in such a place. Being in longitude 14° east and latitude 39° south, he thus writes in his abstract log : " That there is a current setting to the eastward across the South Atlantic and Indian Oceans is, I believe, admitted by all navigators. The prevailing westerly winds seem to offer a suffi- cient reason for the existence of such a current, and the almost constant southwest swell would naturally give it a northerly direc- tion. But why the water should be warmer here (38° 40' south) than between the parallels of 35° and 37° south is a problem that, in my mind, admits not of so easy solution, especially if my sus- THE DRIFT OF THE SEA. 251 picions are true in regard to the northerly set. I shall look with much interest for a description of the ' currents' in this part of the ocean." 545. In latitude 38° south, longitude 6° east, he found the wa- ter at 56^. His course thence was a little to the south of east, to the meridian of 41° east, at its intersection with the parallel of 42° south. Here his w^ater thermometer stood at 50°, but between these two places it ranged at 60° and upward, being as high on the parallel of 39° as 73°. Here, therefore, was a stream — a mighty- driver in the ocean" — one thousand six hundred miles across from east to w^est, having water hi the middle of it 23° higher than at the sides. This is truly a Gulf Stream contrast. What an im- mense escape of heat from the Indian Ocean, and what an influx of warm w^ater into the frozen regions of the south ! This stream is not always as broad nor as w^arm as Captain Grant found it. At its mean stage it conforms more nearly to the limits assigned it in the diagram (Plate IX.). 546. We have, in the volume of heated water reported by Cap- tain Grant, who is a close and accurate observer, an illustration of the sort of spasmodic efforts — the heaves and throes — which the sea, in the performance of its ceaseless task, has sometimes to make. By some means, the equilibrium of its w^aters, at the time of Captain Grant's passage, December — the southern summer — 1852, appears to have been disturbed to an unusual extent ; hence this mighty rush of overheated waters from the great inter-tropical caldron of the two oceans dow^n toward the south. Instances of commotion in the sea at uncertain intervals — the making, as it were, of efforts by fits and starts to keep up to time in the performance of its manifold offices — are not unfrequent, nor are they inaptly likened to spasms. The sudden disruption of the ice wdiich arctic voyagers tell of, the immense bergs which occa- sionally appear ift groups near certain latitudes, the variable char- acter of all the currents of the sea — now fast, now slow, now run- ning this w'ay, then that — may be taken as so many signs of the tremendous throes w^hich occur in the bosom of the ocean. Some- times the sea recedes from the shore, as if to gather strength for a great rush against its barriers, as it did Avhen it fled back to join with the earthquake and overwhelm Callao in 1746, and again Lis- bon nine years afterw^ard. The tide-rips in mid ocean, the waves 252 THE PHYSICAL GEOGRAPHY OF THE SEA. dashing against the shore, the ebb and flow of the tides, may be re- garded, in some sense, as the throbbings of the great sea pulse. 547. The motions of the Gulf Stream (§ 53), beating time for the ocean and telling the seasons for the whales, also suggest the idea of a pulse in the sea, which may assist us in explaining some of its phenomena. At one beat there is a rush of warm water from the equator toward the poles, at the next beat a flow from the poles toward the equator. This sort of pulsation is heard also in the bowlings of the storm and the whistling of the wind ; the nee- dle trembles unceasingly to it, and tells us of magnetic storms of great violence, which at times extend over large portions of the earth's surface ; and when we come to consult the records of those exquisitely sensitive anemometers, which the science and ingenu- ity of the age have placed at the service of philosophers, we find there that the pulse of the atmosphere is never still : in what ap- pears to us the most perfect calm, the recording pens are moving to the pulses of the air. 548. Now if we may be permitted to apply to the Gulf Stream and to the warm flows of water from the Indian Ocean an idea suggested by the functions of the human heart in the circulation of the blood, we perceive how these pulsations of the great sea- heart may perhaps assist in giving circulation to its waters through the immense system of aqueous veins and arteries that run betw^een the equatorial and polar regions. The waters of the Gulf Stream, moving together in a body (§1) through such an extent of ocean, and being almost impenetrable to the cold waters on either side — which are, indeed, the banks' of this mighty river — may be com- pared to a wedge-shaped cushion placed between a wall of waters on the right and a wall of waters on the left. If now w^e imagine the equilibrium of the sea to be disturbed by the heating or cool- ing of its waters to the right or the left of this stream, or the freez- ing or thawing of them in any part, or if we imagine the disturb- ance to take place by the action of any of those agencies which give rise to the motions which we have called the pulsations of the sea, we may conceive how it might be possible for them to force the wall of weiters on the left to press this cushion down to- ward the south, and then again for the wall on the right to press it back again to the north, as (^ 54) we have seen that it is. Now the Gulf Stream, with its head in the Straits of Florida, THE DRIFT OF THE SEA. 253 and its tail in the midst of the ocean (§ 492), is wedge-shaped ; its waters chng together (§ 28), and are pushed to and fro — squeezed, if 3^ou please — by a pressure (^ 53), now from the right, then from the left, so as to work the whole wedge along between the cold liquid walls which contain it. May not the velocity of this stream, therefore, be in some sort the result of this working and twisting, this peristaltic force in the sea ? 