Cape Agulhas is a cape in the South African province of Western Cape and Africa’s southernmost point. The cape is located about 175 kilometers southeast of Cape Town and marks the beginning point of a line dividing the Indian and Atlantic Oceans. The cape’s name translates to “Cabo das Agulhas,” a Portuguese word for “Cape of Needles.” The Portuguese navigators named the cape “Agulhas” because the compass needle always pointed to the true north and coincided with the magnetic north. The “needles” may also refer to the reefs and rocks that are a nightmare to sailors. The cape is notorious for high waves and winter storms that have wrecked many ships, including Meisho Maru (one of the attractions in the Agulhas National Park).
Geography

A beautiful view of Cape Agulhas in South Africa. The cape is bordered to the west by the Quoin Point, Africa’s second most southern tip, while Cape Infante is further east of Agulhas. The tip of Africa is denoted by the white and red Cape Agulhas Lighthouse, established in 1849. The lighthouse was also constructed to reduce the number of international ships succumbing to the dangerous seas.
The town of Cape L'Agulhas - the southernmost point of Africa, where the currents of Indian and Atlantic Oceans meet, Overberg Region, South Africa. The Agulhas Bank, one of the richest fishing grounds in the Southern Hemisphere, has an average depth of 60 meters for about 250 km but plunges 1800 meters deep into the abyssal plain. The cold Atlantic Ocean and the warm Indian Ocean meet in the Bank region, with the convergence of the two oceans leading to treacherous sea conditions. The warm Agulhas Current flows southwards along Africa’s east coast then turns back into the Indian Ocean. While returning, the warm current pinches off part of the Agulhas rings (ocean eddies) drifting into the neighboring ocean and transports large amounts of salt and heat into the Atlantic.
Rock formations with tidal rock pool at the coast of Cape Agulhas in Cape Agulhas National Park, South Africa. The Cape of Agulhas’ coastline is gradually curving and comprises sand and rocky beaches. The rocks forming the cape are part of the Table Mountain Group, also known as Table Mountain Sandstone. The rocks are closely related to those on the cliffs of the Cape of Good Hope, Cape Point, and the Table Mountains.
Climate

Shipping Hazards
