A Gateway to Ocean Circulation
The Strait of Gibraltar has a long tradition of political and scientific uniqueness. Twentieth-century submarine warfare added the ocean’s depth as a new dimension for those wanting to control and understand the Strait. During the Cold War the surveillance of this chokepoint became urgent and entang...
Published in: | Historical Studies in the Natural Sciences |
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Main Authors: | , |
Format: | Article in Journal/Newspaper |
Language: | English |
Published: |
University of California Press
2016
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Subjects: | |
Online Access: | http://dx.doi.org/10.1525/hsns.2016.46.4.429 http://online.ucpress.edu/hsns/article-pdf/46/4/429/377717/hsns_2016_46_4_429.pdf |
Summary: | The Strait of Gibraltar has a long tradition of political and scientific uniqueness. Twentieth-century submarine warfare added the ocean’s depth as a new dimension for those wanting to control and understand the Strait. During the Cold War the surveillance of this chokepoint became urgent and entangled with local disputes predating the two-blocs conflict, in particular the sovereignty of Gibraltar for which Spain and the United Kingdom competed. This paper explores a number of transnational research programs on ocean dynamics at the Strait and discovers a network of collaborating researchers who used, and went beyond, international institutions such the International Geophysical Year and NATO. In the process, the Western Mediterranean was constructed as a key maritime place for global ocean circulation, both as a factor to North Atlantic convection and as a model through which to understand it. |
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