The Notebooks of Leonardo Da Vinci Complete


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the surface of the sea. And if you should think that the moon,  
rising at the Eastern end of the Mediterranean sea must there begin  
to attract to herself the waters of the sea, it would follow that we  
must at once see the effect of it at the Eastern end of that sea.  
Again, as the Mediterranean sea is about the eighth part of the  
circumference of the aqueous sphere, being 3000 miles long, while  
the flow and ebb only occur 4 times in 24 hours, these results would  
not agree with the time of 24 hours, unless this Mediterranean sea  
were six thousand miles in length; because if such a superabundance  
of water had to pass through the straits of Gibraltar in running  
behind the moon, the rush of the water through that strait would be  
so great, and would rise to such a height, that beyond the straits  
it would for many miles rush so violently into the ocean as to cause  
floods and tremendous seething, so that it would be impossible to  
pass through. This agitated ocean would afterwards return the waters  
it had received with equal fury to the place they had come from, so  
that no one ever could pass through those straits. Now experience  
shows that at every hour they are passed in safety, but when the  
wind sets in the same direction as the current, the strong ebb  
increases [Footnote 23: In attempting to get out of the  
Mediterranean, vessels are sometimes detained for a considerable  
time; not merely by the causes mentioned by Leonardo but by the  
constant current flowing eastwards through the middle of the straits  
of Gibraltar.]. The sea does not raise the water that has issued  
from the straits, but it checks them and this retards the tide; then  
it makes up with furious haste for the time it has lost until the  
785  


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