Page 41 - MILA'S TRAVELOGUE - ANTARTICA
P. 41

DAY 4  AT SEA TO ANTARCTICA





 FEB. 23, 2019  CROSSING THE DRAKE PASSAGE





 Most visitors to Antarctica must cross the Drake Passage,
 the narrow stretch of water separating South America from
 the Antarctic Peninsula. Sir Francis Drake, an English explorer,

 discovered this stretch of water in September 1578. Sailing on
 board the Golden Hind and having passed through the Strait
 of Magellan into the Pacific, his ship ran into a storm and got
 blown  far  to  the South which  implies  an  open  connection
 between the Atlantic and Pacific Oceans.


 The 600 miles wide Passage between Cape Horn and Livingston
 Island is the shortest crossing from Antarctica to the rest of the
 world. If there is one place, one sea, one passage that visitors,
 scientists and other sailors and seafarers fear in the Antarctic,
 it is the Drake Passage.

 The construction of Panama Canal which  opened in 1904,
 one  of  the  largest  and  most  difficult  engineering  projects

 ever undertaken, greatly reduced the time for ships to travel
 between the Atlantic and Pacific Oceans enabling them to
 avoid the hazardous  route around the  southernmost tip  of
 South America via the Drake Passage. But this is another story,
 folks.









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