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Background for the Atlantic Trade Triangle A brief geography of winds and currents in the North Atlantic Ocean
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Background for the Atlantic Trade Triangle A brief geography of winds and currents in the North Atlantic Ocean.

Dec 25, 2015

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Page 1: Background for the Atlantic Trade Triangle A brief geography of winds and currents in the North Atlantic Ocean.

Background for theAtlantic Trade

Triangle

A brief geography of winds and currents

in the North Atlantic Ocean

Page 2: Background for the Atlantic Trade Triangle A brief geography of winds and currents in the North Atlantic Ocean.

Here is a globe,viewed from an angle that helps you focus on the Atlantic Ocean

and the continentsaround it.

Page 3: Background for the Atlantic Trade Triangle A brief geography of winds and currents in the North Atlantic Ocean.

The orange squaremarks the location of the Cape Verde Islands, which werean important stopfor sailing ships.

Page 4: Background for the Atlantic Trade Triangle A brief geography of winds and currents in the North Atlantic Ocean.

Near these islands, the wind blows

from the northeast most of the time.

Page 5: Background for the Atlantic Trade Triangle A brief geography of winds and currents in the North Atlantic Ocean.

Near these islands, the wind blows

from the northeast most of the time.

This was good newsif you wanted

to go westin a sailing ship.

Page 6: Background for the Atlantic Trade Triangle A brief geography of winds and currents in the North Atlantic Ocean.

This was bad newsif you thought

that a flat worldhad an edgeto the west!

Page 7: Background for the Atlantic Trade Triangle A brief geography of winds and currents in the North Atlantic Ocean.

What would you do about this?

Page 8: Background for the Atlantic Trade Triangle A brief geography of winds and currents in the North Atlantic Ocean.

One possibilityis to observe

the prevailing winds in different places.

Page 9: Background for the Atlantic Trade Triangle A brief geography of winds and currents in the North Atlantic Ocean.

For example,you might seewhat directionthe winds blewat the latitudeof Great Britain

or northern France.

Page 10: Background for the Atlantic Trade Triangle A brief geography of winds and currents in the North Atlantic Ocean.

Observations there led to the conclusionthat the winds tended

to blow more oftenfrom the west or southwest.

Page 11: Background for the Atlantic Trade Triangle A brief geography of winds and currents in the North Atlantic Ocean.

When people put theseobservations together,

they realized that a shipcould “ride the trade

winds”across the Atlantic

Ocean. . . .

Page 12: Background for the Atlantic Trade Triangle A brief geography of winds and currents in the North Atlantic Ocean.

. . and then turn northward and go along

the coast(or the edge of the world!)

until the westerly winds could push their ships

back to Europe.

Page 13: Background for the Atlantic Trade Triangle A brief geography of winds and currents in the North Atlantic Ocean.

That is why explorers often landed on islands

in the Caribbean Searather than the coasts

of North America or South America.

Page 14: Background for the Atlantic Trade Triangle A brief geography of winds and currents in the North Atlantic Ocean.

Now let’s look athow this workedduring the era

of colonial trade.

Page 15: Background for the Atlantic Trade Triangle A brief geography of winds and currents in the North Atlantic Ocean.

Ships from Europewould first go

southalong the coast

of Africa.

Page 16: Background for the Atlantic Trade Triangle A brief geography of winds and currents in the North Atlantic Ocean.

Then they turnedand headed west,

pushed by the wind

from the east.

Page 17: Background for the Atlantic Trade Triangle A brief geography of winds and currents in the North Atlantic Ocean.

The trade windscould take them quickly across

the Atlantic Ocean.

Page 18: Background for the Atlantic Trade Triangle A brief geography of winds and currents in the North Atlantic Ocean.

Then theywould go northalong the coast

of North America.

Page 19: Background for the Atlantic Trade Triangle A brief geography of winds and currents in the North Atlantic Ocean.

Finally, they usedthe westerly wind

to push them back to Europe.

Page 20: Background for the Atlantic Trade Triangle A brief geography of winds and currents in the North Atlantic Ocean.

Summary

From the British point of view,

the North Atlantic winds were like

an automatic gold-delivery system.

Spanish ships went to the Americas,

loaded up with treasure, and then

had to sail close to England

on their way back home.

Page 21: Background for the Atlantic Trade Triangle A brief geography of winds and currents in the North Atlantic Ocean.

And that is

the geographic setting

for the Spanish Armada

and, later,

the Triangle Trade.

Page 22: Background for the Atlantic Trade Triangle A brief geography of winds and currents in the North Atlantic Ocean.
Page 23: Background for the Atlantic Trade Triangle A brief geography of winds and currents in the North Atlantic Ocean.

PS. Benjamin Franklindrew the first mapsof this circulation.

Page 24: Background for the Atlantic Trade Triangle A brief geography of winds and currents in the North Atlantic Ocean.

Here is oneof his maps

He was especially

interested in the Gulf Stream.

Page 25: Background for the Atlantic Trade Triangle A brief geography of winds and currents in the North Atlantic Ocean.

This is a modern mapshowing the temperature

of the surface waterin the Gulf Stream

(red is warm, blue is cold).

(National Oceanic and Atmospheric Administration

Page 26: Background for the Atlantic Trade Triangle A brief geography of winds and currents in the North Atlantic Ocean.
Page 27: Background for the Atlantic Trade Triangle A brief geography of winds and currents in the North Atlantic Ocean.