Why was this Sea in North America on Old Maps?

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  • čas přidán 25. 08. 2024

Komentáře • 1,4K

  • @GeographyGeek
    @GeographyGeek  Před rokem +88

    Thank you RareMaps.com for supporting another video! Their maps and descriptions are a huge part of the research and visuals that go in these videos. You can purchase your own map with the Sea of the West from their website. - RareMaps.com/

    • @Thingsyourollup
      @Thingsyourollup Před rokem +3

      Bless your heart for thinking i'd have $5000 just laying around to buy old maps with.

    • @GeographyGeek
      @GeographyGeek  Před rokem +4

      @@Thingsyourollup some are less than $200

    • @lourias
      @lourias Před rokem +4

      Are you SURE that that sea never existed? There is now belief that there was a huge lake out in that area. From Missoula, Montana to the coast. It was a remnant of the last Ice Age. To my understanding, they do not know when the dam broke, but the lake did exixt.

    • @GeographyGeek
      @GeographyGeek  Před rokem +5

      @@lourias I believe that multiple stories got combined into one and this depiction is how the De L’Isle family interpreted them. Could have been Great Salt Lake, Puget Sound, the Pacific Ocean, maybe some other bodies of water all combined into one. Plus there was a bit of wishful thinking involved. Every inland sea I’ve covered involved the map maker interpreting what they heard as exactly what they wanted to hear.
      Edit: spelling

    • @kimberlyperrotis8962
      @kimberlyperrotis8962 Před rokem +1

      @@GeographyGeek My apologies, I wrote a strikingly similar comment before I saw yours. Great minds think alike?🙂

  • @Peanutbetter27
    @Peanutbetter27 Před rokem +1622

    It sounds like a bunch of Europeans heard some stories about the Puget Sound, the Great Salt Lake, and few rivers and started making up oceans again.

    • @GeographyGeek
      @GeographyGeek  Před rokem +242

      I feel the same. A lot of stories merged into one with a bit of wishful thinking sprinkled in.

    • @eddiejc1
      @eddiejc1 Před rokem +80

      Because the French wanted to believe there was a great inland sea, that's how what they heard. It's possible that the natives were referring to the Great Lakes which were further east, and the French thought they were talking about something in the west.

    • @kermitwilson
      @kermitwilson Před rokem +95

      North Central California was a massive seasonal lake back then as well. It’s since been eliminated and the water diverted by a massive system dams and canals. “Cadillac Desert” is a phenomenal history of water management in the western USA and covers this

    • @tyronos
      @tyronos Před rokem +47

      Number one, the puget sound doesn't stink, number two, the now dried up Tulare lake is better positioned to be the sea of the west. Also it had no outlet, so i imagine it smelled a bit like the Salton sea... not good

    • @tyronos
      @tyronos Před rokem +14

      Also the name you're looking for is the Salish sea, and by no means is it an "inland" sea, nor can it be reached by river.

  • @GeographyGeek
    @GeographyGeek  Před rokem +105

    I left my own thoughts out of this video so I’ll put them here. The Sea of the West in the form you see on the maps definitely didn’t exist. The topography and geological history of the region just don’t support it. With that being said I think there is a small bit of truth to it. Just as the Sea of Verrazano turned out to be a sighting of Pamlico Sound, the Appalachian Salt Lake may have been native references to the Great Lakes, the Sea of the West may have been combined stories of the Great Salt Lake, the Pacific Ocean, Puget Sound, and maybe other bodies of water but the final ingredient was wishful thinking by Europeans just like the other seas. In retrospect, I’m not sure why I left that part out of the video when I included it in the others.
    Edit: I added some more information and my thoughts on the Sea of the West in another video on my personal channel - czcams.com/video/8ssJRX4jjUM/video.html

    • @Kahless_the_Unforgettable
      @Kahless_the_Unforgettable Před rokem +4

      This is what I was looking for. I was thinking it could be the Great Salt Lake. But I'm not sure about the Great Lakes. The Europeans would have known about the Great Lakes. I think they would have attempted to rule them out when speaking with the natives.
      I'm not sure that would have been successful. Considering how badly they wanted to believe in The Sea of the West. But I'm fairly sure they would have tried to make sure they weren't talking about those lakes. Maybe by mentioning salt?

    • @GeographyGeek
      @GeographyGeek  Před rokem +2

      @@Kahless_the_Unforgettable The Great Lakes reference was for the Appalachian Salt Lake not the Sea of the West.
      czcams.com/video/J-DaWQV3pxw/video.html

    • @tauron1
      @tauron1 Před rokem

      Yes, it would make perfect sense that the "sea" the natives were referencing was the Great Salt Lake. Map making was not all that accurate back then.

    • @GeographyGeek
      @GeographyGeek  Před rokem

      @@tauron1 maps were pretty accurate then when it came to parts actually surveyed but the Sea of the West was theoretical which viewers at the time would have known.

    • @tauron1
      @tauron1 Před rokem

      @@GeographyGeek most of the maps were somewhat accurate, I guess for that time they would be considered very accurate, however when it came to this hypothetical sea, most of the information was gleaned from the Native population who mentioned a sea to the west. Now unless you are considering that they were speaking about the Pacific Ocean, then it would stand to reason they in reality meant the Great Salt Lake as that is the only sizable body of water west of the Mississippi. Now as for the placement of said "Sea" on the map, location, size and orientation of land masses and bodies of water on ancient maps were rarely accurate. Interesting topic for sure, I enjoy looking at ancient maps, as I get a real chuckle and at times amazement on what peoples from long ago thought. btw, the Great Salt Lake would also be far larger that back then, than it ever was in the early 19th century when people started to settle in the area.

  • @theresasandul394
    @theresasandul394 Před rokem +928

    I live further north of the supposed lake. Geologically this area was part of a vast inland sea in prehistoric times. I wonder if the First Nations oral traditions were referencing remains of that body of water when they migrated through northwestern North America?

    • @neiro314
      @neiro314 Před rokem +100

      They called it a "sinking sea"! One that would raise and lower to allow crossing actually makes a lot of sense here. However, other natives specifically said it's only a 8 or 15-day journey, and that they go there to trade with the bald peoples. Sort of not helping this hypothesis

    • @RomaInvicta202
      @RomaInvicta202 Před rokem +89

      The sea you're talking about existed in N America 100 mil years ago, so looooong before ANY humans existed

    • @neiro314
      @neiro314 Před rokem +20

      @@RomaInvicta202 100 million years ago i bet north america wouldnt be recognizable due to plate tectonics so i bet lots of things would be different

    • @RomaInvicta202
      @RomaInvicta202 Před rokem +28

      @@neiro314 I suggest you go and read about it, then you won't have "to bet" - science is not gambling

    • @neiro314
      @neiro314 Před rokem +71

      @@RomaInvicta202 weird angle to take but okay

  • @roberticvs
    @roberticvs Před rokem +745

    I wonder if we could start a new society, like the Flat Earth Society; a "Sea of the West Society". We will uphold the existence of this body of water, denounce anyone who says otherwise, propose a vast conspiracy to conceal it from modern maps, and hold regular appreciation meetings dedicated to restoring it to modern maps! No one from British Columbia will be allowed in the club, of course.