549. In carrying out the views suggested by the idea of pulsa- tions in the sea, and their effects in giving dynamical force to the circulation of its waters, attention may be called to the two lobes of polar waters that stretch up from the south into the Indian Ocean, and which are separated by a feeble flow of tropical wa- ters. Icebergs are sometimes met with in these polar waters as high up as the parallel of the fortieth degree of latitude. Now, considering that this tropical flow in mid ocean is not constant — • that many navigators cross the path assigned to it in the plate without finding their thermometer to indicate any increase of heat in the sea ; and considering, therefore, that any unusual flow of polar waters, any sudden and extensive disruption of the ice there, sufficient to cause a rush of waters thence, Avould have the effect of closing for the time this mid-ocean flow of tropical waters, we are entitled to infer that there i? a sort of conflict, at times, go- ing on in this ocean between its polar and equatorial flows of wa- ter. For instance, a rush of waters takes place from the poles toward the equator. The two lobes close, cut off' the equatorial flow between them, and crowd the Indian Ocean with polar wa- ters. They press out the overheated waters ; hence the great equatorial flow encountered by Captain Grant. Thus this opening between the cold-water lobes appears to hold to the chambers of the Indian Ocean, with their heated wa- ters, the relations which the valves and the ventricles of the hu- man heart hold to the circulation .of the blood. The closing of these lobes at certain times prevents regurgitation of the warm waters, and compels them to pass through their appointed chan- nels. 550. From this point of view, how many new beauties do not now begin to present themselves in the machinery of the ocean ! its great heart not only beating time to the seasons, but palpitat- ing also to the winds and the rains, to the cloud and the sun- 254 THE PHYSICAL GEOGRAPHY OF THE SEA. shine, to day and night (^ 507). Few persons have ever taken the trouble to compute how much the fall of a single inch of rain over an extensive region in the sea, or how much the change even of two or three degrees of temperature over a few thousand square miles of its surface, tends to disturb its equilibrium, and consequently to cause an aqueous palpitation that is felt from the equator to the poles. Let us illustrate by an example : The surface of the At- lantic Ocean covers an area of about twenty-five milHons of square miles. Now, let us take one fifth of this area, and sup- pose a fall of rain one inch deep to take place over it. This rain would weigh three hundred and sixty thousand millions of tons ; and the salt which, as water, it held in solution in the sea, and which, when that water was taken up as vapor, was left behind to disturb equilibrium, weighed sixteen millions more of tons, or near- ly twice as much as all the ships in the world could carry at a car- go each. It might fall in an hour, or it might fall in a day ; but, occupy what time it might in falling, this rain is calculated to exert so much force — wiiich is inconceivably great — in disturbing the equilibrium of the ocean. If all the water discharged by the Mis- sissippi River during the year were taken up in one mighty meas- ure, and cast into the ocean at one effort, it would not make a greater disturbance in the equilibrium of the sea than would the fall of rain supposed. Now this is for but one fifth of the At- lantic, and the area of the Atlantic is about one fifth of the sea- area of the w^orld ; and the estimated fall of rain was but one inch, whereas the average for the year is (^ 144) sixty inches, but w^e will assume it for the sea to be no more than thirty inches. In the aggregate, and on an average, then, such a disturbance in the equilibrium of the w^hole ocean as is here supposed occurs seven hundred and fifty times a year, or at the rate of once in twelve hours. Moreover, when it is recollected that these rains take place now here, now there ; that the vapor of which they w^ere formed was taken up at still other places, we shall be en- abled to appreciate the better the force and the efifect of these pulsations in the sea. 551. Between the hottest hour of the day and the coldest hour of the night there is frequently a change of four degrees in the tem- perature of the sea.* Let us, therefore, to appreciate the throb- *■ Vide Admiral Smyth's Memoir of the Mediterranean, p. 125. THE DRIFT OF THE SEA. 255 bings of the sea-heart, which take place in consequence of the di- urnal changes in its temperature, call in the sunshine, the cloud without rain, with day and night, and their heating and radiating processes. And to make the case as strong as to be true to na- ture we may, let us again select one fifth of the Atlantic Ocean for the scene of operation. The day over it is clear, and the sun pours down his rays with their greatest intensity, and raises the temperature two degrees. At night the clouds interpose, and pre' vent radiation from this fifth, whereas the remaining four fifths, which are supposed to have been screened by clouds, so as to cut off the heat from the sun during the day, are now looking up to the stars in a cloudless sky, and serve to lower the temperature of the surface waters, by radiation, two degrees. Here, then, is a differ- ence of four degrees, which we will suppose extends only ten feet below the surface. The total and absolute change made in such a mass of sea water by altering its temperature four degrees is equivalent to a change in its volume of three hundred and ninety thousand millions of cubic feet. 552. Do not the clouds, night and day, now present themselves to us in a new light ? They are cogs, and rachets, and wheels in that grand and exquisite machinery w^hich governs the sea, and which, amid all the jarrings of the elements, preserves in harmo- ny the exquisite adaptations of the ocean. 553. It seems to be a physical law, that cold-water fish are more edible than those of w^arm water. Bearing this fact in mind as we study Plate IX., we see at a glance the places which are most faA^ored with good fish-markets. Both shores of North America, the east coast of China, with the west coasts of Europe and South America, are all washed by cold waters, and therefore w^e may infer that their markets abound with the most excellent fish. The fisheries of Newfoundland and New England, over which nations have wrangled for centuries, are in the cold water from Davis's Strait. The fisheries of Japan and Eastern China, which almost, if not quite, rival these, are situated also in the cold water. Neither India, nor the east coasts of Africa and South America, where the warm w^aters are, are celebrated for their fish. 554. Three thousand American vessels, it is said, are engaged in the fisheries. If to these we add the Dutch, French, and En- 256 THE PHYSICAL GEOGRAPHY OF THE SEA. glish, we shall have a grand total, perhaps, of not less than six or eight thousand, of all sizes and flags, engaged in this one pursuit. Of all the industrial pursuits of the sea, however, the whale fish- ery is the most valuable. Wherefore, in treating of the physical geography of the sea, a map for the whales would be useful. 