Strait of Gibraltar
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Image:Strait of gibraltar.jpg The Strait of Gibraltar (Arabic: مضيق جبل طارق, Spanish: Estrecho de Gibraltar) is the strait that separates the Atlantic Ocean from the Mediterranean Sea. It is also known as the Straits of Gibraltar or Strog (Strait Of Gibraltar), that latter of which is known in Navy circles.
The all-but-landlocked Mediterranean has an evaporation rate higher than the combined inflow of all the rivers that empty into it. The sill of the Strait of Gibraltar acts to limit mixing between the cold, less saline Atlantic water and the warm Mediterranean waters. The latter are so much saltier that they sink below the constantly incoming Atlantic water and form a highly saline (thermohaline, both warm and salty) bottom water, called the Mediterranean Outflow. It flows out and down the continental slope, losing salinity, until it equilibrates after mixing at a depth of about 1000 metres. The Mediterranean outflow water can be traced for thousands of kilometers before losing its identity.
The name comes from the Arabic name of "Jebel al Tariq," meaning Rock of Tariq. It refers to the Berber Muslim general Tariq ibn-Ziyad who conquered Iberian peninsula in 711.
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History
About 6 million years ago, the Strait closed, effectively turning the Mediterranean into a huge salty lake that eventually dried up, in what is known as the Messinian Salinity Crisis.
Location
Image:Straits of gibraltar nasa.png On the northern side of the Strait is Spain and Gibraltar, while on the southern side is Morocco and Ceuta, a Spanish exclave in North Africa. Its boundaries were known in antiquity as the Pillars of Hercules. There are several small islands, such as the disputed Isla Perejil, that are claimed by both Spain and Morocco.
The Strait of Gibraltar has a very strategic location. Ships that travel from the Atlantic to the Mediterranean, and vice versa, pass through this strait overlooked by the Rock of Gibraltar. Also, very many people who travel between Europe to Africa cross through this strait. During World War II, the British controlled the straits from their nearby base. German submarines entering the Mediterranean Sea were effectively trapped, because they could not leave on the surface and the undersea currents were too strong to leave underwater.
Logistics
Image:Straitofgibraltar.jpg The Strait has a depth of approximately 300 metres, and is about 14 kilometres wide at its narrowest point.
For a number of years, the Spanish and Moroccan governments have been jointly investigating the feasibility of a tunnel underneath the strait, similar to the Channel tunnel between England and France. However, the tunnel idea was renounced because of the currently insurmountable engineering challenge of ventilation to remove exhaust gases from automobiles from a tunnel some nine miles long. A new three-year study for a railway tunnel was announced in 2003.
In addition, a group of American and British engineers have studied the feasibility of building a bridge to span the straits. Such a bridge would be of a combination suspension-truss design and would dwarf any existing bridge in height (over 900 metres) and length (15 km). The 1979 science fiction novel The Fountains of Paradise by Arthur C. Clarke featured such a bridge.
In the event that the earth's general sea level rises significantly due to global warming, then a barrage would become an option worth studying. Such a barrage would incorporate locks to pass ships, a road and rail link to connect the continents, and a hydroelectric power plant to generate power from the flow which would be generated by the Mediterranean's excess evaporation.
To prevent the Mediterranean becoming inexorably saltier, a large pipe would be led from the deep part of the dam, down into the depths of the Atlantic ocean. Because of the salinity difference, the outward flow of deep Mediterranean water would not require pumping.
The costs of such a barrage would be astronomical, but the costs could be spread among the large number of countries which would be protected — including those of the Black Sea basin. more reading
External links
- Climate Control Requires a Dam at the Strait of Gibraltar — American Geophysical Union, 1997. Accessed 26 February 2006.
- Project for a Europe-Africa permanent link through the Strait of Gibraltar — United Nations Economic and Social Council, 2001. Accessed 26 February 2006.
- Map of Morocco — Multimap.com, 2006. Accessed 26 February 2006.
- Template:Es icon Estudios Geográficos del Estrecho de Gibraltar — La Universidad de Tetuán and La Universidad de Sevilla. Accessed 26 February 2006.af:Straat van Gibraltar
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