FIRST PART
CHAPTER 14: The Black Current
 
THE PART OF THE planet earth that the seas occupy has been assessed at
 3,832,558 square myriameters, hence more than 38,000,000,000 hectares.
 This liquid mass totals 2,250,000,000 cubic miles and could form
 a sphere with a diameter of sixty leagues, whose weight would
 be three quintillion metric tons.  To appreciate such a number,
 we should remember that a quintillion is to a billion what a billion
 is to one, in other words, there are as many billions in a quintillion
 as ones in a billion!  Now then, this liquid mass nearly equals
 the total amount of water that has poured through all the earth's
 rivers for the past 40,000 years! 
During prehistoric times, an era of fire was followed by an era of water.
 At first there was ocean everywhere.  Then, during the Silurian period,
 the tops of mountains gradually appeared above the waves,
 islands emerged, disappeared beneath temporary floods, rose again,
 were fused to form continents, and finally the earth's geography
 settled into what we have today.  Solid matter had wrested from liquid
 matter some 37,657,000 square miles, hence 12,916,000,000 hectares. 
The outlines of the continents allow the seas to be divided
 into five major parts:  the frozen Arctic and Antarctic oceans,
 the Indian Ocean, the Atlantic Ocean, and the Pacific Ocean. 
The Pacific Ocean extends north to south between the two polar circles
 and east to west between America and Asia over an expanse of 145
 degrees of longitude.  It's the most tranquil of the seas; its currents
 are wide and slow-moving, its tides moderate, its rainfall abundant.
 And this was the ocean that I was first destined to cross under
 these strangest of auspices. 
"If you don't mind, professor," Captain Nemo told me, "we'll determine
 our exact position and fix the starting point of our voyage.
 It's fifteen minutes before noon.  I'm going to rise to the surface
 of the water." 
The captain pressed an electric bell three times.  The pumps began
 to expel water from the ballast tanks; on the pressure gauge,
 a needle marked the decreasing pressures that indicated the Nautilus's
 upward progress; then the needle stopped. 
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