555. The sperm whale is a w^arm-water fish. The right whale dehghts in cold w^ater. An immense number of log-books of whalers have been discussed at the National Observatory, with the view of detecting the parts of the ocean in which the whales are to be found at the different seasons of the year. Charts showing the result have been published ; they form a part of the series of Maury's Wind and Current Charts. 556. In the course of these investigations, the discovery was made that the torrid zone is to the right whale as a sea of fire, through which he can not pass ; that the right whale of the north- ern hemisphere and that of the southern are two different ani- mals ; and that the sperm whale has never been known to double the Cape of Good Hope — he doubles Cape Horn. 557. With these remarks, and the explanations given on Plate IX., the parts of the ocean to which the right whale most resorts, and the parts in which the sperm are found, may be seen at a glance. STORMS. 257 CHAPTER XVI. STORMS. Typhoons, ^ 559. — Cyclones, 561. — West India Hurricanes, 562. — Eitra-tropical Gales, 563. — The San Francisco's Gale, 564. — These Gales seldom occur at cer- tain Seasons, 565. — Most prevalent Quarter for the Gales beyond the Calm Belt of Capricorn, 566. — Storm and Rain Charts, 567 257 558. Plate V. is constructed from data furnished by the Pilot Charts, as far as they go, that are in process of construction at the National Observatory. For the Pilot Charts, the whole ocean is divided off into districts of five degrees square, i. e., five degrees of latitude by five degrees of longitude, as already explained on page 23. Now, in getting out from the log-books materials for show- ing, in every district of the ocean, and for every month, how nav- igators have found the winds to blow, it has been assumed that, in whatever part of one of these districts a navigator may be when he records the direction of the wind in his log, from that direc- tion the wind was blowing at that time all over that district ; and this is the only assumption that is permitted in the whole course of investis^ation. Now if the navigator will draw, or imagine to be drawn in any such district, twelve vertical columns for the twelve months, and then sixteen horizontal lines through the same for the sixteen points of the compass, i. e., for N., N.N.E., N.E., E.N.E., and so on, omitting the by-^omXs, he will have before him a picture of the "Investigating Chart," out of which the "Pilot Charts" are constructed. In this case, the alternate points of the compass only are used ; because, when sailing free, the direction of the wind is seldom given for such points as N. by E., W. % S., &;c. Moreover, any attempt, for the present, at greater nicety, would be over-refinement ; for navigators do not always make allowance for the aberration of the wind ; in other words, they do not allow for the apparent change in the direction of the wind caused by the rate at which the vessel may be moving through the water, and the angle which her course makes with the true direction of the R 258 THE PHYSICAL GEOGRAPHY OF THE SEA. wind. Bearing this explanation in mind, the inteUigent navigator will have no difficulty in understanding the wind diagram (Plate v.), and in forming a correct opinion as to the degree of credit due to the fidelity with which the prevailing winds of the year are rep- resented on Plate VIII. As the compiler wades through log-book after log-book, and scores down in column after column, and upon line after line, mark after mark, he at last finds that, under the month and from the course upon which he is about to make an entry, he has al- ready made four marks or scores, thus (1 11 1). The one that he has now to enter will make the fifth, and he " scores and tallies," and so on until all the abstracts relating to that part of the ocean upon w^hich he is at work have been gone over, and his materials exhausted. These " fives and talhes" are exhibited on Plate Y. Now, with this explanation, it will be seen that in the district marked A (Plate Y.) there have been examined the logs of vessels that, giving the direction of the wind for every eight hours, have altogether spent days enough to enable me to record the calms and the prevailing direction of the winds for eight hours, 2,144 times : of these, 285 were for the month of September ; and of these 285 observations for September, the wind is reported as pre- vaiUng for as much as eight hours at a time : from N., 3 times from N.N.E., 1 ; N.E., 2; E.N.E., 1 ; E.,0; E.S.E., 1 ; S.E., 4 S.S.E.,2; S.,25; S.S.W.,45; S.W., 93 ; W.S.W., 24 ; W., 47 Y^.N.W., 17; N.W., 15; N.N.W., 1 ; Calms (the little O's), 5 total, 285 for this month in this district. The number expressed in figures denotes the whole number of observations of calms and winds together that are recorded for each month and district. In C, the wind in May sets one third of the time from west. But in A, which is between the same parallels, the favorite quar- ter for the same month is from S. to S.W., the wind setting one third of the time from that quarter, and only 10 out of 221 times from the west ; or, on the average, it blows from the west only 1^ day during the month of May. In B, notice the great " Sun Swing" of the winds in September, indicating that the change from summer to winter, in that region, is sudden and violent ; from winter to summer, gentle and gradual. In some districts of the ocean, more than a thousand observa- STORMS. 259 tions have been discussed for a single month, whereas, with regard to others, not a single record is to be found in any of the numer- ous log-books at the National Observatory. 559. Typhoons. — The China Seas are celebrated for their furi- ous gales of wind, known among seamen as typhoons and white squalls. These seas are included on the plate (VIII.) as within the region of the monsoons of the Indian Ocean. But the mon- soons of the China Seas are not five-month monsoons (^ 475) ; they do not prevail from the w^est of south for more than two or three months. 