    • @GeographyGeek
      @GeographyGeek  Před rokem +98

      I’m down

    • @angelamonk716
      @angelamonk716 Před rokem

      Flat Earth Society is a controlled opposition

    • @Strong_UP_Calvins_zombie
      @Strong_UP_Calvins_zombie Před rokem +53

      I'm in, down with the government conspiracy,and the province of British Columbia! You can't keep the Sea of the west from the world any longer!!

    • @truenorthstrongfree
      @truenorthstrongfree Před rokem +34

      Am from Banff, can confirm there is a large inland sea between the Canadian Rockies and Vancouver.

    • @angelamonk716
      @angelamonk716 Před rokem +6

      @@truenorthstrongfree salt lake is a Sea

  • @ConradDunkerson
    @ConradDunkerson Před rokem +268

    Others have noted various aspects of this, but I think a strong case could be argued for the native accounts to have been referring to Lake Bonneville... which survives today as the much smaller Great Salt Lake of Utah. The description of a stinking salt sea fits like nothing else in the region, and the area aligns fairly well with Bonneville's historic location. It seems reasonable that people living far away would continue to tell stories of the size of the lake at its height rather than its (then) modern size.

    • @tigerstallion
      @tigerstallion Před rokem +23

      its pretty huge, and was even bigger a couple centuries ago. Not sure the natives ever described it to be as big as some of those maps have it, probably because they conflated it with SF Bay or pugeot sound.
      Like Conrad said, I think the stinking description is the dead give away

    • @joshkrause2977
      @joshkrause2977 Před rokem +9

      1000 years ago it was 20,000 miles in size.

    • @eastsidetactown
      @eastsidetactown Před rokem +9

      Im almost certain they conflated the great salt lake and the puget sound as one big body of water because they had no concept of the scale of either, having never seen them

    • @StratospheralNurse
      @StratospheralNurse Před rokem +1

      Highly plausible in my opinion, not that it’s worth much lol

    • @markburke1396
      @markburke1396 Před rokem +4

      if you look at the old map, you can see that none of the currently existing lakes are actually mentioned. I can only imagine that perhaps they were alot more connected back then and considered 1 large lake, instead of several lakes.

  • @j-rocgood7680
    @j-rocgood7680 Před rokem +213

    Sounds like this western sea could be an exaggeration of Puget Sound, the Strait of Juan De Fuca, and the Strait of Georgia, known collectively as the Salish Sea. So in a way this inland western sea does exist it’s just they over estimated it’s size quite preposterously. The Salish Sea does seem quite large while standing on its shores.

    • @jicalzad
      @jicalzad Před rokem +8

      seems plausible to me

    • @MaxTSanches
      @MaxTSanches Před rokem +13

      Looks like the river to the south that goes to the sea would be the Columbia.

    • @Francois424
      @Francois424 Před rokem

      Or there was the all mother of god winter/snow/rain in those years which could've swelled the water to new heights. But a couple day's ride in a small boat ? even with this scenario it's not really probable. who knows !

    • @SavageGreywolf
      @SavageGreywolf Před rokem +11

      The description of the sea from the Sioux in New Mexico as a 'great lake' with 'stinking water' almost certainly refers to the Great Salt Lake. The explorers heard stories from all over Canada and the Western US about notable nearby bodies of water that the locals referred to as 'large' and 'to the West' and instead of realizing that these could be different bodies of water assumed it was a vast inland gulf that stretched from Colorado to the Northwest Territories, which, somehow, they had simply never found.

    • @lazynow1
      @lazynow1 Před rokem +1

      Its half a video, lazy.

  • @Startingfresh87
    @Startingfresh87 Před rokem +46

    “Lake Bonneville was the largest Late Pleistocene paleolake in the Great Basin of western North America. It was a pluvial lake that formed in response to an increase in precipitation and a decrease in evaporation as a result of cooler temperatures. The lake covered much of what is now western Utah and at its highest level extended into present-day Idaho and Nevada. Many other hydrographically closed basins in the Great Basin contained expanded lakes during the Late Pleistocene, including Lake Lahontan in northwestern Nevada”- Wikipedia

    • @josiahhall987
      @josiahhall987 Před rokem +8

      No one else is mentioning that. It is most likely that it was lake Bonneville, combined with a few other bodies of water, perhaps due to lack of exploration they didn't map it correctly

    • @allenjohnson4462
      @allenjohnson4462 Před rokem +6

      The great salt lake is the reminants of lake Bonneville you can see where the shoreline used to be about half way up the 10 to 12 k ft high mountains both east and west of SLC. To the west it looks like it was more beach like how the ocean shoreline is.

    • @SebHaarfagre
      @SebHaarfagre Před rokem +2

      _"Lake Bonneville was the largest Late Pleistocene paleolake in the Great Basin of western North America. It was a pluvial lake that formed in response to an increase in precipitation and a decrease in evaporation as a result of cooler temperatures. The lake covered much of what is now western Utah and at its highest level extended into present-day Idaho and Nevada."_
      You could at least _try_ to not straight up copy paste off of Wikipedia without citing source lol. Jesus...
      Disregarding this blatant attempt at sounding smart, you're right, and Josia Hall is right, except this lake existed 11 000 years ago and what is more likely is that they were referring to a collection of lakes which were already MASSIVE and _extremely_ hard to map properly without a *LOT* of work. There may also be circumstances we don't know about, like floods or even a tsunami.
      The rivers does run all the way to the coast and the "fjord" (inlet) does exist. Also a salt lake doesn't magically appear without being connected to the sea at one point.

    • @anatomicallymodernhuman5175
      @anatomicallymodernhuman5175 Před rokem +1

      @@SebHaarfagre , close - Bonneville was at its height in the very early Holocene. And it continued to exist for thousands of years, dwindling slowly. In a sense, it still exists as the Great Salt Lake. It’s not surprising that many Native American tribes remembered it via oral tradition, and assumed it must still be there.

    • @SCHMALLZZZ
      @SCHMALLZZZ Před rokem

      ​@SebSk it has quotations and says wikipedia at the end.

  • @gypseysurprise
    @gypseysurprise Před rokem +56

    There are rumored to be quite a few Spanish explorations in the two hundred years between Juan de Fuca in 1592 and Juan Perez in 1774 that were kept secret by the Spanish crown. Its no surprise that Straight of Juan de Fuca and the Columbia River mouth are charted accurately before their official discovery. I've sailed the Straight of Juan de Fuca and it feels enormous, two distant mountainous landmasses on either side makes it seem like youre entering a gate, and once you get to about present day Victoria BC, there are opportunities for sailing in any direction. If you went no further and the weather was like it usually is around here, you might be mistaken you are in an endless archipelago. I'm guessing the French reinforced their idea of an inland sea with the Spanish accounts of the entrances they saw along the coast.

    • @DugrozReports
      @DugrozReports Před 9 měsíci

      This seems like the most likely explanation.

