Homer (and I don't mean Homer Simpson) thought the Aegean was 'wine dark'. What colour is your wine, just out of interest?
There is a strong bias toward red in this household, and within that range it varies. It is probably generally darker than the wine Homer drank, though I am not sure whether in 1000 BCE - or whenever he lived; I don't think anybody's really sure - the Greeks practiced watering their wine. They did so during the classical period, when to drink your wine "neat" was apparently considered vulgar. Seems to me I got this from Thucydides. It has been something like 50 years since I studied it.
Homer also thought (at least as translated by Richard Lattimore) that dawn has rosy fingers.
The question that follows this one would be: "What color is the ocean?"
While water has a very slight blue-green color (you'd need a lot of it to really notice it) the main influence on the color of the ocean is the sky, which is reflected by the surface. So, one might ask, further, why is it always darker than the sky? Light from the sky is not polarized, but what's reflected by the surface is. So, the ocean surface is a little less than 1/2 as bright (like your polarizer's filter factor) as the sky.
Variations occur that may make the surface appear to be markedly different from the reflected sky above it. One reason (I suspect it is the main influence) is that the surface of the ocean is not just like the mirror in your bathroom. It has ever-changing facets, each of which (millions, billions) is reflecting a different location in the sky. To complicate matters further, each of these facets reflects light that is polarized in it's own peculiar plane, so the polarization is, in the aggregate, an extremely complex dance. It could appear that there is a near complete compliment of planes, but that isn't at all the same as the unpolarized light coming directly from the sky.
Isn't stuff like this fun? Thanks sbuczkowski for the very informative contribution!
Larry Bullis
Anacortes, WA: where there's LOTS of water reflecting lots of sky,
especially covered with clouds much of the time, but when it's sunny
there's an amazing amount of really gorgeous blue.