In the Eye of the Whirlpool
From the mythical Charybdis to the monster Maelstrom, these watery gyres thrill and chill us
- By Simon Winchester
- Smithsonian magazine, August 2001, Subscribe
(Page 7 of 8)
Bjørn Gjevik, working at the University of Oslo, wrote a study of the Maelstrom in 1997—one of the few extensive mathematical studies that I’ve been able to find of the aqueous complexities that whirlpools seem to be. What he found seems, at first blush, to be common among the great whirlpools.
By making careful measurement of the speeds of waters at different levels and at different places and times of night and day and month and season—a monstrously difficult and dangerous task, one has to assume—he seemed to think that it was "eccentricities on the bottom of the sea" that were the key.
These submarine phenomena—rocks, shelves, ridges, peaks—conspire with the furious winds and with the great concatenations of tides and currents. They produce what Gjevik calls in his paper an "exceptional strong topographic enhancement" of what might otherwise merely be a very strong oceanic tidal flow. They interrupt the smooth passage of water and make its submarine motions become infinitely more complex—and while whatever happens deep under the sea still remains a mystery, what happens up above, on the surface, is in these places self-evident, dramatic and spectacular.
n other words, whirlpools—the Maelstrom especially, the others most probably—are fluid marine phenomena that have solid submarine causes. There is the pinnacle that rises underneath the Saltstraumen. There is a shelf of rock that rears up in the Corryvreckan. There are shallows that the charts of Norway show south of Lofoten Point. There are ridges of rock under Japan’s Naruto Strait such as to allow a bridge to be built across it. And a number of near-islands loom perilously beneath the keels of such boats as pass beside the international boundary in the tidal estuary that divides the state of Maine from the Canadian province of New Brunswick.
Shallowing, in short, is what it is all about. A narrow passage, a fast-speeding current, howling winds, large tides—and beneath all of these things a sudden, dangerous, confusion-causing shallowing. When these conditions all combine—then the waters begin to eddy and swirl, vortices are formed, immense sounds begin to thunder, spray fills the air, and all around the region notices are posted to warn sailors that to pass through this or that at flood or the ebb is at your direst peril.
Blame it all on a rock
Which does little for the sense of legend, of course. The Nordic saga writers and the Gaelic poets and those who still today give out survival certificates in Maine for those who brave the Old Sow in full spate might not prefer a rational explanation. Tales of long-dead Norwegian princes do much to add luster to a legend: to have science bring explanation steals the pleasures of romance.
But it is an ill wind. Some people will be more than happy at what Bjørn Gjevik of the University of Oslo seems to have found. Britain’s Ordnance Survey, for example, will be pleased at the news that whatever occurs in the Gulf of Corryvreckan, at the very least, probably owes its existence to the presence of rock below the surface of the sea. And that is because a rock, whether it is seen or unseen, is a thing of undeniable permanence—which means by extension that any disturbance it creates, far from being a myth, truly is permanent as well.
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Comments (3)
Riveting article! Truly an excellent read.
Posted by Ryan on March 13,2013 | 06:13 PM
Where are the pictures? Seriously? You visit some amazing natural phenomena and take NO pictures. Nuts....
Posted by sdr19899 on March 12,2013 | 12:54 PM
Sir, re the comment that Belnahua was flooded by a great storm.
Today, Aug 25, 2009, I talked with Angus Shaw, aged 102 years, whose uncle , James Shaw quarried slate on Belnahua uuntil at least World War 1 and possibly beyond.
Apparently the quarry always flooded naturally and only constant pumping kept it at bay. When work and pumpinmg stopped - the island flooded.
Posted by Alan Hunter, Scotland on August 25,2009 | 03:23 PM