  • @Afterburner
    @Afterburner Před rokem +499

    You do realize there was once a giant lake called "Lake Missoula" that existed some 13,000 years ago that was held back by an ice-dam which repeatedly broke and reformed as the ice age receded. It existed as a combined ice sheet and southern lake that nearly precisely fits in the area of the lake you show in this video. Lake Missoula occupied a great deal of area in Montana, rivaling or exceeding the Great Lakes further east in terms of size and water volume. Much of Oregon and Washington were scoured by water released from this dam break in disasters with water up to 600 feet high, traces of which are still easy to see on the landscape. Undoubtedly, Native Americans likely witnessed these events and recorded it in their legends. This occurred some 20 to 25 times with these floods happening over the course of several centuries. These events are likely the source of the legends with the various native American tribes, all of which likely heard about the multiple disasters in the Pacific Northwest during that era. You should do another video to share the maps that show the lake as it was and talk about the nature of the disasters that befell Oregon and Washington State because of that lake's violent water releases.

    • @1ACL
      @1ACL Před rokem +80

      Yes. The people remembered and passed down the history. Then I suppose more modern people who had never been there or seen it (being so far in the past) just retold the history to the Europeans as current fact. Oral history has been proven to be more enduring and acurrate than written history.

    • @Afterburner
      @Afterburner Před rokem +11

      @@1ACL Absolutely correct - Thanks for the nice comment!

    • @litigioussociety4249
      @litigioussociety4249 Před rokem +35

      Those dates are very flexible. When it comes to prehistoric America anything from 3,000 years ago to 10,000 years ago is plausible for much native stuff. That would allow for the lake to still be there within the time that the ancestors of the current native tribes might have come. They may also have heard it from the Clovis people that came earlier.

    • @foodog3026
      @foodog3026 Před rokem +8

      Thanks for saving me 8+ mins of my life

    • @butre.
      @butre. Před rokem +21

      I think it's just the salish. he mentions between 47 and 48 latitude, west coast, big bit of water, all signs point to the salish sea. they were just confused about the scale of it

  • @peterdore2572
    @peterdore2572 Před rokem +45

    The Map at 5:35 describes Juan de Fuca's Corridor. According to this map, at least, the Western Bay seems to be an Optimistic Projection of Puget Sound and Vancouver Bay. Probably also confounded with the Great Salk Lake and the San Francisco Bay through MisTranslation. Wishful thinking that Juan de Fuca, San Francisco Bay and Great Salt Lake were all the same thing

    • @HeatherSpoonheim
      @HeatherSpoonheim Před rokem +6

      I've lived on Vancouver Island - these maps do seem like a distorted retelling of the straight and bay.

    • @eddiejc1
      @eddiejc1 Před rokem

      If Juan de Fuca actually discovered San Francisco Bay, then it probably wasn't fear of attacks by the natives that drove him off, but rather the price of housing....

    • @josiahhall987
      @josiahhall987 Před rokem +1

      Lake Bonneville was a thing too. Covered the majority of Utah and went into idaho

  • @kimberlyperrotis8962
    @kimberlyperrotis8962 Před rokem +201

    Fascinating, thank you. It’s possible that the European explorers conflated the natives’ accounts of two different seas, the Great Salt Lake and the Strait of Juan de Fuca. “Eight days ride” from the Southwestern US, and “stinking water” sounds much more like the Great Salt Lake to me. I believe that the natives were perfectly accurate, and it’s the Europeans who made the goof, considering the language barrier. There’s also an element if wishful thinking present, as in the famous, non-existent, Northwest Passage.

    • @adriancarter2863
      @adriancarter2863 Před rokem +6

      Following recent climate change and global warming, the high Artic has been afforded the most, resulting in merchant shipping now being able to traverse from the Pacific to the Atlantic Ocean via the Bearing Strait the Artic Ocean and the Labrador Sea during the summer months. ie: The Northwest Passage.
      Similarly, merchant shipping can now traverse between Archangel and Vladivostok across northern Russia/Siberia during the summer months. Ex-Soviet era nuclear powered Ice Breakers maintain this Artic sea route all summer.

    • @SebHaarfagre
      @SebHaarfagre Před rokem +10

      What on Earth are you talking about? The Northwest Passage is a very real and tangible thing.

    • @Docteroftime
      @Docteroftime Před rokem

      @@SebHaarfagre calm ya tits, they are referring in the northwest “inland” passage. Not the one that goes the Atlantic and pacific through the Arctic. Don’t be getting angry on CZcams.

    • @Zerububble
      @Zerububble Před rokem +6

      Another possibility - the area around Sacramento CA ("Central valley"?) has had a lake in it at times.

    • @rudra62
      @rudra62 Před rokem

      @@adriancarter2863 Indeed! There is a Northwest Passage. They were just looking at it too early, before we got the current level of climate change. It'll be open longer as the earth warms.
      Oh, nevermind that the global warming will cause far more problems than it will solve!

  • @castletown999
    @castletown999 Před rokem +37

    I have often looked at maps of the San Francisco bay and wondered if the entire central valley was once part of the bay. Even now it is barely above sea-level, so at one time it may have been lower and filled with a vast shallow lake. On some of the maps you can almost see where the Golden Gate Bridge would span its mouth. In addition the central valley has very rich soil that could have once been a seabed. Maybe tectonic action uplifted it and drained it.

    • @777Poker
      @777Poker Před rokem

      It’s not that serious bro bodies of water just simply dry up like what are you people not understanding?

    • @seaneendelong8065
      @seaneendelong8065 Před rokem +4

      You are correct- that exact water was a seasonal NORM from north of Sacramento to Bakersfield and much of the current SF Bay Delta borders are landfill or levee reclaiming rather than the much wider waters that as recently as the 1920s had year round boat passage to Tulare Lake at the south end of the Valley- it being visible from space it was so huge before it was drained and the future winter runoff channeled to the LA basin and arid upper farming zones.

    • @perfectallycromulent
      @perfectallycromulent Před rokem +10

      that valley has been a sea, a lake, a giant swamp, and sorta dry land at various times throughout history, you can look this up, there's plenty of research, stanford is right there. thoughout the history of the earth, not human history that is.

    • @AM-ed1cg
      @AM-ed1cg Před rokem +1

      Lake Tulare came back

    • @daemongamingtv
      @daemongamingtv Před rokem +3

      It was indeed a lake, known as Lake Corcoran. It filled much of the Central Valley basin, and eventually drained into the San Francisco bay as you described. It also likely drained to the south, as well. Corcoran existed about 700kya (700,000 years ago) and left behind many large lakes in California, such as the (in)famous Tulare Lake.

  • @aesoundforge
    @aesoundforge Před rokem +26

    I watched an episode of Nova years ago that was about a geologist , from the 1880's, who thought all the canyons were carved out by large lakes emptying out catastrophically over the land. After watching this im wondering if those events were more recent than imagined.

    • @karenv2112
      @karenv2112 Před rokem +1

      Genesis is history, not fairy tale

    • @justinhunt1714
      @justinhunt1714 Před rokem +2

      Look into geologist Randy Carlson . He's done a lot of study of the American northwest and how so much of it was carved out and eroded from massive flows of water

    • @ws775
      @ws775 Před rokem +1

      Massive natural dams broke hundreds of years after the Genesis flood when the ice age ended. This is how Grand Canyon was formed.

