The establishment of the
North Atlantic sea lanes was inspired by the
sinking of the US
mail steamer SS Arctic by
collision with the French steamer
SS Vesta in October 1854 which resulted in the loss of over 300 lives, including the family of the
Arctic's owner. Lieutenant M. F. Maury of the US Navy first published a section titled "Steam Lanes Across the Atlantic" in his 1855
Sailing Directions proposing sea lanes along the 42 degree
latitude. A number of international conferences and committees were held in 1866, 1872, 1887, 1889, and 1891 all of which left the designation of sea lanes to the principal trans-Atlantic steamship companies at the time;
Cunard,
White Star,
Inman,
National Line, and
Guion Lines. In 1913–1914 the
International Convention for Safety of Life at Sea held in
London again reaffirmed that the selection of routes across the Atlantic in both directions is left to the responsibility of the steamship companies. Shipping lanes came to be by analysing the prevailing winds. The trade winds allowed ships to sail towards the west quickly, and the westerlies allowed ships to travel to the east quickly. As such, the sea lanes are mostly chosen to take full advantage of these winds. Currents are also similarly followed as well, which also gives an advantage to the vessel. Some routes, such as that from
Cape Town to
Rio de Janeiro (passing
Tristan da Cunha), were not able to take advantage of these natural factors. Main sea lanes may also attract
pirates.
Pax Britannica was the period from 1815–1914 during which the British
Royal Navy controlled most of the key maritime trade routes, and also suppressed piracy and the slave trade. During
World War I, as German
U-boats began hitting
American and
British shipping, the
Allied trade vessels began to move out of the usual sea lanes to be escorted by
naval ships. ==Advantages==