Landing Point · CA Canada
| Cable | Status |
|---|---|
| AmeriCan-1 | Active |
Cordova Bay, BC, Canada is a submarine cable landing point in Canada (coordinates 48.5204°, -123.3672°). It serves 1 submarine cable system, making it a single-cable landing in Canada's international connectivity infrastructure.
Cordova Bay is a bay in the Alexander Archipelago of southeast Alaska. It opens onto Dixon Entrance to the south, between Cape Muzon on Dall Island and Point Marsh. The name Puerto Cordova y Cordova was given by the Spanish explorer Lieutenant Don Jacinto Caamaño in 1792, in honor of Admiral Luis de Córdova y Córdova. The name was published by George Vancouver in 1798. Wikipedia
| Cable | RFS | Length | Owners |
|---|---|---|---|
| AmeriCan-1 | 1999 | 140 km | Bell Canada, Ledcor Industries Inc., Rogers Communications, … |
From Cordova Bay, BC, Canada, international traffic can reach 2 countries through 1 cable system. Destinations include Canada, United States. This location depends on a single cable system — a characteristic that makes it strategically sensitive to physical disruptions.
No monitoring incidents were recorded on cables serving Cordova Bay, BC, Canada in the past 90 days — all connected systems remained within normal latency thresholds. Our monitoring network continuously samples latency from external probes to targets reachable via these cables.
View actual submarine cable routing from Cordova Bay, BC, Canada — with backbone nodes, distance calculations, and latency estimates
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