  • @GeographyGeek
    @GeographyGeek  Před rokem +1

    I added some more information and my thoughts on the Sea of the West in another video - czcams.com/video/8ssJRX4jjUM/video.html

  • @Chu6um
    @Chu6um Před rokem +13

    Fascinating that there are old maps depicting things that either never existed, or shouldn't have even been possible to know when first created. I've been captivated by such information since learning that there were cultures that knew the world was round well before the decision was made that it was flat, yet maps from earlier times showed otherwise. There was a great deal of history lost over time, and rediscovering such knowledge is just amazing. In this case, I'd imagine there was some 'word of mouth' knowledge passed down through generations, within the indigenous tribes of North America. It was likely the Puget Sound that was spoken of, and mistaken as what was included in such maps of the time. That doesn't discourage learning about other such depictions of the 'lost known world', at least for me. I still think many of those old oral history items hold a great deal more about the past then given credit for.

    • @wolfsquared
      @wolfsquared Před rokem +1

      You can still see lake Bonneville shore line today in Utah

  • @ekszentrik
    @ekszentrik Před rokem +11

    Videos like this are EXACTLY why I watch history CZcams. Making full use of the medium, and seeming very well researched.

  • @julianaguirre1323
    @julianaguirre1323 Před rokem +7

    The qu in Vasquez makes a sk sound. It's like Vaskez. Great video!

  • @lovestein92
    @lovestein92 Před rokem +11

    some of the depictions of the map show a sea in the shape of California’s Central Valley. It makes me wonder if this unknown Lake is Tulare Lake (or it was part of it), which was the largest freshwater lake west of the Mississippi till it dried up in the late 1800s. I live just miles away from where Tulare Lake once was and found this video very interesting.

    • @syrionsyronimus2686
      @syrionsyronimus2686 Před rokem

      czcams.com/video/VxCbjEoJxj0/video.html seems to agree with you, macadelic

  • @donjulio420
    @donjulio420 Před rokem +5

    There once was a massive lake in California named Lake Tulare. It’s water was diverted for irrigation purposes and is now gone.

  • @mrnobody3161
    @mrnobody3161 Před rokem +9

    The Hudson Bay Company in Canada with Trading Posts and Fur Trappers chasing beaver pelts, were some of the earliest explorers of
    N America, but they went west much further north in Canada.

  • @jasonriley9677
    @jasonriley9677 Před rokem +5

    Lake Tulare in the central valley of California was recorded to be 26 miles wide and over 200 miles long in the 1800s. Today it's a small lake in Tulare, it was by reduced irrigation done at the turn of the century.

    • @777Poker
      @777Poker Před rokem +1

      Exactly big bodies of water, sometimes simply just dry up. And sometimes floods happen and make new bodies of water. Has nothing to do with tectonic plates, or if people were making of regions or whatever.

    • @joesmoe282000
      @joesmoe282000 Před rokem +1

      Yep and more than likely connected to San Francisco Bay

    • @jasonriley9677
      @jasonriley9677 Před rokem

      @@777Poker True and California has lots of seismic activity.

    • @jasonriley9677
      @jasonriley9677 Před rokem

      @@joesmoe282000 scientists claim that there was a body of water much larger known by geologists as lake Concord and the remains of prehistoric manatees have been found as far south as Bakersfield.

  • @DuckOfRubber
    @DuckOfRubber Před rokem +1

    I love how in maps of that time period the east coast is impressively close to reality but the further west you go the crazier it gets.

  • @nickyalexa7744
    @nickyalexa7744 Před rokem +7

    Up here in Montana, we have a museum that has maps and claims the Pacific Ocean once came into Canada in the same area. It continued into Montana, connecting to the now Missouri River and taking up most of the eastern half of the state. It then connected to the Mississippi and went all the way down to the Gulf.

    • @brianmorger2174
      @brianmorger2174 Před rokem

      That's correct Nicky and I live near Great Falls and find sea shells, although small when I hike across what are now wheat fields .

  • @kellywellington7122
    @kellywellington7122 Před rokem +4

    So...No mention of San Francisco Bay, nor the Great Salt Lake. There once was a 'great inland sea', but it has largely disappeared, leaving a huge salt pan.

  • @jozz2248
    @jozz2248 Před rokem +5

    Salish Sea is pretty big if you go from the top of Vancouver Island down to Olympia, Wa

    • @Transilvanian90
      @Transilvanian90 Před rokem

      It's almost certainly the inspiration for this Western Sea.

  • @puffsniffy6425
    @puffsniffy6425 Před rokem +1

    cool that you worked your ad into the fabric of the video and used rare maps as a resource. i bet they appreciated it too lol

  • @creech444
    @creech444 Před rokem +11

    Could this have been the great California Inland Sea? All that was historically a big sea connected to the ocean around San Francisco. Not sure there was anything left but a few scattered lakes by that time, but wonder if it was in their ancestral lore. I keep hearing that with oceans rising, that its a real possibility that this inland ocean could return.

    • @seaneendelong8065
      @seaneendelong8065 Před rokem +1

      Our weatger cycle has returned rains that have all but recreated the smaller version of Tulare Lake this year- and snowmelt from the epic snowfalls over 4k feet hasn't even happened yet.
      Desperately reinforced levees are the only reason the entire south end of the CV isn't filled in a shallow lake today, particularly since the subsidence there is 30'40' lower than when it WAS a lake in the 1920s.
      The upper San Joaquin portion has big chunks of reclaimed delta just basically swamped most weeks for the last couple months, and the very wide northern river natural floodplains are waterlogged too.
      No need for any oceans to rise- if we didn't funnel so much fresh water out to LA and levee so much land it would still be possible to take a ship from SF to Chico north and Bakersfield south.

    • @roboparks
      @roboparks Před rokem +4

      Surprising this guy doesn't even Mention this in his Video shows you the lack of research . But the great California Inland Sea was a Fresh Water Sea . And only contained to the Sacramento Valley. What we call The 4 Great Rivers Sacramento, American, San Joaquin and Feather rivers would flood the Whole Valley From Red Bluff all the way to Baskers field. The Inland Sea and wetlands would still exist today but all 3 of those rivers are dammed up.

  • @WojciechP915
    @WojciechP915 Před rokem +24

    Basically, there was a conspiracy in the cartographer/seafarer community to keep up the kings' hopes for a northwest passage. This ensured continued funding for their jobs. If they were to flat out admit that a northwest passage wasn't feasible, they would be out of work!

    • @pinkiesue849
      @pinkiesue849 Před rokem +2

      the people could not believe how far north the Northwest Passage is, but I am sure there was a history of using it back in the warm times. How nice the weather must have been then.

    • @Maddog3060
      @Maddog3060 Před rokem +5

      And no way that could ever happen today in this day and age.
      _>

  • @hatuletoh
    @hatuletoh Před rokem +19

    As a resident of Salt Lake City, I knew exactly what the source of the native stories would be. Especially when the Sioux mentioned the "stinking waters." After 150 years of human dumping things into it, those waters stink even worse now.

