Edge of the World: Strait of Magellan, Drake Passage & Beagle Channel

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  • čas přidán 27. 05. 2024
  • At the southernmost edge of the inhabited world lies a trio of straits, the Strait of Magellan, the Beagle Channel, and the Drake Passage, the only natural gateways between the world's two largest oceans. Together, we'll learn about the history of these three southern straits: their geologic origins, the people who've crossed them through the ages, their importance in the world's economy and culture, and even how they've reshaped the ocean itself. Let's Explore!
    __
    Chapters:
    0:00 Intro
    0:29 Geographic overview
    2:09 Geologic history
    2:51 Human history
    6:41 The Straits today
    7:29 Bridge/tunnel?
    7:56 Conclusion
    NOTE: The flag of the Netherlands used at 4:31 is supposed to be the Statenvlag, used by the Netherlands from the mid 17th century, but the actual flag may have actually been a darker shade of blue (the colors were only standardized in the 20th century with the dark blue we see today). Either way, the Orange-white-blue Prinzenvlag would have been more appropriate given the date of the Dutch transit of the passage in 1616. The flag of Luxembourg is similar, but wider.
    __
    Seafloor spreading animation made with GPlates: www.earthbyte.org/gplates-2-3...
    All CC BY-SA works and their derivatives may be used under their respective licenses. See all CC licenses at creativecommons.org
    Cape horn: kasio69, CC BY 2.0
    Holanda Glacier: RAYANDBEE, CC BY 2.0
    Magallanes Locator, Santa Cruz Locator, Tierra Del Fuego Locator: By TUBS via Wikimedia Commons, CC BY-SA 3.0
    Magallanes Flag: By B1mbo and -xfi-, CC BY-SA 3.0
    Antarctic Claims: By A loose necktie, derived from Lokal_Profil, CC BY-SA 4.0
    GPlates 2.3 and Data: EarthByte Group, CC BY 3.0
    Antarctic Convergence: Hogweard, CC BY-SA 3.0
    Cueva Fell, fishtail points: University of Iowa Press - "Travels and Archaeology in South Chile", CC BY-SA 3.0
    Indigenous Peoples Map: Janitoalevic, derived from NordNordWest & Keysanger, CC BY-SA 3.0
    Battle of Mactan: Nmcast at English Wikipedia, CC BY-SA 3.0
    Beagle Voyage Map: Sémhur, CC BY-SA 3.0
    Puerto del Hambre: Pato Novoa, CC BY 2.0
    Fuerte Bulnes: Juan25, CC BY-SA 3.0
    Punta Arenas Pano: John Seb Barber, CC BY 2.0
    Clipper Route: Johantheghost, CC BY-SA 3.0
    Armel Le Cléac'h: Eric HOUDAS, CC BY-SA 4.0
    Beagle Conflict Map: Keysanger, CC BY-SA 3.0
    Punta Arenas with ships: Gonzalo Baeza H, CC BY 2.0
    Cristina Calderón: Víctor Alejandro Correa Rueda, CC BY 2.0
    Lidia González Calderón: Biblioteca del Congreso Nacional de Chile, CC BY 3.0 Chile
    Capesize Tanker: Danny Cornelissen
    Ferry: Heretiq, CC BY-SA 2.5
    Cymbal: Thibault Aspe, CC BY-SA 4.0

Komentáře • 466

  • @solarsailor1534
    @solarsailor1534 Před rokem +499

    This part of the world is hauntingly beautiful. Even in the 21st century going here feels like an adventure. You feel small and isolated amongst the mountainous windswept landscape. Yet some of the warmest friendliest people choose to live here. It’s truly an amazing place.

    • @SignoreGalilei
      @SignoreGalilei  Před rokem +41

      I've visited Ushuaia briefly, it's a very scenic place!

    • @jfu5222
      @jfu5222 Před rokem +7

      This region has been on my short- list for a long time. I'm happy for you for making the journey.

