WOW.com Web Search

Search results

  1. Results from the WOW.Com Content Network
  2. Submarine communications cable - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Submarine_communications_cable

    A submarine communications cable is a cable laid on the seabed between land-based stations to carry telecommunication signals across stretches of ocean and sea. The first submarine communications cables were laid beginning in the 1850s and carried telegraphy traffic, establishing the first instant telecommunications links between continents ...

  3. OpenSeaMap - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/OpenSeaMap

    Launched. 2009. Content license. CC BY-SA (map), ODbL (data) OpenSeaMap is a software project collecting freely usable nautical information and geospatial data to create a worldwide nautical chart. This chart is available on the OpenSeaMap website, and can also be downloaded for use as an electronic chart for offline applications.

  4. Transatlantic telegraph cable - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Transatlantic_telegraph_cable

    Contemporary map of the 1858 transatlantic cable route. Transatlantic telegraph cables were undersea cables running under the Atlantic Ocean for telegraph communications. . Telegraphy is an obsolete form of communication, and the cables have long since been decommissioned, but telephone and data are still carried on other transatlantic telecommunication

  5. History of navigation - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/History_of_navigation

    History of navigation. Map of the world produced in 1689 by Gerard van Schagen. The history of navigation, or the history of seafaring, is the art of directing vessels upon the open sea through the establishment of its position and course by means of traditional practice, geometry, astronomy, or special instruments.

  6. Early world maps - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Early_world_maps

    Early world maps. The earliest known world maps date to classical antiquity, the oldest examples of the 6th to 5th centuries BCE still based on the flat Earth paradigm. World maps assuming a spherical Earth first appear in the Hellenistic period. The developments of Greek geography during this time, notably by Eratosthenes and Posidonius ...

  7. Giant Pacific octopus - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Giant_Pacific_octopus

    The giant Pacific octopus ( Enteroctopus dofleini ), also known as the North Pacific giant octopus, is a large marine cephalopod belonging to the genus Enteroctopus and Enteroctopodidae family. Its spatial distribution encompasses much of the coastal North Pacific, from the Mexican state of Baja California, north along the United States' West ...

  8. General Post Office - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/General_Post_Office

    The General Post Office (GPO) was the state postal system and telecommunications carrier of the United Kingdom until 1969. Established in England in the 17th century, the GPO was a state monopoly covering the dispatch of items from a specific sender to a specific receiver (which was to be of great importance when new forms of communication were invented); it was overseen by a Government ...

  9. North Sea - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/North_Sea

    The North Sea lies between Great Britain, Denmark, Norway, Germany, the Netherlands, Belgium and France. An epeiric sea on the European continental shelf, it connects to the Atlantic Ocean through the English Channel in the south and the Norwegian Sea in the north. It is more than 970 kilometres (600 mi) long and 580 kilometres (360 mi) wide ...