Landing Point · US United States
| Cable | Status |
|---|---|
| Gulf of Mexico Fiber Optic Network | Active |
RTT measurements to this landing point from 2026-07-12 through 2026-07-18 - live ICMP round-trip time via our monitoring probes. Recomputed daily. ✓ No anomalies detected in the monitored period.
| Probe | Location | Samples | Avg |
|---|---|---|---|
| #6410 own probe | Sao Paulo BR | 3 | 128.4 ms |
| #6427 own probe | Sydney AU | 3 | 150.8 ms |
| #6487 own probe | Singapore SG | 3 | 204.4 ms |
| #1014473 own probe | Minsk BY | 3 | 118.8 ms |
| #1015563 own probe | Saint Petersburg RU | 3 | 112.0 ms |
| #1015523 own probe | Moscow RU | 2 | 121.9 ms |
| #29049 | control probe | 1 | 30.4 ms |
| #50284 | control probe | 1 | 49.3 ms |
| #1003950 | control probe | 1 | 52.7 ms |
Pascagoula is a coastal city in the state of Mississippi, United States, situated along the Gulf of Mexico. As a submarine cable landing point, it hosts one submarine cable, the Gulf of Mexico Fiber Optic Network, which connects it to the broader domestic telecommunications infrastructure of the United States. The Gulf Coast positioning of Pascagoula places it within the regional submarine cable geography of the Gulf of Mexico basin.
The single cable landing at Pascagoula operates within a domestic corridor, linking points within the United States across the Gulf of Mexico. With 75 submarine cables landing across 119 landing points throughout the United States, Pascagoula represents a focused, single-cable terminus rather than a multi-cable hub, yet it participates in the national submarine cable network that underpins connectivity across the country's diverse coastal regions.
Gulf of Mexico Fiber Optic Network is a submarine cable with a length of 1,200 km, ready for service in 2008, and currently listed at draft status. The cable connects landing points within the United States, routing across the Gulf of Mexico to link domestic endpoints. At 1,200 km, it is notably shorter than the United States average cable length of 5,553 km, reflecting its role as a regionally scoped, intra-national connection rather than a long-distance intercontinental link.
Within the United States, Pascagoula ranks in the top 72% of 119 landing points by cable count, hosting one cable compared to more heavily served landing points such as Boca Raton, FL, and San Juan, PR, which each host six cables, or Kapolei, HI, which hosts five. Gulf Coast submarine cable landing points like Pascagoula serve a distinct geographic segment of the national network, complementing the denser cable concentrations found in Florida, Puerto Rico, Hawaii, and California.
Pascagoula functions as a single-cable terminus within the United States domestic submarine cable network. The Gulf of Mexico Fiber Optic Network connects it to other American landing points across the Gulf, enabling intra-national submarine connectivity along a coastal corridor that is less densely served by submarine infrastructure compared to the Atlantic and Pacific-facing coastlines of the country.
As a landing point with one cable in a national network that spans 119 such points, Pascagoula represents the specificity of domestic Gulf of Mexico submarine routing. Its presence in the broader United States submarine cable graph reflects the geographic diversity of landing points that together form the country's coastal connectivity framework.
What next: Pascagoula, MS, United States in the global directory of cable landing points; see surrounding routes on the interactive submarine cable map or follow live network monitoring.
View actual submarine cable routing from Pascagoula, MS, United States - with backbone nodes, distance calculations, and latency estimates
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