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The Atlantic Coast

Chart entitled A CHART OF THE ATLANTIC OCEAN, EXHIBITING THE SEAT OF WAR BOTH IN EUROPE AND AMERICA ACCORDING TO THE DISCOVERIES AND REGULATED BY ASTONOMICAL OBSERVATIONS, 1780

Source

"A Chart of the Atlantic Ocean, Exhibiting the Seat of War Both in Europe and America According to the Discoveries and Regulated by Astronomical Observations," 1780

Galleries

The Atlantic Coast of Canada consists of the eastern seaboard waters, which extend from the New Brunswick/Maine border in the south to the Arctic Ocean in the north, and the Gulf of St. Lawrence. The Labrador Current, which carries cold water and air, flows south into these waters and meets up with the warm Gulf Stream off of Newfoundland's coast. These conditions form the rich fishing area of the Grand Banks, an area that attracted the first European ships into the region at the end of the 15th century. Sea traffic increased rapidly following these first visits, peaking in the years 1850-1900.

The meeting of the Labrador Current and the Gulf Stream produces great dangers for shipping, namely dense and persistent fog into which the Labrador Current deposits heavy ice floes and treacherous icebergs. To navigate in thick fog, captains would post crew members to listen for the sound of waves breaking on the shore.

For years, safe passage was made difficult by a lack of lighthouses and simple maps, as well as by the limited nature of the navigational tools available, many of which relied on taking readings from the sun or stars that were often hidden from view. These conditions combined to make shipwrecks almost a certainty. Such is the scale of seafaring disasters in the area that the number of wrecks off of Nova Scotia's coast alone, is estimated to be in the range of 25,000.

Shipwreck InvestigationsFierce weather patterns and strong currents still pose a risk, but improvements in the compass, and the invention of course-plotting equipment that does not require taking readings from the sky, has significantly reduced the climactic dangers that shipping faces in the area.

References

The Atlas of Canada -- Break-up of Sea Ice. Natural Resources Canada.
http://atlas.nrcan.gc.ca/site/english/maps/environment/seaice/break-up (accessed September 30, 2005).

The Atlas of Canada -- Map of the Atlantic Provinces. Natural Resources Canada.
http://atlas.nrcan.gc.ca/site/english/dataservices/wall_maps/MCR0077.jpg/image_view (accessed September 30, 2005).

The Atlas of Canada -- Mapping the Coasts, 1492 to 1874. Natural Resources Canada.
http://atlas.nrcan.gc.ca/site/english/maps/archives/3rdedition/historical/002 (accessed September 30, 2005).

Dearborn, Dorothy. New Brunswick Sea Stories: Phantom Ships and Pirate's Gold, Shipwrecks and Iron Men. Saint John: Neptune Publishing Company Ltd., 1998.

Galgay, Frank, and Michael McCarthy. Shipwrecks of Newfoundland and Labrador. St. John's: Harry Cuff Publications Ltd., 1987.

Marine Heritage Database. Maritime Museum of the Atlantic, 2005.
http://museum.gov.ns.ca/mma/wrecks/wrecks/ (accessed September 30, 2005).

Etching entitled THE MELANCHOLY SHIP WRECK OF THE FRANCES MARY FROM ST. JOHN'S, J. KENDALL MASTER, 1827

Source

"The Melancholy Ship Wreck of the Frances Mary from St. John's, J. Kendall Master", 1827

 

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