560. Plate V. exhibits the monsoons very clearly in a part of this sea. In the square between 15° and 20° north, 110°*and 115° east, there appears to be a system of three monsoons ; that is, from northeast in October, November, December, and January ; from east in March and April, changing in May ; from the southward in June, July, and August, and changing in September. The great disturber of the atmospheric equilibrium is situated among the arid plains of Asia ; their influence extends to the China Seas, and about the changes of the monsoons these awful gales are experi- enced. 561. In like manner, the Mauritius hurricanes, or the cyclones of the Indian Ocean, occur during the unsettled state of the at- . mospheric equilibrium which takes place at that debatable period during the contest between the trade-wind force and the monsoon force (§ 477), and which debatable period occurs at the changing of the monsoon, and before either force has completely gained or lost the ascendency. At this period of the year, the winds, break- ing loose from their controlling forces, seem to rage wdth a fury that would break up the very fountains of the deep. 562. So, too, with the West India hurricanes of the Atlantic. These winds are most apt to occur during the months of August and September. There is, therefore, this remarkable diiference between these gales and those of the East Indies : the latter occur about the changing of the monsoons, the former during their height. In August and September, the southwest monsoons of Africa (^ 479) and the southeast monsoons of the West Indies (§ 474) are at their height ; the ao-ent of one drawing the northeast trade- winds from the Atlantic into the interior of New Mexico and Tex- as, the agent of the other drawing them into the interior of Africa. 260 THE PHYSICAL GEOGRAPHY OF THE SEA. Its two forces, pulling in opposite directions, assist now and then to disturb the atmospheric equilibrium to such an extent that the most powerful revulsions in the air are required to restore it. 563. Extra-tropical Gales. — In the extra-tropical regions of each hemisphere furious gales of wind also occur. One of these, remarkable for its violent effects, was encountered on the 24th of December, 1853, about three hundred miles from Sandy Hook, latitude 39° north, longitude 70° west, by the San Francisco, steam-ship (^ 72). That ship was made a complete wreck in a few moments, and she was abandoned by the survivors, after in- credible hardships, exertions, and sufferings. Some months after this disaster, I received by the California mail the abstract log of the fine clipper ship " Eagle Wing" (Ebenezer H. Linnell), from Boston to San Francisco. She encountered the ill-fated steam- er's gale, and thus describes it : 564. ''December 2Uh, 1853. Latitude 39° 15" north, longitude 62° 32' west. First part threatening weather ; shortened sail : at 4 P.M. close reefed the top-sails and furled the courses. At 8 P. M. took in fore and mizen top-sails ; hove to under close-reefed main top-sail and spencer, the ship lying with her lee rail under water, nearly on her beam-ends. At 1 30 A. M. the fore and main top- gallant-masts went over the side, it blowing a perfect hurricane. At 8 A. M., moderated ; a sea took away jib-boom and bowsprit- cap. In my thirty-one years' experience at sea, I have never seen a typhoon or hurricane so severe. Lost two men overboard — saved one. Stove sky-light, broke my barometer, &c., &c." 565. Severe gales in this part of the Atlantic — i. e., on the polar side of the calm belt of Cancer — ^rarely occur during the months of June, July, August, and September. This appears to be the tnne when the fiends of the storm are most busily at work in the West Indies. During the remainder of the year, these extra-trop- ical gales, for the most part, come from the northwest. But the winter is the most famous season for these gales. That is the time when the Gulf Stream has brought the heat of summer and placed it (§ 71) in closest proximity to the extremest cold of the north. And there would, therefore, it would seem, be a conflict between these extremes ; consequently, great disturbances in the air, and a violent rush from the cold to the warm. 566. In like manner, the gales that most prevail in the extra- STORMS. 261 tropics of the southern hemisphere come from the pole and the west, i. e., southwest. 567. Storm and Rain Charts for the Atlantic Ocean have al- ready been published by the Observatory, and others for the whole seas are in process of construction. The object of such charts is to show the directions and relative frequency of gales in all parts of the sea, the relative frequency of calms, fogs, rain, thunder, and lio:htninsf. These charts are very instructive. 262 THE PHYSICAL GEOGRAPHY OF THE SEA. CHAPTER XVII. ROUTES. How Passages have been shortened, <$> 568. — How closely Vessels follow each other's Track, 570. — The Archer and the Flying Cloud, 571. — The great Race-course upon the Ocean, 573. — Description of a Race, 575. — Present Knowledge of Winds en- ables the Navigator to compute his Detour, 582. 56S. The principal routes across the ocean are exhibited on Plate VIII. ; the great end and aim of all this labor and research are in these, and consist in the shortening of passages — the im- provement of navigation. Other interests and other objects are promoted thereby, but these, in the mind of a practical people, who, by their habits of thought and modes of action, mark the age in which we live as eminently utilitarian, do not stand out in relief half so grand and imposing as do those achievements by which the distant isles and marts of the sea have been lifted up, as it were, and brought closer together, for the convenience of commerce, by many days' sail. 569. We have been told in the foregoing pages how the winds blow and the currents flow in all parts of the ocean. These con- trol the mariner in his course ; and to know how to steer his ship on this or that voyage so as always to make the most of them, is the perfection of navigation. The figures representing the ves- sels are so marked as to show whether the prevailing direction of the wind be adverse or fair. 570. When one looks seaward from the shore, and sees a ship disappear in the horizon as she gains an offing on a voyage to In- dia, or the Antipodes perhaps, the common idea is that she is bound over a trackless waste, and the chances of another ship, sailing with the same destination the next day, or the next week, coming up and speaking with her on the '* pathless ocean," would, to most minds, seem slender indeed. Yet the truth is, the winds and the currents are now becoming to be so well understood, that the navigator, like the backwoodsman in the wilderness, is enabled literally "to blaze his way" across the ocean; not, indeed, upon trees, as in the wilderness, but upon the wings of the wind. The ROUTES. 