Economic aspects
The Black Sea is an important year-round transportation artery, linking the eastern European countries with world markets. Odessa, the historic Ukrainian city, together with the nearby port of Illichivsk, account for most of the sea’s freight turnover. The ports of Novorossiysk and, to a lesser extent, Tuapse (both in Russia) and Batumi (Georgia) farther to the east specialize in petroleum. In Bulgaria, Varna and Burgas are the main ports. Constanța, in Romania, connects oil-bearing regions with foreign markets. Istanbul on the Sea of Marmara is Turkey’s main port, while the Danube acts as a huge trade artery for the Balkan countries.
Fish constitute the most widely utilized biological resource of the Black Sea. Conservation and antipollution measures have included the banning of dolphin fishing, enacted by Soviet authorities in 1966, as well as restrictions on oil tankers and the disposal of industrial wastes. In the 1990s the six Black Sea countries signed the Convention on the Protection of the Black Sea Against Pollution (also called Bucharest Convention), a comprehensive agreement to implement an array of additional programs to control pollution, sustain the fisheries, and protect marine life.
Finally, the magnificent climate and mineral springs around the Black Sea have made it a major recreational and recuperative centre, with Crimea being the most important region. The sandy beaches of Bulgaria and Romania also have attracted an increasing number of tourists.
Study and exploration
Navigation on the Black Sea has been known from the time of the ancient Phoenicians. The Greek historian Herodotus described the northern coasts of the sea in the 5th century bce, while the first navigational guides, called peripli (singular: periplus), were written by Greeks in the 4th century bce. The shores of the Black Sea were settled by a number of peoples, including Slavs, Turks, and Genoese; by the 15th century the Turks were in control of the entire shoreline.
Russian sailors began hydrographic explorations of the Sea of Azov and the Black Sea in the 18th century, and these investigations were mostly complete by the end of the 19th century. Regular meteorological observations were initiated in the first quarter of the 19th century, and a biological station at Sevastopol (on the Crimean Peninsula) was founded in 1871. In 1881–82 the Russian naval commander and oceanographer Stepan Osipovich Makarov investigated in detail the two-layer exchange of water through the Bosporus.
The first multidisciplinary expedition (1890–91) conducted pioneering hydrologic observations in the deep layers of the sea, in the process discovering the presence of hydrogen sulfide in those layers. The oceanographic investigations of the Black Sea were largely completed during expeditions organized in the mid-1920s. A variety of complex investigations of the sea were conducted by the countries of the Black Sea basin and other regions in the second half of the 20th century. More recently, underwater archaeological surveys combining acoustic mapping with physical sampling of marine mollusks and extinct freshwater mollusks have suggested that the inundation of the Black Sea followed the collapse of a natural dam between it and the Mediterranean.
Vladimir Petrovich Goncharov Luch Mikhaylovich Fomin Aleksey Nilovich Kosarev