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The Terrestrial Sphere of Crates of Mallus ( c. 150 BCE), showing the region of the antipodes in the southern half of the western hemisphere
Modern world map with the intertropical zone highlighted in crimson

The torrid zone was the name given by ancient Greek and Roman geographers to the equatorial area of the Earth, so hot that it was impenetrable. That notion became a deterrent for European explorers until the 15th century.

Origin

Aristotle posited that the western half of the temperate zone on the other side of the world from Greece might be habitable and that, because of symmetry, there must be in the Southern Hemisphere a temperate zone corresponding to that in the northern. He thought, however, that the excessive heat in the torrid zone would prevent the exploration. [1]

Strabo referred to:

the meridian through Syene is drawn approximately along the course of the Nile from Meroë to Alexandria, and this distance is about ten thousand stadia; and Syene must lie in the centre of that distance; so that the distance from Syene to Meroë is five thousand stadia. And when you have proceeded about three thousand stadia in a straight line south of Meroë, the country is no longer inhabitable on account of the heat, and therefore the parallel though these regions, being the same as that through the Cinnamon-producing Country, must be put down as the limit and the beginning of our inhabited world on the South. [2]

In 8 AD the poet Ovid wrote in his Metamorphoses.

...the celestial vault is cut by two zones on the right and two on the left, and there is a fifth zone between, hotter than these, so did the providence of God mark off the enclosed mass with the same number of zones, and the same tracts were stamped upon the earth. The central zone of these may not be dwelt in by reason of the heat [3]

Pomponius Mela, the first Roman geographer, asserted that the Earth had two habitable zones, a north and a south one. The second population were known as Antichthones. However, it would be impossible to get into contact with each other because of the unbearable heat at the equator (De orbis situ 1.4).

Proved wrong

Many Europeans had assumed that Cape Bojador, in Western Sahara, marked the beginning of the impenetrable torrid zone until 1434, when the Portuguese sailed past the cape and reported that no torrid zone existed. [4]

References

  1. ^ Sanderson, Marie (April 1999). "The Classification of Climates from Pythagoras to Koeppen". Bulletin of the American Meteorological Society. 80 (4): 669–673. JSTOR  26214921.
  2. ^ Strabo. GEOGRAPHY. Book II Chapter 5. Retrieved 31 August 2023.{{ cite book}}: CS1 maint: location ( link)
  3. ^ Ovid. Metamorphoses, Book I.
  4. ^ Hansen, Valerie; Curtis, Kenneth R. (2015). Voyages in World History, Brief. Cengage Learning. p. 335. ISBN  9781305537705. Retrieved 28 March 2023.