263 results of scientific inquiry have so taught him how to use these invisible couriers, that they, with the calm belts of the air, serve as sign-boards to indicate to him the turnings, and forks, and cross- ings by the way. 571. Let a ship sail from New York to California, and the next week let a faster one follow after : they will cross each other's path many times, and are almost sure to see each other by the way. Thus a case in point happens to be before me. It is the case of the "Archer" and the "Flying Cloud" on their last voy- age to California, They are both fine clipper ships, ably com- manded. But it was not until the ninth day after the " Archer" had sailed from New York that the " Flying Cloud" put to sea, California bound also. She was running against time, and so was the " Archer," but without reference to each other. The " Archer," with "Wind and Current Charts" in hand, went blazing her way across the calms of Cancer, and along the new route, down through the northeast trades to the equator ; the " Cloud" followed after, crossing the equator upon the trail of Thomas of the " Archer." Off Cape Horn she came up with him, spoke him, handed him the latest New York dates, and invited him to dine on board the "Cloud," w^hich invitation, says he of the "Archer," "I was re- luctantly compelled to decline." 572. The " Flying Cloud" finally ranged ahead, made her adieus,. and disappeared among the clouds that lowered upon the western horizon, being destined to reach her port a week or more in ad- vance of her Cape Horn consort. Though sighting no land from the time of their separation until they gained the offing of San Francisco — some six or eight thousand miles off* — the tracks of the two vessels were so nearly the same, that, being projected on the Plate IX., they would appear almost as one. 573. This is the great race-course of the ocean ; it is fifteen thousand miles in length. Some of the most glorious trials of speed and of prowess that the world ever witnessed have taken place over it. Here the modern clipper ship — the noblest work that has ever come from the hands of man — has been sent, guided by the lights of science, to contend with the elements, to outstrip steam, and astonish the world. 574. The most celebrated ^nd famous race that has ever been run came off upon this course : it was in the autumn of 1852, 264 THE PHYSICAL GEOGRAPHY OF THE SEA. when navigators were beginning fully to reap the benefits of these researches with regard to the winds and currents, and other facts connected with the Physical Geography of the Sea, that four splendid new clipper ships put to sea from New York, bound for California. They were ably commanded, and, as they passed the bar at Sandy Hook, one by one, and at various intervals of time, they presented really a most magnificent spectacle. The names of these ships and their masters were, the "Wild Pigeon," Cap- tain Putnam; the "John Gilpin," Captain Doane — alas! now no more ; the " Flying Fish," Captain Nickels, and the " Trade Wind," Captain W^ebber. Like steeds that know their riders, they were handled with the most exquisite skill and judgment, and in such hands they bounded out upon the "glad waters" most gracefully. Each, being put upon her mettle from the start, was driven, under the seaman's whip and spur, at full speed over a course that it would take them three long months to run. 575. The "Wild Pigeon" sailed October 12; the "John Gil- pin," October 29 ; the " Flying Fish," November 1 ; and the "Trade Wind," November 14. It w^as the season for the best passages. Each one was provided with the Wind and Current Charts. Each one had evidently studied them attentively ; and each one was resolved to make the most of them, and do his best. All ran against time ; but the " John Gilpin" and the " Flying Fish" for the whole course, and the " Wild Pigeon" for part of it, ran neck and neck, the one against the other, and each against all. It was a sweepstake with these ships around Cape Horn and through both hemispheres. 576. Wild Pigeon led the other two out of New York, the one by seventeen, the other by twenty days. But luck and chances of the winds seem to have been against her from the start. As soon as she had taken her departure, she fell into a streak of baffling winds, and then into a gale, which she fought against and con- tended w4th for a week, making but little progress the while ; she then had a time of it in crossing the horse latitudes. After hav- ing been nineteen days out, she had logged no less than thirteen of them as days of calms and baffling winds ; these had brought her no farther on her way than the parallel of 26° north in the At- lantic. Thence she had a fine run to the equator, crossing it be- tween 33° and 34° west, the thirty-second day out. She was un- ROUTES. 265 avoidably forced to cross it so far west ; for only two days before, she crossed 5° north in 30° — an excellent position. In proof that the Pigeon had accomplished all that skill could do and the chances against her would permit, we have the testi- mony of the barque Hazard, Captain Pollard. This vessel, being bound to Rio at the same time, followed close after the Pigeon. The Hazard is an old hand with the Charts ; she had already made six voyages to Rio with them for her guide. This was the long- est of the six, the mean of which was twenty-six and a half days. She crossed the line this time in 34° 30^, also by compulsion, hav- ing crossed 5° north in 31°. But, the fourth day after crossing the equator, she was clear of Cape St. Roque, while the Pigeon cleared it in three days.