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The Maelstrom
In Homer’s Iliad, Jason and the Argonauts travel through numerous obstacles before finding the golden fleece of legend. One such phenomenon was the Maelstrom, a spinning whirlpool that swallowed ships with no mercy. Nicholas de Lynna, a Franciscan friar in the fourteenth century, may have been the first foreign traveler to encounter Norway’s real Maelstrom, a whirlpool so famous that its name has become the generic name for all whirlpools.

Similar spinning pools also exist in the Strait of Messina between Italy and Sicily, as well as in Japan’s Naruto Strait. However, it is Norway’s Maelstrom that remains the most infamous. Edgar Allen Poe writes of it in his short story, “A Descent into the Maelstrom.” In the tale, a miscalculation of tides and an unforeseen storm trap three fishermen in a narrow passage, where the waters begin to whirl until “the boat appeared to be hanging, as if by magic, midway down, upon the interior surface of a funnel vast in circumference, prodigious in depth.”

The Maelstrom is caused by the sharply rising seafloor between the Norwegian islands of Moskenesoy and Mosken. The topography constricts the tide flow, so that a fresh, rising tide often begins to rush inward before the previous tide has finished flowing out. The result is a conflict of water, channeled by a rocky seafloor, that whirls and spins into a confused mass.


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