    • @MFBloosh
      @MFBloosh Před rokem +4

      It’s also salty while most lakes are fresh water, which is why they thought it was a sea. Just a thought.

    • @mikewabrown1052
      @mikewabrown1052 Před rokem

      Yeah sounds right to me to. Never been to(nor smelled) the great salt lake though, but I like to think it may be stinky. God bless brother!

    • @MistyKathrine
      @MistyKathrine Před rokem

      @@mikewabrown1052 The stinking is always the worst in the summer when the lake levels drop and the algae gets exposed and rots.

  • @nancyacker5747
    @nancyacker5747 Před rokem +2

    Perhaps ancient memories of the Great Basin area?

  • @davidgrech4574
    @davidgrech4574 Před rokem +2

    Thank you so much for your expertise and I hope you have a wonderful week ahead 🌎

  • @whereswaldo5740
    @whereswaldo5740 Před rokem +9

    Y’all need to read In the Beginning by Walt Brown. In it he explains the glacial run off trapped by moraines created Grand Lake. It’s shore lines are marked by several levels and clearly visible covering four states. Even from space which Mr Brown had access to. When it breached it created the Grand Canyon hence its moniker. Which washed south southwest creating the Baja Peninsula and it’s bay which is only 40 to 60 feet deep. The warmth from being so far south with its flat sandy bottom make it a perfect spot for whales to birth their young.

    • @jack-1955
      @jack-1955 Před rokem +1

      Exactly, and that lake was water that was trapped after Noah's flood. When the dam broke, it washed out the grand Canyon in a matter of weeks.

  • @pwnmeisterage
    @pwnmeisterage Před rokem +5

    It rains a _lot_ where I live, near Vancouver. Sometimes as much as in the Amazon. There's a major river, a large network of lesser rivers, countless little creeks and tributaries of all types. Lots of runoff from glacier melt every year. Rain all spring, a month or three of sunshine, rain all autumn, and rain all winter (except when it's snowing). Rain almost every day, every morning, every evening, every night. Very wet.
    The puddles can get pretty deep. The ocean is right next door. But I don't think I live in a sea.

    • @daviswhite3591
      @daviswhite3591 Před rokem

      I live in Spokane Washington and I have been down The Columbia to Puget Sound. The Columbia is huge! I could easily see how the early explorers could think there was an inland sea north of it.

  • @loganlabbe9767
    @loganlabbe9767 Před rokem

    What a superb sponsor integration, it fits perfectly with the video and the video shows why such a thing is actually pretty cool. Bravo

    • @GeographyGeek
      @GeographyGeek  Před rokem +1

      I appreciate it. I really like having them as a sponsor because of that.

  • @brianmorger2174
    @brianmorger2174 Před rokem +5

    I live in Montana and I often find miniature sea 🐚 shells in the wind blown areas of the Great Plains. So there truly was an Inland sea here , albeit in prehistoric time.

    • @nickzalan4762
      @nickzalan4762 Před rokem +1

      That's the part that doesn't make sense to me, for the sea to have been over the great plans it would mean some major natural disaster would've had to occur for the sea to dry up in the time span of 1500 to 1750

    • @thwingerpodthvet4302
      @thwingerpodthvet4302 Před rokem

      @@nickzalan4762 did you not hear the part about “prehistoric times”? There hasn’t been a sea there for millions of years.

    • @mikebronicki8264
      @mikebronicki8264 Před rokem +1

      Lake Missoula existed as recently as 13,000 years ago. It covered much of Washington, Idaho and Montana. It was created by glaciers of the last ice age.

  • @LeoVerRosa
    @LeoVerRosa Před rokem +4

    I love your research and channel ❤

  • @daemongamingtv
    @daemongamingtv Před rokem +3

    Yes, the western United States used to have massive lakes, such as Lake Corcoran in California's Central Valley (that left behind Lake Tulare after drying up), Lake Bonneville in Utah (that left behind the Great Salt Lake after drying up), Lake Lahontan in Nevada (that left behind Pyramid Lake), and Lake Missoula in Montana.
    Corcoran drained out hundreds of thousands of years ago, but the last three did exist until about 13kya (13,000 years ago). As far as we currently know, that time frame does allow for migrating people into western North America (starting around 15kya-25kya) to have discovered them, but they would not have lasted long at all and certainly were mostly dried up by the 17th-19th centuries.

  • @soybased2995
    @soybased2995 Před rokem +1

    There are large salt deposits in Saskatchewan Canada, huge salt lakes that dried up long ago. The brine shrimp come to life when it rains, it's weird

  • @davideaston6944
    @davideaston6944 Před rokem +3

    Yes, seems clear now that this is the Juan deFuca Straight (finding that entrance, and seeing the Strait of Georgia the north, and Puget Sound, to the south. but no one ever going up or down into either; and below it, the navigable Columbia River... Cool.

  • @dennisenright7725
    @dennisenright7725 Před rokem +3

    I can understand how the idea might have started. The geogia straits and puget sound area, known to the natives in the area as the salish sea, are 650km from olympia to the north end of Vancouver island, and the main outlet is almost 48 degrees north

  • @robinanthony7946
    @robinanthony7946 Před rokem +3

    Just like the Peri Reis depiction of ice free Antarctica from the 1600's, it may be from stories of way back, when the scablands of Oregon and Washington were inundated by the melting glaciers of 11,600 years ago.

  • @tsya
    @tsya Před rokem +1

    i love this channel sm

  • @frankvehafric5062
    @frankvehafric5062 Před rokem +2

    What's always amazing to me in the study of history is learning the rate at which scholars and authorities just made stuff up without a shred of evidence and apparently believed themselves. One wonders how many current authorities and pundits work from the same playbook.

  • @robertfindley921
    @robertfindley921 Před rokem +6

    I wonder if cartographers intruduced intentional errors in maps in case they were acquired by their adversaries. The creator and the intended users would know not to follow that information, but an adversary would not. In software, benign errors are intentionally introduced sometimes to detect copyright violations.

    • @Peanutbetter27
      @Peanutbetter27 Před rokem +4

      Map makers have done that for a really long time. For a more modern instance, you can look up phantom settlements.

    • @sethharrington1796
      @sethharrington1796 Před rokem +3

      Map men did a video on this. They specifically pointed at cities and false streets. In one instance there was a false settlement made and then later a convince store popped up there, and looking at the map named the store after the fake location. So when another map maker added the settlement (I can't remember if he plagiarized or not) and was later sued because of the store he won the case.

    • @MightandMagic88
      @MightandMagic88 Před rokem

      Yup, Paper Towns, or in this case a Paper Sea

  • @randomuser5443
    @randomuser5443 Před rokem +4

    I havent finished the video but it looks like there are actual rivers that can get to the Pacific Ocean

    • @greasher926
      @greasher926 Před rokem

      Yes the Columbia river flows in to the ocean, but originally it wasn’t navigable. There were many sand bars at the mouth that would cause a lot of ship wrecks, it wasn’t until 1877 that the river was dredged down to Portland, OR. And then beyond that through the the Columbia gorge there were many rapids that also made it impossible to pass, that issue wasn’t resolved until the dams were built in the 1930s. But even today the river is only navigable to the Idaho border. Hells canyon is still not navigable to this day.

