Page:Physical Geography of the Sea and its Meteorology.djvu/335

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THE DEPTHS OF THE OCEAN.
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penetrate. And what is more, these monster instruments have revealed to us, in those distant regions, forms or aggregations of matter which suggest to some the idea of the existence of physical forces there that we do not understand, and which raise the question in speculative minds, Is gravitation a universal thing, and do its forces penetrate every abyss of space? Could we not gauge the sea as well as the sky and devise an instrument for penetrating the depths of the ocean as well as the depths of space? Mariners were curious concerning the bottom of the sea. Though nothing thence had been brought to light, exploration had invested the subject with additional interest, and increased the desire to know more. In this state of the case, the idea of a common twine thread for a sounding-line, and a cannon ball for a sinker, was suggested. It was a beautiful conception; for, besides its simplicity, it had in its favour the greatest of recommendations, it could be readily put into practice.

567. The great depths and failures of the first attempts.—Well-directed attempts to fathom the ocean began now to be made with such a line and plummet, and the public mind was astonished at the vast depths that were at first reported. Lieutenant Walsh, of the United States schooner "Taney," reported a cast with the deep-sea lead at thirty-four thousand feet without bottom. His sounding-line was an iron wire more than eleven miles in length. Lieutenant Berryman, of the United States brig "Dolphin," reported another unsuccessful attempt to fathom mid-ocean with a line thirty-nine thousand feet in length. Captain Denham, of Her Britannic Majesty's ship "Herald," reported bottom in the South Atlantic at the depth of forty-six thousand feet; and Lieutenant J. P. Parker, of the United States frigate "Congress," afterwards, in attempting to sound near the same region, let go his plummet, and saw it run out a line fifty thousand feet long as though the bottom had not been reached. There are no such depths as these. The three last-named attempts were made with the sounding-twine of the American navy, which has been introduced in conformity with a very simple plan for sounding out the depths of the ocean. It involved for each cast only the expenditure of a cannon ball, and twine enough to reach the bottom. This plan was introduced as a part of the researches conducted at the National Observatory, and which have proved so fruitful and beneficial, concerning the winds and currents and other phenomena of the ocean. These researches had already received the