Discount Cruises > Panama Cruise Agent > Panama Canal: Challenge of Connecting Two Oceans of Different Levels Panama Canal:
Challenge of Connecting Two Oceans of Different Levels
By Sydney Tremayne
Many would be surprised to know that the Panama Canal runs north to
south to link the Atlantic and Pacific Oceans, not east to
west.
By shortening the
route and reducing the cost of transportation between the two
oceans, the Panama Canal allows for lower-cost imported goods and
commodities in many part of the world. (It saves almost 8,000 miles
on a trip from New York to San Francisco.)
By eliminating
for the majority of shipping the treacherous route around the tip
of Argentina, it has no doubt saved countless lives and millions of
dollars in lost vessels. However, it is estimated to have cost some
30,000 lives in the two attempts French and American to build it
between 1880 and 1914.
Reducing the
distance between the two oceans provides Panama with a major share
of its gross domestic product. Some 13,500 ships transit the canal
each year, almost 40 a day.
Not commonly
known is the fact that the two oceans have different sea levels,
and different levels of high tide. At the entrance to the Panama
Canal, the Pacific Ocean can rise as much as 20 feet, but 45 miles
away, the difference between high tide and low in the Atlantic is
just three feet.
The longest part
of the canal, sandwiched between gigantic sets of locks at either
end, is manmade Gatun Lake and the Gaillard Cut. Gaillard Cut
actually rips through a low point in the mountain chain that runs
all the way from Alaska to the tip of Argentina.
The Panama Canal
has six locks, three near either end. From the Pacific Ocean, near
Panama City, the Miraflores Locks' two chambers each raise vessels
27 feet. A short distance away, the Pedro Miguel Lock lifts
shipping a further 31 feet. Most of the passage through the canal
is at 85 feet above sea level.
The Gaillard Cut
is followed by the town of Gamboa, where the Chagres River enters
the canal. Without the Chagres and the immense amount of water that
flows from it, there could be no Panama Canal.
The three steps
of the Gatun Locks each lower ships about 28 feet, to the level of
the Atlantic Ocean.
The locks are
gravity fed from the Chagres and Gatun Lake. No pumps are needed.
Water pours through a huge culvert in the center wall of each lock,
a culvert so massive that a locomotive could pass through it. Other
large culverts pass through the side walls. Water fills or empties
through vents along the bottom of the locks, 26 million gallons in
just eight minutes.
Each lock chamber
is 110 feet wide and 1,000 feet long, and each gate weighs 700
tons. When the Panama Canal was completed in 1914, the locks were
large enough for the largest vessel in the world to pass through.
And since then, most marine architects have been careful to design
hulls with the canal's measurements in mind. That changed in 1934
when the Queen Mary was launched. She was 118.5 feet wide, but it
didn't matter: she was built for transatlantic service, like the
Queen Elizabeth, launched a little later.
But shipping
economics call for ever larger loads. There has been talk for a
number of years about widening the canal, one possibility being the
construction of wider parallel locks beside the existing ones. One
limiting factor could be the availability of water in greater
volume. Other options that have been discussed, including building
a canal at sea level that would need no locks. One problem with
this is the current that would be created because the oceans are at
different levels.
Another option
that Panamanians don't even want to think about is the original
idea: to build a canal through Nicaragua.
All naval vessels
except aircraft carriers can squeeze through the Panama Canal, and
do so without damage, though the occasional battleship loses some
paint. The flight deck on aircraft carriers is angled to give
greater runway length, and they cannot clear the canal. The world's
largest oil tankers cannot make it, either, and have to offload
their cargoes to smaller vessels at terminals on either
end.
Apart from being
the crossroads of the world's shipping, the Panama Canal is a great
attraction for tourists. There are daily cruises that ply either
the whole length or part of it. It's an excellent way to view part
of Panama's history, past and present.
To learn more
about some of the interesting places to see in Panama, visit
http://www.yourpanama.com/places-of-interest-in-panama.html
Sydney Tremayne
is publisher of a website for potential retirees and tourists to
Panama, http://www.yourpanama.com He says he made every mistake in
the book when he retired to Panama in 2003. He hopes his site will
help others to avoid the same mistakes.
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