* 577. So far, therefore, chances had turned up against the Pig- eon, in spite of the skill displayed by Putnam as a navigator, for the Gilpin and the Fish came booming along, not under better management, indeed, but with a better run of luck and fairer courses before them. In this stretch they gained upon her — the Gilpin seven and the Fish ten days ; so that now the abstract logs show the Pigeon to be but ten days ahead. Evidently the Fish was most confident that she had the heels of her competitors ; she felt her strength, and was proud of it ; she was most anxious for a quick run, and eager withal for a trial. She dashed down southwardly from Sandy Hook, looking occa- sionally at the Charts ; but, feeling strong in her sweep of wing, and trusting confidently in the judgment of her master, she kept, on the average, two hundred miles to leeward of the right track. Rejoicing in her many noble and fine qualities, she crowded on her canvas to its utmost stretch, trusting quite as much to her heels as to the Charts, and performed the extraordinary feat of crossing, the sixteenth day out from New York, the parallel of 5° north. The next day she was well south of 4° north, and in the Dol- drums, longitude 34° west. Now her heels became paralyzed, for Fortune seems to have de- serted her a while — at least her master, as the winds failed him, feared so ; they gave him his motive power ; they were fickle, and he was helplessly baffled by them. The bugbear of a northwest * According to the received opinion, this was impossible. Vide ^ 376. 266 THE PHYSICAL GEOGRAPHY OF THE SEA. current off Cape St. Roque (§ 276) began to loom up in his im- agination, and to look alarming ; then the dread of falling to lee- ward came upon him ; chances and luck seemed to conspire against him, and the mere possibility of finding his fine ship back-strapped filled the mind of Nickels with evil forebodings, and shook his faith in his guide. He doubted the Charts, and committed the mistake of the passage. 578. The Sailing Dit'ections had cautioned the navigator, again and again, not to attempt to fan along to the eastward in the equa- torial doldrums ; for, by so doing, he would himself engage in a fruitless strife with baffling airs, sometimes re-enforced in their weakness by westerly currents. But the winds had failed, and so too, the smart captain of the Flying Fish evidently thought, had the Sailing Directions. They advise the navigator, in all such cases, to dash right across this calm streak, stand boldly on, take advantage of slants in the wind, and, by this device, make easting enough to clear the land. So, forgetting that the Charts are founded on the experience of great numbers who had gone before him. Nickels, being tempted, turned a deaf ear to the caution, and flung away three whole days, and more, of most precious time, dallying in the doldrums. He spent four days about the parallel of 3° north, and his ship left the doldrums, after this waste of time, nearly upon the same meridian at which she entered them. She was still in 34°, the current keeping her back just as fast as she could fan east. After so great a loss, her very clever mas- ter, doubting his own judgment, became sensible of his error. Leaving the spell-bound calms behind him, where he had under- gone such trials, he wrote in his log as follows : " I now regret that, after making so fine a run to 5° north, I did not dash on, and work my way to windward to the northward of St. Roque, as I have experienced little or no westerly set since passing the equa- tor, while three or four days have been lost in working to the east- ward, between the latitude of 5° and 3° north, against a strong westerly set ;" and he might have added, "with little or no wind." In three days after this he was clear of St. Roque. Just five days before him, the Hazard had passed exactly in the same place, and gained two days on the Fish by cutting straight across the doldrums, as the Sailing Directions advised him to do. ROUTES. • 267 The Wild Pigeon, crossing the equator also in 33°, had passed along there ten days before, as did also the Trade Wind twelve days after. The latter also crossed the line to the west of 34°, and in four days after had cleared St. Roque. But, notwithstanding this loss of three days by the Fish, who so regretted it, and w^ho afterward so handsomely retrieved it, she found herself, on the 24th of November, alongside of the Gilpin, her competitor. They were then both on the parallel of 5° south, the Gilpin being thirty-seven miles to the eastward, and of course in a better position, for the Fish had yet to take advantage of slants, and stand off shore to clear the land. They had not seen each other. 579. The Charts showed the Gilpin now to be in the best po- sition, and the subsequent events proved the Charts to be right, for thence to 53° south the Gilpin gained on the Pigeon tw^o days, and the Pigeon on the Fish one. By dashing through the Straits of Le Maire, the Fish gained three days on the Gilpin ; but here Fortune again deserted the Pigeon, or rather the winds turned against her ; for as she ap- peared upon the parallel of Cape Horn, and was about to double round, a westerly gale struck her and kept her at bay for ten days, making little or no way, except alternately fighting in a calm or buffeting wdth a gale, while her pursuers were coming up " hand over fist," with fine winds and flowing sheets.. They finally overtook her, bringing along with them propitious gales, when all three swept past the Cape, and crossed the paral- lel of 51° south on the other side of the " Horn," the Fish and the Pigeon one day each ahead of the Gilpin. The Pigeon w^as now, according to the Charts, in the best po- sition, the Gilpin next, and the Fish last ; but all were doing well. From this parallel to the southeast trades of the Pacific the prevailing winds are from the northwest. The position of the Fish, therefore, did not seem as good as the others, because she did not have the sea-room in case of an obstinate northwest gale. But the winds favored her. On the 30th of December the three ships crossed the parallel of 35° south, the Fish recognizing the Pigeon ; the Pigeon saw only a " clipper ship," for she could not conceive how the ship in sight could possibly be the Flying Fish, as that vessel w^as not to leave New York for some three weeks 268 THE PHYSICAL GEOGRAPHY OF THE SEA. after she did ; the Gilpin was only thirty or forty miles off at the same time. The race was now wing and wing, and had become exciting. With fair winds and an open sea, the competitors had now a clear stretch to the equator of two thousand five hundred miles before them. The Flying Fish led the way, the Wild Pigeon pressing her hard, and both dropping the Gilpin quite rapidly, who was edging off to the westward. The two foremost reached the equator on the 13th of January, the Fish leading just twenty-five miles in latitude, and crossing in 112° 17^;* the Pigeon forty miles farther to the east. At this time the John Gilpin had dropped two hundred and sixty miles astern, and had sagged off several degrees to the westward. 