6533b858fe1ef96bd12b6588

RESEARCH PRODUCT

Geovisualizing the sail-to-steam transition through vessel movement data

Séléna PetitClaire LagesseFrançoise BahokenBruno MarnotCésar DucruetEric MermetMattia Bunel

subject

Economic efficiencyVesselOperations researchTechnological transitions[SHS.GEO] Humanities and Social Sciences/Geography0211 other engineering and technologiesGraph analysis02 engineering and technologyPARIS teamSpace (commercial competition)[ SHS.GEO ] Humanities and Social Sciences/GeographyVisualisation0502 economics and businessShipping flowsComputingMilieux_MISCELLANEOUS050210 logistics & transportationMovement (music)Transition (fiction)05 social sciencesCOUV021107 urban & regional planning[SHS.GEO]Humanities and Social Sciences/GeographyPort (computer networking)Geographic distribution[SHS.HIST] Humanities and Social Sciences/HistoryBusiness[SHS.HIST]Humanities and Social Sciences/HistoryMarine engineering

description

International audience; Technological transitions in the maritime and port industries go along with increased transport and economic efficiency, resulting in faster movements and longer travelled distances. Yet, such transformations may also enhance disparities between winners and loosers, should they be ports or shipping companies. This research focuses on the particular case of the transition from sail to steam over the period 1890-1925, which witnesses the rapid replacement of sailing vessels, the latter concentrating 65% of the world fleet in 1890 but only 3.5% in 1925. It applies a variety of measures to compare how these two layers overlap in the network (at links and ports) and what is their respective architecture in terms of cargo concentration, geographic distribution, and topological structure. Main results show very distinct patterns and evolutions affecting each fleet and its movements across the globe. Steam shipping, more recent and booming, appears to be more concentrated and hierarchically organized than sail shipping, while the two layers are less and less overlapped in space as the second replaces the first.

https://hal.science/hal-01623631v2