Nicholas Channel

Summary

Nicholas Channel (also Saint Nicholas Channel; Spanish: Canal de Nicolas or Canal de San Nicolas) is a strait off the northeastern coast of Cuba. It lies 90 miles (145 km) east of Havana. It separates Cuba from the most southwestern of the islands of the Bahamas.[1]

Nicholas Channel
1899 map of Cuba with the Nicholas Channel in the north, between Cay Sal Bank and Cuba's northern coastal islands.
Nicholas Channel is located in Bahamas
Nicholas Channel
Nicholas Channel
Nicholas Channel is located in Cuba
Nicholas Channel
Nicholas Channel
Nicholas Channel is located in Caribbean
Nicholas Channel
Nicholas Channel
Coordinates23°25′N 80°05′W / 23.417°N 80.083°W / 23.417; -80.083 (Nicholas Channel)
Basin countriesCuba
United States
Bahamas

Geography

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Part of the Atlantic Ocean, it is bordered to the west by the Straits of Florida, to the north by the Cay Sal Bank and to the south by the Sabana-Camaguey Archipelago off Cuba's north shore and to the east by the Old Bahama Channel.

Geography of this location can be described as follows:

Both the Little and the Great Bahama Banks have their edges towards the Atlantic. These gulfs and channels are full of islands and rocks which with some others farther south are comprehended under the general name of the Bahama Islands. The Key Sal Bank which turns the gulf stream to the north and sends it to the Straits of Florida lies between the Great Bahama Bank and Cuba between 23 and 24 N lat and is divided from the former by the Santarem Channel and from the latter by Nicholas Channel which unite farther to the south east and take the name of Old Bahama Channel. Key Sal Bank is of no great extent and contains few rocks and islets.[2]

References

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  1. ^ Nicholas Channel: Bahamas, The National Geospatial-Intelligence Agency, Bethesda, MD, US
  2. ^ George Long, George Richardson Porter, George Tucker, Wilhelm Wittich. America and the West Indies: geographically described page 11. Publisher: C. Knight and Co., 1845