580. Here Putnam, of the Pigeon, again displayed his tact as a navigator, and again the fickle winds deceived him : the belt of northeast trades had yet to be passed ; it was winter ; and, by crossing where she did, she would have an opportunity of making a fair wind of them, without being much to the west of her port when she should lose them. Moreover, it w^as exactly one year since she had passed this way before; she then crossed in 109°, and had a capital run thence of seventeen days to San Francisco. Why should she not cross here again ? She saw that the 4th edition of Sailing Directions, which she had on board, did not dis- countenance it, and her own experience approved it. Could she have imagined that, in consequence of this difference of forty miles in the crossing of the equator, and of the two hours' time behind her competitor, she would fall into a streak of wind which would enable the Fish to lead her into port one whole week ? Certainly it was nothing but what sailors call " a streak of ill luck" that could have made such a difference. But by this time "John Gilpin" had got his mettle up again. He crossed the line in 116° — exactly two days after the other two — and made the glorious run of fifteen days thence to the pilot grounds of San Francisco. Thus end the abstract logs of this exciting race and these re- markable passages. * Twenty-five days after that, the Trade Wind clipper came along, crossed in 112°, and had a passage of sixteen days thence into San Francisco. ROriES. 269 The Flying Fish beat : she made the passage in 92 days and 4 hours from port to anchor ; the Gilpin in 93 days and 20 hours from port to pilot ;* the Wild Pigeon had 118. The Trade Wind followed, with 102 days, having taken fire, and burned for eight hours on the w^ay. The result of this race may be taken as an illustration as to how well navigators are now brought to understand the winds and the currents of the sea. 581. Here are three ships sailing on different days, bound over a trackless waste of ocean for some fifteen thousand miles or more, and depending alone on the fickle winds of heaven, as they are called, to waft them along ; yet, like travelers on the land, bound upon the same journey, they pass and repass, fall in with and recognize each other by the w^ay ; and what, perhaps, is still more remarkable, is the fact that these ships should each, throughout that great distance, and under the wonderful vicissitudes of cli- mates, winds, and currents which they encountered, have been so skillfully navigated, that, in looking back at their management, now that w^hat is past is before me, I do not find a single occa- sion, except the one already mentioned, on which they could have been better handled. There is another circumstance which is worthy of notice in this connection, as illustrative of the accuracy of the knowledge which these investigations afford concerning the force, set, and direction both of winds and currents, and it is this : 582. I had computed the detour which these vessels would have to make, on account of adverse winds, between New York and their place of crossing the equator. The whole distance, includ- ing detour to be sailed to reach this crossing at that season of the year, was, according to calculation, 4115 miles. The "Gilpin" and the " Hazard" only kept an account of the distance actually sailed ; the former reaching the equator after sailing 4099 miles, the latter, 4077 ; thus accomplishing that part of the voyage by sailing, the one within thirty-eight, the other within sixteen miles of the detour which calculation showed they would be compelled to make on account of head- winds. With his way blazed through the forest, the most experienced backwoodsman w^ould have to make a detour greater than this on account of floods in the rivers. * The abstract log of the Gilpin is silent after the pilot came on board. 270 THE PHYSICAL GEOGRAPHY OF THE SEA. Am I far wrong, therefore, when I say that the present state of our knowledge w^ith regard to the physical geography of the sea has enabled the navigator to blaze his way among the winds and currents of the sea, and so mark his path that others, using his signs as finger-boards, may follow in the same track ? A LAST WORD. 271 CHAPTER XVIII. A LAST WORD. Brussels Conference, ^ 584. — How Navigators may obtain a Set of Maury's Wind and Current Charts, 585. — The Abstract Log, 586. 583. I HAVE, I am aware, not done more in this little book than given only a table or two of contents from the interesting volume which the Physical Geography of the Sea is destined some day to open up to us. The subject is a comprehensive one : there is room for more laborers, and help is wanted. Nations, no less than individuals ; '' stay-at-home travelers," as well as those who " go down to the sea in ships," are concerned in the successful prosecution of the labors we have in hand. We are now about to turn over a new leaf in navigation, on which we may confidently expect to see recorded much informa- tion that will tend to lessen the dangers of the sea, and to shorten the passages of vessels trading upon it. (See Appendix L.) We are about to open in the volume of Nature a new chapter, under the head of Marine Meteorology. In it are written the laws that govern those agents which ''the winds and the sea obey." In the true interpretation of these laws, and the correct reading of this chapter, the planter as well as the merchant, the husbandman as well as the mariner, and states as well as indi- viduals, are concerned. All have a deep interest in these laws ; for with the hygrometrical conditions of the atmosphere, the well- being of plants and animals is involved. The health of the invalid is often dependent upon a dry or a damp atmosphere, a cold blast or a warm wind. The atmosphere pumps up our rivers from the sea, and trans- ports them through the clouds to their sources among the hills ; and upon the regularity with which this machine, whose motions, parts, and offices we now wish to study, lets down that moisture, and the seasonable supply of rain which it furnishes to each region 272 THE PHYSICAL GEOGRAPHY OF THE SEA. of country, to every planter, and upon all cultivated fields, depend the fruitfulness of this country, the sterility of that. The principal maritime nations, therefore, have done well by agreeing to unite upon one plan of observation, and to co-operate with their ships upon the high seas with the view of finding out all that patient research, systematic, laborious investigation, may reveal to us concerning the winds and the waves ; and philosoph- ical travelers, and every sailor that has a ship under his foot, may do even better by joining in this system. 