    • @markjoler3044
      @markjoler3044 Před rokem +14

      @@SignoreGalilei You missed the best of Tierra del Fuego (Chilean side) full of fjords, channels, islands, mountains, islets, hanging snowdrifts and glaciers; the highest mountain in all of Tierra del Fuego (Mount Shipton); the fabulous Monte Sarmiento (described by Charles Darwin as 'the most sublime sight in the region'); and the Cordillera Darwin, a mountain range exclusive to the Magallanes region - Chile, and which houses one of the three ice fields in Chile. A few weeks ago Will Smith, MrBeast, and Camila Cabello, made that Chilean route starting from Punta Arenas - Magallanes, to reach Antarctica. I don't know if Sebastian Vettel did that route or not in private, but what is certain is that he stayed this year enjoying Torres del Paine.

    • @zddxddyddw
      @zddxddyddw Před rokem +11

      @@markjoler3044 Hey, the Argentinian side is pretty great and is full of breathtaking landscapes too. No need to turn this into a competition.

    • @EldiniTheGenie
      @EldiniTheGenie Před rokem +11

      @a no one CARES!!!!!!!!!!!

  • @HodgdonH110
    @HodgdonH110 Před rokem +151

    I was on a 5000ton refrigeration ship and passed through the Straights of Magellan going from Chile to sail up to Argentina - it was ABSOLUTELY SPECTACULAR. That was back in 1979 - thankyou for the video

  • @Hyperventilacion
    @Hyperventilacion Před rokem +172

    I traveled to Chile to conduct research last year and it has been one of the most amazing experiences I've had, as soon as I crossed the BíoBío river into the Araucanía Region you really start to feel that there is something special in that strip of land, and when you approach the Andes the wilderness is just amazing, the temperate rainforest is such a beautiful environment. That section is the start of the south, and where things start to really get more disperse and wild, Concepción is kinda like the Winterfell of the southern cone, then going through Araucanía, los Ríos y los Lagos it is evident the immense beauty of the area and why colonialism was so relentless there, the Mapuches found themselves literally on heaven on earth, and oh boy the Europeans wanted it so much. Anyways, next time I'll go further south to Tierra de Fuego, the trip is a pain in the ass but it is worth it.

    • @SignoreGalilei
      @SignoreGalilei  Před rokem +5

      That sounds really cool! I've been to Ushuaia, which was great itself, but not the rest of the area.

    • @zddxddyddw
      @zddxddyddw Před rokem +2

      You can visit Ushuaia quite easily, just fly to Buenos Aires and take a connection flight to Ushuaia there.

    • @vichonavarrete9929
      @vichonavarrete9929 Před rokem +4

      @@zddxddyddw a quien le interesa Ushuaia jajaj

    • @GRMNCVS
      @GRMNCVS Před rokem

      @@vichonavarrete9929 a quién le interesa tu opinión

    • @An-kw3ec
      @An-kw3ec Před rokem +1

      The region still very scarcely populated, maybe this global warming could push south americans to live more fourther south, same with new Zealand.

  • @richardglady3009
    @richardglady3009 Před rokem +70

    My carrier was too big for the canal, so I sailed around South America. Your video was the first, I have ever seen, explaining the geography in this area. Thank you!

  • @brianmccarthy5557
    @brianmccarthy5557 Před rokem +34

    In California there used to be only three ways to get here. The first by wagon or horseback, and later the transcontinental railroad. The second the dangerous journey to disease ridden Panama, then crossing the Isthmus jungle by mule train and catching a ship north. Very dangerous as the losses from disease could be considerable. The last was the Passage Around the Horn, or Cape Horn, which allowed the shipment of large, expensive and heavy items by cargo and passenger vessels. Dangerous because of the weather and seas but popular. Things used to be identified as "coming around the Horn". I remember by grandparents had an elaborate old wooden pedestal lamp stand they had been gifted by a rich employer they worked for as servants. We always identified it as "what came around the Horn". The railroad only reached LA in the early 1890's and the Panama Canal opened in 1917 for WWI. Before that we were an isolated small town without even a real harbor.

    • @SignoreGalilei
      @SignoreGalilei  Před rokem +7

      Wow! I had heard that the strait was used for that purpose. It's nice to hear more details from someone with family history!

    • @stephenburnage7687
      @stephenburnage7687 Před 9 měsíci +1

      There were other alternatives, at different times, including the Tehuantepec Railway (across the isthmus in Mexico) and the Panama Railway, both of which preceded the opening of the canal.

