Online Encyclopedia

THE SOLENT

Online Encyclopedia
Originally appearing in Volume V25, Page 358 of the 1911 Encyclopedia Britannica.
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THE

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SOLENT  , a strait of the
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English Channel, between the mainland (the coast of Hampshire, England), and the north-western coast of the Isle of Wight, forming the western entrance to Southampton
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Water, Spithead being the eastern . Its length, from the eastern
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shore of Southampton Water to the Needles rocks off the western extremity of Wight, is 15 M . The general breadth is from 21 to 3 m., but between Stone Point on the mainland and
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Egypt Point on the north coast of Wight it narrows to It m.; and 31 M. north of the Needles there springs from the mainland a
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great
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shingle
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bank, mostly only a few yards in breadth above water, but nearly 2 M. in length . "The
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American
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sole (Achirus fasciatus) is a small flat-fish of inferior quality . It reduces the breadth of the
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Solent to a little over i m., and broadens at the end, on which stands Hurst Castle, an important fortification dating from the time of Henry VIII . Here Charles I. was imprisoned in 1648 . The coast of the mainland is low but picturesque, and is broken by the shallow estuaries of the
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Beaulieu
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River and the Lym, with the small
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port of
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Lymington upon it . The coast of Wight rises more steeply . On this side the Medina estuary opens northward, and those of the Newtown and the Yar north-westward into the strait . At the mouth of Southampton Water is a projecting bar resembling but smaller than that of Hurst Castle, and like it bearing a Tudor fortress, Calshot Castle . The Solent is frequently the scene of yacht races . The configuration of the coast causes a double tide in the strait .

End of Article: THE SOLENT
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