From the Black Sea through the Bosporus into the Sea of Mamara, past the Dardanelles into the Agean Sea and the Mediterranean
gulf of Oman
The Dardanelles is the strait connecting the Aegean Sea and the Sea of Mamara.
Through the Bosporus Straits and the Sea of Mamara
Sea of Mamara
Most probably a Yelkouan Shearwater. Also known as a Mediterranean Shearwater
Suez canal (Not the Suez Canal) that's the one that connects to the Red Sea The Mediterranean connects to the Black Sea via the Turkish Straights Approximately 800 sea miles from Mediterranean round Greece by Athens into the Sea of Mamara. On past Istanbul and through the Turkish Straits past Besiktas and finally into the Black Sea. Without the Turkish Straits it wouldn't be possible to enter the Black Sea or to leave it.
As you might expect - it took place at Gallipolli - which is a peninsula in Turkish Thrace. To the west of Gallipolli is the Agean Sea. To the east is the Sea of Mamara (with the Dardannelles running between the two along the southwest coast of the Gallipolli peninsula. Pretty much the entire battle was confined to the southwestern tip of the peninsula and a some of the northwestern beach contiguous to it.
During the years that Sri Ramana Maharshi stayed at Virupaksha Cave (1899 - 1916), he would go down to Mango Tree Cave (Mamara Guhai) during the summer months, when no water was available at Virupaksha. Ramanujacharya and Rangacharya modified Mango Tree Cave and made it habitable for Ramana. Mango Tree Cave can be found by walking up to Virupaksha Cave, taking the main route straight up the hill.
The Mediterranean Sea The Black Sea The Aegean Sea The Sea of Marmara
The waterways in and out of the Mediterranean are the Straits of Gibraltar in the west. In the south-east the Nile River enters, and the Suez Canal gives passage to the Red Sea. In the east the Bosphorus is the passage to the Black Sea.