  • @catyatzee4143
    @catyatzee4143 Před rokem +1

    When I saw this video being recommended my first thought was "DID WE LOSE A WHOLE SEA?!?!"

  • @benhutchinson9703
    @benhutchinson9703 Před rokem +1

    It’s very possible they’re referring to prehistoric Lake Lahontan. At one point it covered the entire stage of Nevada, Utah, parts of New Mexico, some of Colorado etc…

  • @JuandeFucaU
    @JuandeFucaU Před rokem +3

    07:00 the "Entree de Jean [sic] de Fuca (as shown on this map) is obviously referring to the Strait of Juan de Fuca.....
    and the "Mer ou Baye de L'ouest" is obviously Puget Sound, the Strait of Georgia, and all the water east of Vancouver island including all the millions of inlets into our interior, right?

    • @GeographyGeek
      @GeographyGeek  Před rokem +1

      The Juan De Fuca Strait on the map wasn’t meant to be the same one. The one today was named after it. Though it’s possible it was the same one all along. The Sea of the West was probably combined stories of different bodies of water which includes Puget Sound.

    • @JuandeFucaU
      @JuandeFucaU Před rokem +1

      @@GeographyGeek why wouldn't early explorers think Vancouver Island was an isthmus like Baja California when it's pretty unlikely any European ship would pass thru the northern tip of the Georgia Strait's very narrow and rapid waters on the north-east side of Vancouver Island back into the Pacific Ocean?
      seems pretty clear to me, notwithstanding the obvious exaggeration connecting this "mer or baye" directly next to "L. Ounipigon" (Lake Winnipeg). but the Fraser maybe?
      the Rocky Mountains bordering east of this "sea or baye" also seem telling, doncha think? all these "tiny" inlets into our interior sometimes seem to reach the Rockies, to me.

  • @LuisAldamiz
    @LuisAldamiz Před rokem +9

    Obviously there is a sea by the west: the Pacific Ocean and, if you follow the river (the Missouri I understand) to the high (Rocky) mountains and then get any river heading west of them... you'll end up by the Pacific Ocean, where the Spaniards had colonies (notably California) and traded exotic knives while having beards.
    Alternatively the river is not the whole Missouri but the Missouri-Platte and the sea is the Great Salt Lake, which is (or was before dessication) approximately round. I dislike this interpretation though but I would support that they would take the Colorado all the way to the Gulf of California in Mexico where the Castilians were firmly established.

    • @masrr3678
      @masrr3678 Před rokem

      Didn't the natives say the people selling exotic knives had no hair at all? Facial or on their heads?

    • @LuisAldamiz
      @LuisAldamiz Před rokem

      @@masrr3678 - I understood the exact opposite: that they had hair on their faces.

    • @LuisAldamiz
      @LuisAldamiz Před rokem

      @@masrr3678 - You're right. I checked and they were explicitly called "peeled heads" (shaven heads). Maybe a group of natives that either had other way of making knives or traded them from the Spaniards?

    • @heatherkuhn6559
      @heatherkuhn6559 Před rokem

      @@LuisAldamiz Or possibly tonsured missionaries?

    • @LuisAldamiz
      @LuisAldamiz Před rokem

      @@heatherkuhn6559 That's a very good point I had not thought about. Priests and monks would also shave their faces... unless Russian orthodox, we can discard those but the Catholic Castilians are plausible.

  • @CobnutVTS
    @CobnutVTS Před rokem +2

    Saw my first video from you about a week ago or something and now I'm hooked! Your explanations and research are super easy to understand and follow, such an awesome channel!

  • @matthewbattie1022
    @matthewbattie1022 Před rokem +2

    It was a melted glacial lake called Lakeati ks aaktuk. It broke through a glacial wall and flooded half of what is now Canada and the U.S. It created a series of deposits across it's flood plane, including large mounds in the Midwest and large stones in the Northwest. There was a similar glacial lake in the Midwest called Lake Bonneville. The remains of the lake are Great Bear Lake, and Great Slave Lake. The remains of Lake Bonneville are called Utah Lake, and the Great Salt Lake. The map makers of the renaissance had access to many of these ancient maps that are now off limits, in the Vatican archives.

  • @angelamonk716
    @angelamonk716 Před rokem +5

    Salt Lake is sea water

    • @LuisAldamiz
      @LuisAldamiz Před rokem +1

      I thought about that but the river > mountains > river connection don't add up. Then I thought that they probably got the Colorado river and that the Western Sea is just the Gulf of California... were bearded Spaniards traded exotic steel knives quite probably.

    • @jbtownsend9535
      @jbtownsend9535 Před rokem

      Salt Lake also generally corresponds to the southeasternmost shores of the Mer l’Ouest on these creative maps.
      I can see how back then word-of-mouth legends, tall tales and the like (see the Fountain of Youth) were abounding while beliefs, folklore, and facts were interchangeable.

    • @greasher926
      @greasher926 Před rokem +2

      The bear river does flow into the great salt lake and it’s head waters are in Wyoming, but it’s water basin doesn’t border the Missouri River basin. Perhaps they were referring to the Clark fork that flows into the Columbia River and then the Pacific Ocean.

    • @angelamonk716
      @angelamonk716 Před rokem

      @@greasher926 likely comes from under ground . Just a thought

  • @mesauer
    @mesauer Před rokem +7

    The San Joaquin valley and San Francisco Bay were much larger than now. The entire valley was a huge lake, possibly even much of it brackish water. It stretched from Golden Gate bridge all the way to Bakersfield south and Redding in the north. Remnants of Tulare is all that remains of this once huge sea like lake.
    I could easily see how Native American story’s and lore could be talking about this bay/valley It was the largest lake in what became the USA.

    • @ripn929707
      @ripn929707 Před rokem +1

      It's possible that earthquakes and tectonic upheaval also played a part in draining the lake as well.

    • @blahbaconblah
      @blahbaconblah Před rokem

      @@ripn929707 Humans did the majority.

  • @hotbam37
    @hotbam37 Před rokem +2

    Who were the people the Natives spoke of being "Like the europeans but with different knives?" Man I'd like to know more about these kinds of things.

  • @matthightower4204
    @matthightower4204 Před rokem +1

    I have a theory that when the great basin drained the grand canyon was formed.

  • @LA-hx8gj
    @LA-hx8gj Před rokem +3

    Ah, yes. The ol', "they just weren't as smart as us," comments.

  • @Transilvanian90
    @Transilvanian90 Před rokem +5

    If you look at the map, the Sea appears to be an exaggeration of the Georgia Strait (the body of water between Vancouver Island and the mainland), perhaps incorporating Puget sound into it as well. It's easy to imagine how oral accounts traveling east to the plains could become exaggerated and, mixed with European wishes to find an inland sea, result in a larger sea than what is actually there. The real-life Juan de Fuca straight fits perfectly with the one on the maps, as does the depiction of the sea as being immediately west of the Rocky Mountains depicted on those maps.

    • @owlostrom6812
      @owlostrom6812 Před rokem

      I was thinking the same…it’s large area that takes hour(s) by modern ferry, can you imagine paddling from the Island to the mainland?

