(Redirected from Cantabrian Sea)

Map of the Bay of Biscay.
The 'Bay of Biscay' (
Spanish: ''Golfo de Vizcaya'';
French: ''Golfe de
Gascogne'';
Basque: ''Bizkaiko Golkoa'';
Occitan: ''Golf de Gasconha'') is a
gulf of the North
Atlantic Ocean. It lies along the western coast of
France from
Brest south to the
Spanish border, and the northern coast of Spain, and is named for the Spanish province of
Biscay.
Geography
Parts of the
continental shelf extend far into the bay, resulting in fairly shallow water in many areas which creates the rough seas the region is known for.
Rivers
The main rivers that end in the Bay of Biscay are:
★ France:
Loire,
Charente,
Garonne,
Dordogne,
Adour.
★ Spain: named westward :
Bidasoa,
Oria,
Urola ,
Nervión,
Nalón,
Pas,
Asón,
Deva,
Miera,
Besaya,
Nansa,
Eo,
Sor.
Main cities
The main cities on the shores of the Bay of Biscay are:
★ France:
Brest,
Nantes,
La Rochelle,
Bordeaux,
Bayonne.
★ Spain:
San Sebastian,
Bilbao,
Santander,
Gijon.
History
The southern end of the gulf is also called in Spanish ''"Mar Cantábrico" (Cantabrian Sea)'', for the region of
Cantabria, but this name is not generally used in English. It was named by Romans in 1st century BC as ''Sinus Cantabrorum'' (Ocean of the
Cantabri).
On some medieval maps, the Bay of Biscay is marked as ''El Mar del los Vascos'', the Basque Bay. The Bay of Biscay is the birthplace of what is possibly the world's most successful and most renowned maritime industry, the Basque and Cantabrian shipbuilders and fishermen.
This area was considered to be the final (European) destination for the
Soviet Red Army (the former
U.S.S.R.'s military force) during the
Cold War. The location has both geopolitical as well as strategic importance. The former is representative of potential Soviet dominance of Europe, and the latter applies to the strategic importance of Soviet naval access to the Atlantic Ocean.
The Bay of Biscay is home to some of the
Atlantic Ocean's fiercest
weather. Large storms occur in the bay, especially during the winter months. Up until recent years it was a regular occurrence for merchant vessels to founder in Biscay storms and many lives were lost. Improved ships and weather prediction have reduced the toll of the storms.
★
Rogue wave (oceanography)
Wildlife
The car ferries from
Portsmouth to
Bilbao and from
Plymouth to
Santander provide one of the most convenient ways to see
cetaceans in
European waters, and there are often specialist trips on board.
Volunteers and employees from the
Biscay Dolphin Research Programme use the bridge of the vessel on the
P&O Portsmouth to Bilbao run to observe and monitor cetacean activity. Many species of
whales and
dolphins can be seen in this area but it is one of the few places where the
beaked whales such as the
Cuvier's beaked whale have been observed.
The best areas to see the larger cetaceans are those over deep water off the continental shelf particularly over the
Santander Canyon and
Torrelavega Canyon in the south of the Bay.
The three-day round trip also gives sightings of good numbers of several species of
seabirds, particularly
gannets.
The alga
Colpomenia peregrina was introduced and first noticed by oyster fishermen in the Bay of Biscay in 1906.
Trivia
★ The
British Yachtswoman
Ellen MacArthur finished her first trip around the world here, and there is a famous song based on this.
★ Biscay is also an area of the British
Shipping Forecast, familiar to
BBC Radio 4 listeners.