The Seven Seas
The major bodies of water on Earth, with a discussion of their role in fiction.
What the "seven seas" are has varied over the years. We are going with the modern definition, associating relevant seas with their respective oceans.
North Atlantic
Primarily known for, well, not much. Takes about a week to cross on a ship, although the record is about three and a half days.
- Scene of the Battle of the Atlantic in World War Two, where the Germans tried to stop North American supplies getting to the UK.
- Many World War Three works have the USSR trying to do something similar.
- Also where the Titanic made its only voyage.
- Don't forget the Bermuda Triangle
- Also, the Gulf Stream current bringing warm water from the Caribbean east across the Atlantic maybe helping to keep Europe from freezing. There's a theory that climate change may shut this down, to undesirable effects most recently grossly exaggerated in The Day After Tomorrow.
Mediterranean Sea
Connecting the Atlantic and Indian Oceans via the Suez canal, the Med is known for being hot and a major tourist destination, especially if you live in NW Europe.
Best known by Greco-Roman culture: to them it was the centre of the world, and that is in fact what the name means (Medi-Terra, world's middle).
Black Sea
One of Russia's main seas and also Turkey's. The only access from the Med to this is via the Dardanelles and international treaties limit the amount of warship tonnage you can have in there if you're not a local state.
Baltic Sea
A major trade sea of Northern Europe. The Hanseatic League of medieval merchants operated here. This sea was very important for the Russian Empire since the times of Peter the Great, who built St.Petersburg as a Baltic port. Many Ruritanias were/are located on the coast of this sea.
Caribbean Sea/Gulf of Mexico
Known as one of the former homes of Pirates. Has hurricanes, bananas and historically Banana Republics. Many nations of The Commonwealth are found here.
South Atlantic
Also known for not much, except The Falkland Islands. Cape Horn, the Atlantic-Pacific crossing point, is known for seriously strong trade winds and is considered the toughest part of any global circumnavigation by boat.
North Pacific
Known for not all that much. There's Japan, obviously, but most of the stuff round here are cold islands with US radar stations on, and Russian Pacific fleet.
- Well, there's the Great Pacific Garbage Patch
- Also, many of the islands were used for nuclear testing by the US during the Cold War.
- The Russo-Japanese War was fought here.
South Pacific
A large collection of low-lying atolls, best known for their scantily-clad natives and diverse wildlife. And nuclear testing.
The location of many major World War II campaigns and the Mutiny on the Bounty.
Arctic
Largely covered in ice for much of the year, there is no real permanent land mass here. The main stuff you find here are submarines under the ice pack.
Barents Sea
Traditionally, a home for the Russian Navy.
Bering Sea
North of the Aleutian Islands, this area's more known for seal hunting when it was OK, and being near where the Bering Land Bridge was, which allowed the Americas to get their first inhabitants.
Antarctic/Southern
Best known for penguins and scientific observation bases, no-one actually owns any of the land mass that is Antarctica, as per international treaty.
Indian
Has a couple of large island groups in the middle of it, but mostly ignored.
- In the West, anyway. The Monsoon used to aid in navigation on the "Maritime Silk Road" between the China and Europe and feeds a billion people (give or take) across Southern Asia.
- Still important in international trade. According to The Other Wiki a quarter of all of the world's trade pass through the Strait of Malacca each year.
- Boxing Day Tsunami of 2006
- And then there's this place called Somalia
Persian/Arabian Gulf
The area from Iraq to the Straits of Hormuz and a major oil transit route. The name you use may annoy some people.
Red Sea
Moses parted it, according to The Bible. Very popular with divers.