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Encyclopedia > Bosporus Strait
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Fatih Sultan Mehmed Bridge over the Bosporus seen from over Rumelihisarı

This article is about the strait; Bosphorus is also a Turkish Boğaziçi or İstanbul Boğazı) is a strait that separates the European part (Rumeli) of Turkey from its Asian part (Anadolu), connecting the Sea of Marmara (Marmara Denizi) with the Black Sea (Karadeniz). It is 30 km long, with a maximum width of 3,700 meters at the northern entrance, and a minimum width of 750 meters between Anadoluhisarı and Rumelihisarı. The depth varies from 36 to 124 meters in midstream.


The shores of the strait are heavily populated as the city of Istanbul (population at least 11 million) straddles it.

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Bosporus - Landsat satellite photo

Two bridges cross the Bosporus Strait. The first, Bogazici (Bosporus I) bridge, is 1074 meters long and was completed in 1973. The second, Fatih Sultan Mehmed (Bosporus II) bridge, is 1090 meters long, and was completed in 1988 about five kilometers north of the first bridge.


Marmaray, a 13.7 kilometer-long rail tunnel is under construction and expected to be completed in 2008. Approximately 1,400 meters of the tunnel will run under the strait, at a depth of about 55 meters.


There are also three overhead powerlines crossing Bosporus (Bosporus overhead line crossing I, Bosporus overhead line crossing II and (Bosporus overhead line crossing III)


History

Bosporus means in Greek "ox ford" or "ox passage"; the name comes from a Greek myth about Io's travels after Zeus turned her into an ox for her protection.


The ancient Greeks referred to this strait as the Thracian Bosporus, as they called the Strait of Kerch the Cimmerian Bosporus. Increasing the chances of confusion, they also called a land area near these two straits by the same name: the Thracian Chersonesus, which is known today as Gallipoli, and the Cimmerian Chersonesus, known today as the Crimea.


Due to the importance of the strait for the defense of Istanbul, the Ottoman sultans constructed a fortification on each side of it, Anadoluhisari (1393) and Rumelihisari (1451). Its strategic importance remains high: several international treaties have governed vessels using the waters. including the Montreux Convention Regarding the Regime of the Turkish Straits, signed in 1936.


Some have argued that a massive flood occurring in the region around 5600 BC is the historic basis for the flood stories in the Epic of Gilgamesh and the Bible.








  Results from FactBites:
 
Bosphorus - Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia (754 words)
The world's narrowest strait used for international navigation, it connects the Black Sea with the Sea of Marmara (which is connected by the Dardanelles to the Aegean Sea, and thereby to the Mediterranean Sea).
The shores of the strait are heavily populated as the city of Istanbul (in excess of 13 million inhabitants) straddles it.
The strategic significance of the strait was one of the factors in the decision of the Roman Emperor Constantine I to found there in 330 AD his new capital, Constantinople, which came to be known as the capital of the Eastern Roman Empire.
Strait - Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia (203 words)
A strait is a narrow channel of water that connects two larger bodies of water, and thus lies between two land masses.
Straits are typically much larger, wider structures that do not have water running in a single direction, and normally connect two seas.
That is, while straits lie between two land masses and connect two larger bodies of water, isthmuses lie between two bodies of water and connect two larger land masses.
  More results at FactBites »


 

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