Real Reason Ships Don’t Pass Under South America (It’s Not the Distance)


Most understand that the construction of the Panama Canal was necessary in order to significantly reduce the travel time of going around the tip of South America.

While that is true, there are also much more treacherous and nefarious reasons why navigators wanted to explore the long way round.

Today we’ll learn more about one of the most dangerous and infamous straits that exists in the world, a rite of passage for some of the most renowned explorers, adventurers, and scientists humanity has produced, and a region ordinary mariners and commercial ships avoid at all costs: The Drake Passage.

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About agogo22

Director of Manchester School of Samba at http://www.sambaman.org.uk
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1 Response to Real Reason Ships Don’t Pass Under South America (It’s Not the Distance)

  1. A very interesting summary of past and present down there. Nowadays many countries are swarming there at the south pole and do things nobody is supposed to know. I wonder what impact that has on the climate …

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