  • @Vagabondo-fs6qu
    @Vagabondo-fs6qu Před 6 měsíci +4

    I was a marine engineer in my first career, rounding Cape Horn in January 1978. I hate to disappoint all the viewers but it was as calm as a millpond, the largest waves being the vessel's bow wave and wake. Nice video 👍

  • @alessandrapirelli7040
    @alessandrapirelli7040 Před rokem +7

    Clearly one of the more informative and enjoyable CZcams channels. You can actually learn many interesting facts from this young man. His narration and demeanor are pleasant and easy listening. This gets a 9.2 "WW" (worth watching) score! 👏

  • @SonoftheBread
    @SonoftheBread Před rokem +18

    I absolutely love concise videos like this. Perfect pacing, accurate and helpful visuals, very informative. Thanks dude

  • @mitchellminer9597
    @mitchellminer9597 Před rokem +16

    Thank you. I hadn't seen the Beagle Channel before, nor heard the names of the people who lived thereabouts.
    Excellent video. Subscribed.
    The captain of the Beagle kidnapped four of the locals and took them along to England, teaching them English, and later returned the three that survived. One was Elleparu, called York Minster by the crew.

    • @SignoreGalilei
      @SignoreGalilei  Před rokem +5

      Yep, that did happen. Not a very happy piece of history there.

  • @hyxlo_
    @hyxlo_ Před rokem +11

    It’s midnight and I’m watching the most random video ever.

  • @oscargibbons9419
    @oscargibbons9419 Před rokem +16

    me being some one from magallanes, love it.
    EDIT: the thing about connect tierra del fuego with the continent is that none of both territories have a economy big enought to justify the connection

  • @zekeonstormpeak4186
    @zekeonstormpeak4186 Před rokem +2

    We got to see this in January on a cruise from Buenos Aires. It was fantastic to see the Magellan strait, the Drake passage and Antarctica.

  • @iconoclastforever7065
    @iconoclastforever7065 Před 4 měsíci +1

    In his 19th century classic, "Two Years Before the Mast", Richard Henry Dana wrote memorably about what it was like to sail through Tierra del Fuego during the Antarctic Winter of 1836. It sure made my timbers shiver!

  • @webdaddy
    @webdaddy Před rokem +5

    I was on a cruise from Buenos Aires to Santiago, and we passed through the Drake passage followed by the Beagle Channel. There are no words to describe the wildlife and scenery in this area - it is truly fantastic. I've been to Alaska, and Alaska cannot compare to this area of South America.

    • @SignoreGalilei
      @SignoreGalilei  Před rokem +2

      It's a very impressive place. It's interesting you bring up Alaska, because a lot of people compare Tierra del Fuego to the Inside Passage.

    • @webdaddy
      @webdaddy Před rokem +1

      @@SignoreGalilei I've been to the Inside Passage as well, and to me there was no comparison to the majesty of the Beagle Channel of South America.

  • @kidwiththehat2016
    @kidwiththehat2016 Před rokem +44

    Love your channel and all your videos, you make things I often gloss over when studying geography.

    • @SignoreGalilei
      @SignoreGalilei  Před rokem +9

      Thank you! I do love covering those "out of the way" topics, and it's good to hear that people like you enjoy learning about them.

  • @Blaqjaqshellaq
    @Blaqjaqshellaq Před rokem +9

    In addition, around 1850 thousands of prospectors rounded the cape to reach gold fields in California and Australia.

  • @wnaderhuffstadt8201
    @wnaderhuffstadt8201 Před rokem +86

    5,2 k subscribers is a joke you should atleast be in the 100 thousands

    • @SignoreGalilei
      @SignoreGalilei  Před rokem +18

      Thanks! It would be great if that happened haha

    • @sfsoccerstar5
      @sfsoccerstar5 Před rokem

      Not gonna lie, had us in the first half

    • @royfearn4345
      @royfearn4345 Před rokem

      Size isn't everything!

    • @niksutliff
      @niksutliff Před rokem

      @@SignoreGalilei so many trash channels doing "map" content with like 2.4 m subs

    • @VOGS597
      @VOGS597 Před rokem

      Why not 100 million

  • @nenel24_
    @nenel24_ Před rokem +24

    I love your videos. It keeps my inner geography geek alive :)

  • @cat_daddy
    @cat_daddy Před rokem +8

    Magellan today is rather honored and revered in Cebu., Philippines. There is a huge cross there that is claimed to have been his.