584. By the recommendations of the Brussels Conference, ev- ery one who uses the sea is commanded or invited to make cer- tain observations ; or, in other words, to propound certain queries to Nature, and to give us a faithful statement of the replies she may make. Now, unless we have accurate instruments, instruments that will themselves tell the truth, it is evident that we can not get at the real meaning of the answers that Nature may give us. An incorrect observation is not only useless of itself, but, when it passes undetected among others that are correct, it becomes worse than useless ; nay, it is mischievous there, for it vitiates results that are accurate, places before us wrong premises, and thus renders the good of no value. 585. Those ship-masters who, entering this field as fellow-la- borers, will co-operate in the mode and manner recommended by the Brussels Conference, and keep, voyage after voyage, and as long as required, a journal of observations and results according to a prescribed form — and which form is annexed, under the title of Abstract Log — are entitled, by sending the same, at the end of the voyage, to the Superintendent of the National Observatory, to a copy of my Sailing Directions, and such sheets of the Charts as relate to the cruising-ground of the co-operator. 586. There are two forms of abstract logs : one, the more elab- orate, for men-of-war ; the other for merchantmen. The observa- tions called for by the latter are a minimum, the least which will entitle the co-operator to claim the proffered bounty. It must give, at least, the latitude and longitude of the ship daily ; the height of the barometer, and the readings of both the air and the water thermometer, at least once a day ; the direction and force of the wind three times a day — first, middle, and latter part — at the A LAST WORD. 273 hours eight P.M., four A.M., and noon ; the variation of the com- pass occasionally ; and the set of the current whenever encounter- ed. These observations, to be worth having, must be accurately- made ; and as every thermometer and every barometer has its sources of error, consequently, every ship-master who undertakes hereafter to co-operate with us, and keep an abstract log, should have his barometer and thermometer accurately compared with standard instruments, the errors of which have been accurately determined. These errors the master should enter in the log ; the instru- ments should be numbered, and he should so keep the log as to show what instrument is in use. For instance, a master goes to sea with thermometers Nos. 4719, 1, 12, &c., their errors having been ascertained and entered on the blank page for the purpose in the abstract log. He first uses No. 12. Let it be so stated in the column of Remarks, when the first observation is recorded, thus : Thermometer No. 12. During the voyage. No. 12 gets bro- ken, or for some reason is laid aside, and another, say 4719, is brought into use. So state when the first observation with it is recorded, and quote in the column of Remarks the errors both of Nos. 12 and 4719. Now, with such a statement of errors given in the log for each of the instruments, according to the number, the observations may be properly corrected when they come up here for discussion. It is rare to find a barometer or a thermometer that has no er- ror, as it is to find a chronometer without error. A good ther- mometer, the error of which the maker should guarantee not to exceed in any part of the scale one degree, will cost, in the United States, not less than $2, perhaps $2 50. The errors of thermometers sometimes are owing to inequali- ties in the bore of the tube, sometimes to errors of division on the scale, &c. Therefore, in comparing thermometers with a stand- ard, they should be compared, at least, for every degree between melting ice and blood heat. 274 PHYSICAL GEOGRAPHY OF THE SEA. o 00 i i > 1 C ^ 1 I- u 2;=; If CO 1 •a o b 04 1 B "^ si i S si ' g s -''B g :^ § o " ..| o^r ° 1 .^ Z ^2i gl|s ' V ^T^lsl 1 IbS ^s-p; o pS |f.i- . " i:?fi M ^- M ^ Gcl 1 Pi p. fell o^lS g Lh fitb :::i2iiid 's 1 II • n S o », ? m C55 li|.s 1^5 J 00 li^ii^ i 5^C QogS t* 1 '"' it; 5^ ..p :m fc; ^1ild!t ^r o 1 ^ 1 •S ^ b g- ■■*-% O 1 j ■ ■ ■ ■ 1 1 1 f 05 '^ 1 1 - "^ C S . . -r P S ..- « ^ p n 1 a < T f^-_H''-- rt «« ■^ O lilt 1 1 o : >■ : c^ • w : oo . H : ■■^ i ^ o u §^ [-i^i rt E2 CO < : H : ■"«u c-^ ; i^ / 2 o CO CO -o o S : t^ * r^ m^t'^^ ■ ' ' ^ — 1 1 iS « Ti* ^='■2 1 ?€.2 ■ 1 O - — j p — O ^ CO 1 « C "^ HH CO -^ CO a * n X * o >< ^ i ^ o > o (M ct C5 >< CO > > 05 >< i-Q a § V ;^ c c 0 -i C ■^ P _i: _ =. ^ __ Jl = ^i = = .:= = ■^ APPENDIX ADDITIONS AND CORRECTIONS FOR THE SECOND EDITION. A.— Page 81, § 118. MECHANICAL POWER OF EVAPORATION. The mechanical power exerted by the air and the sun in hftint. water from the earth, in transporting it from one place to another^ and in letting it down again, is inconceivably great. The utilita- rian who compares the water-power that the Falls of Niao-ara would afford if apphed to machinery, is astonished at the number of figures which are required to express its equivalent in horse- power. Yet what is the horse-power of the Niagara, falling a few steps, m comparison with the horse-power that is required to lift up all the water that is discharged into the sea, not only by this river, but by all the other rivers in the world, as high as the clouds. The calculation has been made by engineers, and, according to it, the force for making and lifting vapor from each area of one acre that is included on the surface of the earth, is equal to the power of 30 horses ; and, for the whole area of the earth, it is 800 times greater than all the water-power in nature, B.— Page 125, § 236. THE MAELSTROM. The Maelstrom, that school-books make so much of, is a whirl- pool, or rather an eddy, off the coast of Norway, supposed to be created by a conflict or meeting of the tides which have been di- vided by the British Islands, C— Page 128,