As of 2002, submarine cables link all the world's continents except Antarctica.
- It is designed to factor out general communications cable issues from transatlantic / telephone / telegraph special cases
The first submarine communications cable was a telegraph cable laid between England and France in August 1850 by the Anglo-French Telegraph Company. In 1852 a link laid by the Submarine Telegraph Company linked London to Paris for the first time.
The first transatlantic telegraph cable was laid in 1858 (Cyrus Field). It only operated for a month. Attempts in 1865 and 1866 were more successful but although a telephone cable was discussed from the 1920s it needed a number of technological advances that did not arrive until the 1940s to be practical.
- blowing up the first transatlantic cable
- Lord Kelvin and the mirror galvanometer
- British Pacific Cable: October 31 1902
- electromagnetic issues
- mirror galvanometer
- coaxial cable
- frequency division multiplexing
- reliability
- repeaters
- power distribution for repeaters
- fiber optics
- optical repeaters, Erbium-doped fiber amplifier
- self-healing ring
- SONET
- wavelength division multiplexing
Economics of submarine communications cables
- national telco partnerships
- opening to third parties
- indefeasible rights of use (IRUs)
- venture capital
- boom and bust
- FLAG, Project Oxygen
- exponential rise in capacity over time makes value of IRUs implode
Owners and operators of submarine communications cables
to be written
Owners and operators of cable-laying ships
- TYCO
See also:
- Communications satellite
- Internet
- transatlantic telephone cable
- optical fiber
- Public switched telephone network
- http://www.atlantic-cable.com/Article/WireRope/wirerope.htm
- http://www.iscpc.org/ - The International Cable Protection Committee -- includes a register of submarine cables worldwide (though not always updated as often as one might hope)
- Cableships of the World
- FLAG telecom network summary
- A short history of telegraphy
- An Oversimplified Overview of Undersea Cable Systems
- Google search: "Submarine communications cable history"
- Google search: "Submarine communications cable technology"