  • @mikesherman4814
    @mikesherman4814 Před rokem

    Pass through the straits on the USS Damato DD 871 in late 1968. A truly beautiful place. Thanks for the video.

  • @johnny_my_penls_is_small_but

    As an Argentinian I really appreciate all the research you put into this video, especially the mention of Cristina Calderon´s efforts, something I honestly had not expected. Keep up the great content!

    • @SignoreGalilei
      @SignoreGalilei  Před rokem

      Thank you! I really try my best with the research and I'm glad that it worked out well.

  • @joeljolland1696
    @joeljolland1696 Před rokem +10

    Your quality is excellent. This channel's definitely going to blow up in no time.

    • @SignoreGalilei
      @SignoreGalilei  Před rokem +3

      Thanks! It's been doing pretty well lately. I hope I can help even more people learn about cool stuff like this.

    • @haweater1555
      @haweater1555 Před rokem +2

      The Great Lakes video blew it out of water.

    • @Worldviewsandthoughts
      @Worldviewsandthoughts Před 5 měsíci

      Maybe if he would get his measurements correct!

  • @cratecruncher6687
    @cratecruncher6687 Před rokem +2

    There is a terrifying film of sailors maintaining sail high up in the trees of a clipper rounding the Horn. The entire deck disappears below the foam several times. It is just incredible stuff from a different age: Around Cape Horn (1929).

  • @Mrmidknight-yx9pg
    @Mrmidknight-yx9pg Před rokem +4

    Seems like a pretty chill part of the world

    • @SignoreGalilei
      @SignoreGalilei  Před rokem +2

      I mean at least since the 80s. (Or do you mean literally chilly and I'm getting wooshed)

  • @Bisamberg
    @Bisamberg Před rokem +1

    Great video - a dear family friend has booked a Drake Passage/Antartica Expedition cruise in Feb 2023. Now I understand the differences between the Magellan, Beagle and Drake routes.

  • @427rj
    @427rj Před rokem

    Great video! Love your voice and you presentation style! Look forward to learning more from you!

    • @SignoreGalilei
      @SignoreGalilei  Před rokem

      Thanks! I aim to post a couple of times each month.

  • @zddxddyddw
    @zddxddyddw Před rokem +7

    3:44 I visited Tierra del Fuego back in January and there I learned that Magellan actually called the island "Tierra de Humos" (Land of Smokes) since what he saw from his ship wasn't the actual fires but the smoke columns that rose from the firepits. It was Spanish king Carlos I who then changed the island's name to Tierra del Fuego, since he deemed it more attractive

  • @AmazingPhilippines1
    @AmazingPhilippines1 Před rokem +2

    Thanks for the geography and economic history of this area.

  • @davidcarmack5074
    @davidcarmack5074 Před rokem

    I've been through that area several times. It's incredible.

    • @SignoreGalilei
      @SignoreGalilei  Před rokem +1

      That's very cool! I've been to Ushuaia and I really liked it as well.

  • @radiomindchatter7994
    @radiomindchatter7994 Před 4 měsíci

    When I was a kid I really liked studying maps and often wondered what it was like at the furthest reaches of our planet.
    I'm still fascinated by this....

  • @2101case
    @2101case Před rokem +1

    The book Over the Edge of the World captured my imagination about this place. Your video was an excellent supplement to
    what I discovered from that reading.

    • @SignoreGalilei
      @SignoreGalilei  Před rokem

      Thanks! I haven't read that one yet but it sounds cool.

  • @beatricetreadwell5785
    @beatricetreadwell5785 Před rokem +1

    Another very informative video! 😃👍
    Thanks again!

  • @mrrandom1265
    @mrrandom1265 Před 4 měsíci

    Today I learned that the Straight of Magellan and the Drake Passage are two different things. And I'm quite good at geography and history. Thank you for sharing!

  • @adventurelifewithbob2960
    @adventurelifewithbob2960 Před 4 měsíci

    Enjoyed your video. Our time spent in Antarctica and Ushuaia was wonderful.

