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GULF STREAM

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Originally appearing in Volume V12, Page 714 of the 1911 Encyclopedia Britannica.
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GULF STREAM ,' the name properly applied to the stream current which issues from the Gulf of See also:

Mexico and flows See also:north-eastward, following the eastern See also:coast of North See also:America, and separated from it by a narrow See also:strip of See also:cold See also:water (the Cold See also:Wall), to a point See also:east of the See also:Grand See also:Banks off See also:Newfoundland. The Gulf Stream is a narrow, deep current, and its velocity is estimated at about 8o m. a See also:day.. It is joined by, and often indistinguishable from, a large See also:body of water which comes from outside the See also:West Indies and follows the same course. The See also:term was formerly applied to the See also:drift current which carries the mixed See also:waters of the Gulf Stream and the Labrador current eastwards across the See also:Atlantic. This is now usually known as the " Gulf Stream drift," although the name is not altogether appropriate. See ATLANTIC.

End of Article: GULF STREAM

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