  • @coupdegras107
    @coupdegras107 Před rokem +2

    California's Central Valley was a sea in prehistory

  • @debpalm8667
    @debpalm8667 Před rokem +1

    One study of the scab lands in Oregon would show you there was a large body of water that flooded that area.

  • @Butter_Warrior99
    @Butter_Warrior99 Před rokem +11

    I gotta love how conspiracy theorists take old maps pike these at face value, and have the gaul to reject satellite maps.

    • @GeographyGeek
      @GeographyGeek  Před rokem +7

      Exactly. Even people at the time didn’t take it at face value.

  • @pepperypeppers2755
    @pepperypeppers2755 Před rokem +1

    The sinking sea and salt lake stories could be explained by salt lake city and the Bonneville salt flats, which are a lakebed and are underwater part of the years

  • @SebHaarfagre
    @SebHaarfagre Před rokem +1

    After a bit of research, the reasonable thing to me is that the natives (and Spanish) were referring to the Great Salt Lake (or collective individual lakes; Lake Lahontan etc.) and that it might have been connected to the Great Basin (with tons of other lakes) at this time, and the river in question was Snake River.
    Great Salt Lake is smaller now than before (and was previously part of Lake Bonneville) It is also not easy to discern where such large lakes start and end if there's several, without _extremely_ time consuming work.
    Northwest America was the "last" area properly mapped and many things could have happened geologically over the span of just a few hundred years.
    A great salt lake does not form without connection to the sea at some point.

  • @jordanbell9356
    @jordanbell9356 Před rokem +1

    This also could have been referring to Lake Corcoran, may not have been salt water but a giant lake that filled the entire San Joaquin Valley. Central California could have been what the Natives were talking about. Before it drained out and dried up it would have seemed like a big inland sea.

  • @patricktilton5377
    @patricktilton5377 Před rokem +2

    Hmm . . . it looks to me as if somebody had made a fairly accurate map depicting the Pacific Ocean's inlet to San Francisco Bay and San Pablo Bay to the north . . . only to grossly enlarge it and turn it into this "Sea of the West" monstrosity. Maybe there was a map which included an 'inset' map of the lands bordering those two bays, but then some other mapmaker didn't realize it was an inset map and made it into that humongous thing that is quite literally "mad north by northwest" in those later maps!

  • @TTVToxic-yu5ov
    @TTVToxic-yu5ov Před rokem

    CZcams just recommended this video and I'm sn instant subscriber. This channel is so cool!!

  • @marklytle6376
    @marklytle6376 Před rokem +2

    If you travel along the coast from the mouth of the Columbia river ( 4.6 ) miles wide then into Washington along Long Beach to the north end, which is along Willapa bay , I can see how from that walking perspective that they could come to that conclusion of an inland sea. It is a vast area with some small rivers flowing south and some flowing north into these two body’s of water, but very close together.

  • @LTPottenger
    @LTPottenger Před rokem +1

    On some old maps all of north america north of mexico is under ice. Which would explain why population was so low and spanish did not really bother. Also could explain the existence of an inland ocean or very large lake at some point.

  • @boba2783
    @boba2783 Před rokem +2

    Pulse 1a and 1b would have produced a sea just like that 11-12k years ago- fascinating

    • @pootube2024
      @pootube2024 Před rokem +1

      The Great flood from The younger dryas melting

  • @Fummy007
    @Fummy007 Před měsícem

    You should do a video on the mapping of Alaska/East Siberia. Before the Bering strait was navigated a lot of maps presumed Asia had a land bridge with America. a lot of really cool changes to maps in rapid succession during that period.

  • @adamheskett6245
    @adamheskett6245 Před rokem +1

    There are still sea shells in the mud west of steamboat springs - west of craig Colorado in northwest Colorado.

  • @techytech3487
    @techytech3487 Před rokem +1

    This sea or crater appears on vibes of cosmos moon map

  • @KhaoticDeterminism
    @KhaoticDeterminism Před rokem +1

    Cause San Francisco Bay is just that cool
    And I am pretty sure that inland sea (California interior) will be back soon enough with sea water rising.

  • @smackymcproductions4443
    @smackymcproductions4443 Před rokem +1

    really cool stuff. john reeves (jre) has an account for the ocean you're referring to. your style is like academy of ideas. factual

  • @keeper0523
    @keeper0523 Před rokem +1

    I think one of the main reasons why these large areas of land and sea on maps, disappearing is because people don’t or won’t accept that large areas like this, can quickly form and disappear within hours or months. It creates a type of fear and insecurity that people have trouble handling.
    Thank you for the theory. I won’t forget that many times, people hide information on maps.

  • @AmazingPhilippines1
    @AmazingPhilippines1 Před rokem +1

    Interesting discussion and I love maps.

  • @streamofconsciousness5826

    Seems to be a measurement discrepancy, the Natives units had to be uniform for the Europeans to put any credence in them, they must've got the distance between two spots right enough times to instill confidence in their navigational ability.
    So this is probably a long handed down story, which is why the distance is wrong, there is no record of them interacting with Asia in recent times.
    It looks like a deformed Victoria island with a disporopetinat sized channel that became a lake between it and the mainland. It also means that a large swath of the continent had no humans living on it, there was a gap, a unknow uninhabited land between the Natives and the Pacific Ocean costal settlements.
    The maps seem to omit the Rockies as well, but the lake seems to extend into the prairies and does not move north and south like a wall so it's not a metaphor for them but that should have raised some flags if they had already sailed up the West Coast.
    It's like a 1700's paranormal UFO type thing, scientists saying it's theoretically possible, some people from different places all with the same story that has real things in it like the people with the different knives, and why would they lie. People writing books and lecturing about something they themselves have never seen but truly believe in.

  • @TJDawgs72
    @TJDawgs72 Před rokem +1

    I lived in the scablands of central Washington state. You can see the effects of Glacial Lake Missoula filling, breaking and filling again and again. I'm sure the natives has oral traditions of this history. Thanks for the video...

  • @Talltrees432
    @Talltrees432 Před rokem +1

    There was an inland sea in the east Bay Area, more specifically the Livermore valley. In a park called Brushy Peak, you can still see the salt grass, and an area about a mile long and roughly 100 feet wide in some parts it actually looks just like some of the marshes in Hayward/Fremont. I’m not exactly sure how long ago it had saltwater running through, but this sounds similar. Just an old inland sea.

  • @tarettime9392
    @tarettime9392 Před rokem

    The fact that they had two inlets from the ocean near the straight of Juan de Fuca and the Columbia river is impressive/interestingly lucky

  • @mauser98kar
    @mauser98kar Před rokem +1

    Honestly, this sea looks a lot like Elliott Bay blown out of proportions.