  • @jfu5222
    @jfu5222 Před rokem +8

    I find it fascinating that Magellan and his crew thought the native inhabitants were giants. Although Patagonia's entomology is debated to mean the land of those with big feet or the land of giants, it suggests that the inhabitants were able to thrive in an inhospitable environment. I like the land of big feet explanation, the large footwear made of woven grasses confusing the sailors who gave them the name.

    • @Blaqjaqshellaq
      @Blaqjaqshellaq Před rokem +4

      You mean "etymology," right?

    • @jfu5222
      @jfu5222 Před rokem

      @@Blaqjaqshellaq Ha, spell check got me again! I should have looked a little closer before I sent that comment. Insects and word origins are both interesting but hardly interchangeable!

    • @Kim_Kardashi-un
      @Kim_Kardashi-un Před rokem +5

      Well the Tehuelches (the people that most likely Magellan refered to) were actually taller than the average European of the time, however, has you said Magellan was actually referring to their very large footprints hence he named them "Patagon", 'pata' meaning feet in coloquial Spanish and Portuguese.

    • @SignoreGalilei
      @SignoreGalilei  Před rokem +3

      I hadn't heard the feet explanation before, thanks for sharing.

    • @TheLastArkham
      @TheLastArkham Před rokem

      @@SignoreGalilei its actually one of 3 explanations for the name Patagon, buy there isnt a clear consensus. Another is that Magellan read a novel, Caballerias Primaleon, in which a giant character named Patagon appears and thus the term. There is also another theory about a misstranslation of portugues to spanish on the word "patagao", which means big feet.

  • @richtomlinson7090
    @richtomlinson7090 Před rokem

    My great great grandfather was a sailor most of his life, and one trip he was first mate on the clipper ship Intrepid and which sailed this passage during the clipper ship period.
    That ship became shipwrecked in the Gaspar Straits near Bancka Island in the Malay archipelago.
    They fought off Malay pirates in proas, trying to save their cargo of silks, fireworks and opium, from China.
    Another time, my great great grandfather was the captain of the clipper ship Asterion and they went around the horn also, but became shipwrecked on Baker Island one of the minor outlying Islands, near Howland Island and Jarvis Island.
    They filled the ship with bird crap from Howland Island and ran aground on a coral reef off of Baker Island which is truly a hot treeless desert island near the equator.
    They were stranded for three months, and all survived but with scurvy.

  • @johnwright4395
    @johnwright4395 Před rokem

    Went to Punta Arenas in 1968 and thru the Straits simply amazing,

  • @orhanaygun7298
    @orhanaygun7298 Před 4 měsíci

    I started to become curious about this region after reading Jules Verne's book Magellania or The Survivors of the Jonathan. It would have been even more wonderful if had seen this video before reading the book. Thank you for your hard work!

  • @DTL0VER
    @DTL0VER Před rokem

    What a fantastic video. Thank you!

  • @bigfloppa5643
    @bigfloppa5643 Před rokem +2

    This was a very informative video! Subscribed

  • @anthonymcneill1465
    @anthonymcneill1465 Před 10 měsíci

    In my view, although brief, quite educational. Thanks for the enlightening commentary.

  • @thosoz3431
    @thosoz3431 Před 6 měsíci

    Cape Horn was a pilgrimage for me.
    A magnificent part of the world.

  • @mikeemery6741
    @mikeemery6741 Před 4 měsíci

    Nice presentation, I enjoyed your informative commentary.

  • @chrisclassical7
    @chrisclassical7 Před rokem +2

    great video. really enjoyable and informative.

  • @cinemaipswich4636
    @cinemaipswich4636 Před rokem +2

    When Magellan was sailing down the east cost of South America, his ship was pushed out to sea by 100 kilometers in a matter of hours, and the water turned from salty to fresh. He had found the Amazon River without actually seeing it.

  • @coyote4237
    @coyote4237 Před rokem +1

    Thank you. Great video.

  • @viditrawat1074
    @viditrawat1074 Před 4 dny

    I've transited through magellan strait twice, was extremely beautiful......snowcapped mountain peaks

  • @sisfantasto7004
    @sisfantasto7004 Před rokem +3

    very interesting! thank you very much.

