Saltstraumen Saltstraumen is a narrow strait located close to the
Arctic Circle, south-east of the city of
Bodø,
Norway. It has one of the strongest tidal currents in the world. It is the second strongest whirlpool in the world with flow currents reaching speeds as high as . The Moskstraumen is formed by the combination of powerful semi-diurnal tides and the unusual shape of the
seabed, with a shallow ridge between the
Moskenesøya and
Værøya islands which amplifies and whirls the tidal currents. The fictional depictions of the Moskstraumen by
Edgar Allan Poe,
Jules Verne, and
Cixin Liu describe it as a gigantic circular vortex that reaches the bottom of the ocean, when in fact it is a set of currents and crosscurrents with a rate of . Poe described this phenomenon in his short story "
A Descent into the Maelström", which in 1841 was the first to use the word
maelstrom in the English language;
Corryvreckan The Corryvreckan is a narrow
strait between the islands of
Jura and
Scarba, in
Argyll and Bute, on the northern side of the
Gulf of Corryvreckan,
Scotland. It is the third-largest whirlpool in the world.
Niagara Whirlpool About three miles (4.8 kilometers) downstream from
Niagara Falls is the
Niagara Whirlpool. Located mostly in Canada and partially in the United States, the whirlpool is crossed by the
Whirlpool Aero Car. The basin of the whirlpool is 1,700 feet (518 meters) long and 1,200 feet (365 meters) wide. Its maximum water depth is 125 feet (38 meters).
Other notable maelstroms and whirlpools Old Sow whirlpool is located between Deer Island,
New Brunswick, Canada, and Moose Island, Eastport,
Maine, USA. It is given the epithet "pig-like" as it makes a screeching noise when the vortex is at its full fury and reaches speeds of as much as . A short-lived whirlpool sucked in a portion of the
Lake Peigneur in
Louisiana, United States after a drilling mishap on November 20, 1980. This was not a naturally occurring whirlpool, but a disaster caused by underwater drillers breaking through the roof of a salt mine. The lake then drained into the mine until the mine filled and the water levels equalized, but the formerly deep lake was now deep. This mishap caused a sinkhole, and in the end, resulted in the destruction of five houses, the loss of nineteen barges and eight tug boats, oil rigs, a mobile home, trees, acres of land, and most of a botanical garden. The adjacent settlement of Jefferson Island was reduced in area by 10%. A crater across was left behind. Nine of the barges, which had sunk, later resurfaced after the whirlpool subsided. A more recent example of an artificial whirlpool that received significant media coverage occurred in early June 2015, when an intake vortex formed in
Lake Texoma, on the Oklahoma–Texas border, near the floodgates of the dam that forms the lake. At the time of the whirlpool's formation, the lake was being drained after reaching its highest level ever. The
Army Corps of Engineers, which operates the dam and lake, expected that the whirlpool would last until the lake reached normal seasonal levels by late July. == Dangers ==