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I—The Separation of Traffic at Sea

Published online by Cambridge University Press:  18 January 2010

Extract

To the layman navigation may sometimes appear as an old lady whose fads have acquired the sanctity of tradition. In every tradition, however, there is something venerable; and we would be very wrong to laugh at the traditions of the sea, for they are a legacy we have inherited from all our seafaring ancestors since the days of Noah.

The core of this inheritance is the notion of freedom. For centuries the freedom of the seas was absolute and unconditional; all men were free to use the sea, for no man can plant his flag on its restless immensities; and all were free to choose their routes and navigate as they pleased, for encounters at sea were so infrequent that it would be only a most uncommon stroke of ill-luck that produced a collision between two vessels in the vast emptiness of the oceans.

Type
The Regulation of Traffic at Sea
Copyright
Copyright © The Royal Institute of Navigation 1961

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References

REFERENCE

1Oudet, L. (1959). Journal de la Marine Marchande.Google Scholar