  • @matiashogden1240
    @matiashogden1240 Před rokem

    I sailed through the Magellan Strait, then crossed Cape Horn from the west through the Drake Passage and then into the Beagle Channel into Ushuaia on a three masted barqe last winter.
    Wonderful sight when the sea was kind

  • @washingtondale
    @washingtondale Před rokem +1

    bravery of the explorers = breathtaking

  • @olekatoska1901
    @olekatoska1901 Před rokem +4

    crazy to think there could be a reality where Chile and Norway, the 2 "Fjord" countries and both the Southernmost and Northernmost countries on Earth respectively, would technically share a massive common border

    • @olekatoska1901
      @olekatoska1901 Před rokem

      on closer research, the real Northernmost country would actually be the Kingdom of Denmark, although another of the Fjord countries it's a shame the funny fact is impossible now💔

    • @SignoreGalilei
      @SignoreGalilei  Před rokem

      Ah, well. At least it's close to being the Northernmost country.

  • @z0n0ph0ne
    @z0n0ph0ne Před 4 měsíci

    Sailed across Drakes Passage in 1965 and 1966 aboard RRS John Biscoe.
    Never been so sick in all my life.

  • @inutilsuverzivo
    @inutilsuverzivo Před rokem +9

    great video, it would have been cool if you mentioned the differences between magellan strait and beagle pass that made pilots choose one route over the other, for people who likes ships it's an interesting topic

    • @SignoreGalilei
      @SignoreGalilei  Před rokem +2

      Yeah, that might be something cool to cover also, though I personally know less about it.

  • @colinburns9736
    @colinburns9736 Před rokem +3

    Lovely. Informative. To the point. Largely politically neutral. Just excellent. Thank you.

  • @Meagain921
    @Meagain921 Před rokem

    Very interesting. Thank you - subscribed.

  • @David-wk6md
    @David-wk6md Před rokem

    Thanks for posting

  • @jakemarchbank
    @jakemarchbank Před rokem +1

    This video should have far more views than it does now

    • @SignoreGalilei
      @SignoreGalilei  Před rokem +1

      Thanks! I hope it gets traction. I'd love for more people to learn about this kind of stuff.

  • @davidcarmack5074
    @davidcarmack5074 Před 4 měsíci

    I've through that area several times, it's always a gamble on which weather your going to get sailing through Drake Passage.

  • @Alarix246
    @Alarix246 Před rokem +2

    I wonder how deep was the Drake passage during the Ice Age. As the ocean surface was 400ft/130m lower, how would that affect the water throughput within the roaring forties? Plus of course, there would be a glacier over the entire Drake passage - whilst the underwater current would not be interrupted.

    • @SignoreGalilei
      @SignoreGalilei  Před rokem +2

      The Drake is deep enough that I don't think the lower sea level will do too much (though it would have affected the Strait of Magellan and the Beagle Channel). Sea ice might have been significant though.

  • @catdemon922
    @catdemon922 Před rokem +1

    Oh thanks I was just wondering about these today

  • @eagleviewhd
    @eagleviewhd Před rokem

    When I was in the Air Force I spent July 1971 at Puente Arenas with an Air Force Special Operations Squadron working there.

  • @d1want34
    @d1want34 Před rokem

    Never knew i needed this info. Good job. Very rare information indeed 😊

  • @Danilo.Ladron
    @Danilo.Ladron Před rokem +2

    You probably already knew this but Gabriel Boric, the current president of Chile is from Punta Arenas.

    • @SignoreGalilei
      @SignoreGalilei  Před rokem

      I didn't already know that particular fact, thanks for letting me know!

  • @joechang8696
    @joechang8696 Před rokem +9

    a little bit of curiosity as to why Magellan was looking for a strait would be nice. Also, great graphic showing that Antarctica was not frozen before the separation from South America

    • @SignoreGalilei
      @SignoreGalilei  Před rokem

      I mention Magellan wanted to find a sea route to Asia, basically the story is that the Portuguese dominated trade from Europe to India around Africa, and Magellan was hired by Spain to find an alternative path. Also, thanks about the graphic!