  • @promontorium
    @promontorium Před rokem +1

    You might notice on the maps "San Francisco" alternatively mentions of Francis Drake. This is what's today called "Drake's Bay". San Francisco Bay is not on any of the maps shown in this video.
    San Francisco bay was curiously not discovered until 1769. Even though explorers and traders had sailed up and down the coast hundreds of times over hundreds of years. It wasn't until a group on foot accidentally found San Francisco Bay while looking for Monterey Bay (it looks so nondescript they walked past it). Back then Drake's Bay was known as San Francisco Bay. The explorers who found San Francisco Bay assumed it was the "San Francisco Bay" found by Francis Drake, so they called it San Francisco Bay. Eventually the bigger bay won the name, so the original San Francisco Bay became Drake's Bay.
    Bonus Bonus, the city of San Francisco got its name for a completely different reason than the bay, so their names being the same is just a coincidence. The city was named after the Spanish Mission, which was supposed to be the final California Mission set up by Franciscan friars, so they named the last one after their patron saint. Nearly 50 years later they ended up setting up one more, and then named that one "San Francisco Solano". And if that isn't confusing enough, while the Mission in San Francisco was officially called San Francisco, everyone locally called it "Mission Dolores. The nearby town wasn't called San Francisco either, it was called Yerba Buena. But map makers kept calling the city San Francisco because they didn't know the local names, just the official name of the mission, so eventually the city of Yerba Buena made an official proclamation stating that because everyone keeps getting the name of their city wrong, and they're known world wide, they'll just rename Yerba Buena to San Francisco to spare more confusion.
    I can go down this rabbit hole all day.
    Yerba Buena means good herb and referred to a plant that smelled good as Spanish walked around. They also named the island facing the Yerba Buena cove, Yerba Buena Island. Today Yerba Buena Island is connect to Treasure Island, which is a completely artificial island built to become an airport, but never ended up being that. While Yerba Buena island still exists today, Yerba Buena Cove is entirely filled in, what is much of San Francisco's downtown is what used to be underwater.
    OK ONE MORE. The reason nobody found San Francisco Bay is because of how narrow the Golden Gate strait is (which is also a reason that made the bay so valuable) also there are various islands in the bay and so many hills and mountains that if you look at it from the ocean at a distance you could entirely miss seeing the strait that lead into the bay, and instead just see a series of mountains/hills. And on top of all of this, because the bay is so shallow, it lends to a lot of evaporation, the bay is quickly warmed in the summer and San Francisco is frequently foggy. The famous fog around the strait probably frequently made it invisible to passing ships. The Golden Gate being the name of the strait of course, the bridge was named after the strait, not the other way around...............OK OMG ONE MORE DON'T HATE.......... The man who named the strait "Golden Gate" was John Fremont, a man of a crazy long resume including being a Civil War general, and personally responsible for starting the war with Mexico in California to steal California from Mexico, he was also an explorer (places are named after him across the country) and the first Republican nominee for president. Obviously he lost. Lincoln was the second, 4 years later and won. Lincoln and Fremont were notoriously frenemies.

  • @greenlightning2539
    @greenlightning2539 Před rokem +1

    The melting of The Younger Dryas passed down through oral tradition perhaps? I doubt the inland sea would have been witnessed by native peoples.

  • @waynethera2712
    @waynethera2712 Před 7 měsíci

    I live in Lesser Slave Lake Alberta. Some of our older history says the lake/sea was very large. I believe after the latest ice age there were enormous shallow lakes that swallowed up the prairies until the waters drained to the oceans.
    Most of the area here is comprised of swampy/boggy land and large sand hills that were previously lake bottom.

  • @ecoshah
    @ecoshah Před rokem +1

    That body of water would have been the ideal size to create the grand canyon. Check how a mini version of the grand canyon was created by the flash flood when the glacier on mount st hellen melted.

    • @Dan-or8qo
      @Dan-or8qo Před rokem

      or the Columbia River Gorge, which happens to be between 45 and 47 degrees latitude.

  • @withershin
    @withershin Před měsícem

    I ran the first map through ArcGIS and it's most like that the bay is what is Vancouver/Seattle waterways today. It warps to be right there but goes over the Rockies.

  • @Johnsonman47373
    @Johnsonman47373 Před rokem +2

    Idk but we up 🔥🔥🔥 -Brayden Callahan

  • @vanaals
    @vanaals Před rokem +1

    No cross referencing with Russian exploration of the northwest? Or was it that it didn’t coincide with Spanish and English exploration coming up the coast from the south?

  • @subverted
    @subverted Před rokem +1

    I wonder if some of these stories that resulted in the conception of a great northern inland sea is tied to the drying up of ancient Lake Cahuilla (in the present Salton Sea basin) and/or Lake Tulare.

  • @Damidas
    @Damidas Před 4 měsíci

    The Grand Canyon used to be filled with water and was lined with advanced cities & temples and the entire area was intentionally destroyed by something. The buildings were melted and the remaining water was drained because there were entrances to the structures accessible only by water and people started finding caves filled with all kinds of things that were really the interiors of these ancient buildings.

  • @jeremyblade7561
    @jeremyblade7561 Před rokem

    Kinda funny how from the looks of it one reason we forgot about this sea is because the guy that mapped it was so sure it existed, he wanted to make sure people had to buy his map to find it.
    There's no telling if it's because he really believed it or if he wanted everyone else to buy his map just thinking it was the more accurate one, but it makes a good story both ways.

  • @awesomeblossom1
    @awesomeblossom1 Před rokem +1

    Isn't that whole area the place where you can see evidence of water runoff from the last ice age? I think Randall Carlson talks about this area as a scabland. Maybe it was a sea for a "short" period of time.

  • @lordkrythic6246
    @lordkrythic6246 Před rokem

    "was sued for plagarism" (Literally shows that using this rendition of the map costs money, but shows it anyway)

  • @drscopeify
    @drscopeify Před 7 měsíci

    2:20 The shores around the Puget Sound do sometimes smell bad due to the large amount of seaweed from how deep the Sound is, they wash up and decay pretty slowly with the lack of sun and cold rainy days can lead to odor that the strong winds blow inland. The various counties sometimes do clean up some of the seaweed from more public areas but it is still an issue today for sure.

  • @centexan
    @centexan Před rokem

    I love the line about a sea being hypothesized!

  • @StephieGilley
    @StephieGilley Před rokem +1

    There is a theory from mainstream science that the Grand Canyon was created by a huge deluge from an inland sea. Maybe the timeline for it needs to be studied in conjunction with these maps and Native American oral history.

  • @gmanvaca8269
    @gmanvaca8269 Před rokem

    Several commentators are probably right. The explorer’s were experienced with the Mediterranean sea. The Golden Gate / SF Bay was likely seen as an entry point. The talk of spring flooding in the Central Valley, the various lakes in Nevada and the great Salt Lake were all probably assumed to be one big body of water by these map makers.

  • @stalefurset9444
    @stalefurset9444 Před rokem

    This is Tulare Lake, it just dried up. It could reappear in a couple of months when record levels of snow melts in the spring.

  • @valw3212
    @valw3212 Před rokem

    There was a sea inland North America. I lived in rural Manitoba and there were lots of fossilized shells on the land as the ploughs would bring up the underlying base. All that's left now are some large lakes in the area. Peace♥

  • @lancewilliams1999
    @lancewilliams1999 Před rokem +1

    The Great Salt Lake was once much much bigger. Locally it was called Lake Bonneville. Here in southern Utah you can still find seashells fossils and even sharks teeth in the mountains here