50 THE PHYSICAL GEOGRAPHY OF THE SEA. 



CHAPTER IL 



INFLUENCE OF THE GULP STEEAM UPON CLI^IATES. 



How the Climate of England is regulated by it, «J 6L — Isothermal Lines of the At- 

 lantic, 65. — Deep-sea Temperatures under the Gulf Stream, 68. — Currents indi- 

 cated by the Fish, 70.— Sea-nettles, 73.— Climates of the Sea, 75— Offices of the 

 Sea, 76. — Influence of the Gulf Stream upon the Meteorology of the Ocean, 78. — 

 Furious Storms, 80. — Dampness of the English Climate due the Gulf Stream, 83. 

 ' — Its Influence upon Storms, 85. — Wreck of the Steamer San Francisco, 88. — 

 Influence of the Gulf Stream upon Commerce and Navigation, 96. — Used for find- 

 ing Longitude, 103. — Commerce in 1769, 106. 



61. MoDEEN ingenuity has suggested a beautiful mode of warm- 

 ing houses in winter. It is done by means of hot water. The 

 furnace and the caldron are sometimes placed at a distance from 

 the apartments to be warmed. It is so at the Observatory. In 

 this case, pipes are used to conduct the heated water from the 

 caldron under the superintendent's dwelling over into one of the 

 basement rooms of the Observatory, a distance of one hundred 

 feet. These pipes are then flared out so as to present a large cool- 

 ing surface ; after which they are united into one again, through 

 which the w^ater, being now cooled, returns of its own accord to 

 the caldron. Thus cool water is returning all the time and flow- 

 ing in at the bottom of the caldron, while hot water is continually 

 flowing out at the top. 



The ventilation of the Observatory is so arranged that the cir- 

 culation of the atmosphere through it is led from this basement 

 room, where the pipes are, to all other parts of the buikling ; and 

 in the process of this circulation, the warmth conveyed by the 

 water to the basement is taken thence by the air and distributed 

 over all the rooms. Now, to compare small tilings with great, we 

 have, in the warm waters which are confined in the Gulf of Mex- 

 ico, just such a heating apparatus for Great Britain, the North 

 Atlantic, and Western Europe. 



62. The furnace is the torrid zone ; the Mexican Gulf and Ca- 