    • @joechang8696
      @joechang8696 Před rokem

      @@SignoreGalilei I don't mean why Magellan was on the voyage. Why was he specifically looking for a strain to the ocean on the other side of the South America. Why not sail around South America (if he did not know the passage was extremely dangerous). I recall that he checked each of the bays to see if it was a strait.
      Imagine yourself in a sailing ship going into the strait for the first time. Why would you think it led the pacific. Magellan sent each of his ships to look for a passage.

    • @decentish8546
      @decentish8546 Před rokem +3

      @@joechang8696 this is just a guess but I would imagine he had no idea where South America actually ended. For all he knew it could’ve been connected to Antarctica. Or separated by only a small straight or passage. Plus the further South he went the colder it became and the more distance required to be sailed by any travellers using the route. So he wanted to find the furthest North straight that he could in order to have the shortest possible route. Essentially he wanted the most efficient route for future travellers.
      Take sailing through the Canadian Arctic for example. There is a route way to the North that avoids all the narrow straights and islands, going around the continent entirely. However, in involves a substantially increased distance of travel through extremely inhospitable (and often frozen) waters. Hence why the emphasis was on finding the Northwest passage instead.

    • @BMrider75
      @BMrider75 Před rokem +2

      @@joechang8696 I remember seeing a documentary a few years back, which examined this exact question, showing that Magellan KNEW already that there was a passage there. He had with him a rough chart and description of it which he kept secret (Portuguese in origin?). The point is that he wasn't first, but was specifically looking for the passage previously found, but kept quiet for territorial reasons.

    • @JamesSmith-ui2hv
      @JamesSmith-ui2hv Před rokem

      @@BMrider75 No , he wasn't the first neither was Columbus it probably was some unknown sailor in an unknown ship with an English surname , yeah right

  • @pabloarruda
    @pabloarruda Před rokem

    Super video!!! Thank you!

  • @tomhermens7698
    @tomhermens7698 Před 8 měsíci

    Very good Thank you.

  • @dewaynethompson8095
    @dewaynethompson8095 Před rokem

    As a veteran submariner, i have travelled thru Drake's Passage! Let's just say, I wouldn't want to do it again! Even underwater it was ROUGH!!!!

  • @mcgoo721
    @mcgoo721 Před 5 měsíci

    Honestly the strait of Magellan seems balling af

  • @StoicHistorian
    @StoicHistorian Před rokem +1

    Great video my dude

  • @horseshoehimself
    @horseshoehimself Před rokem

    I love the map gets more high quality when the camera zooms in.

    • @SignoreGalilei
      @SignoreGalilei  Před rokem +1

      Thanks! I use the high-res Blue Marble satellite pictures from NASA to get that effect.

  • @gmendes1831
    @gmendes1831 Před 9 měsíci

    Nice job!

  • @jamesdillon1453
    @jamesdillon1453 Před rokem

    Nice conclusion !

  • @Thisandthat8908
    @Thisandthat8908 Před 4 měsíci

    not only did he name the Paific. He was the first who gave us a vague idea, how absolutely MASSIVE it is.

  • @opathe2nd973
    @opathe2nd973 Před rokem

    Brilliant!

  • @BigZaddyBradly
    @BigZaddyBradly Před rokem +2

    Wow! Nice video very informative but it would suck getting stuck in antártica you can’t even leave with all those currents

    • @SignoreGalilei
      @SignoreGalilei  Před rokem +4

      You should check out the journey of Ernest Shackleton on the Endurance. He and his crew got stuck on one of those islands at Antarctica's tip and had to sail in a basically a lifeboat across the current there to get help from a whaling station. It was wild.

    • @BigZaddyBradly
      @BigZaddyBradly Před rokem +2

      @@SignoreGalilei wow I certainly am and I love your channel and what you do keep it up

  • @JS-jh4cy
    @JS-jh4cy Před rokem +1

    Do you have any plans for covering the Panama canal and the Panama canal railroad end to end

    • @SignoreGalilei
      @SignoreGalilei  Před rokem

      It's not on my current list, but I may at some point.

  • @Marotonella
    @Marotonella Před 9 měsíci

    America, what a great continent. Un saludo par todos los americanos, los colombianos, los argentinos, los mexicanos... para todos.

    • @SignoreGalilei
      @SignoreGalilei  Před 9 měsíci

      Yeah, we've got quite the mix of environments and cultures here. It's pretty cool.

  • @devinzelman5838
    @devinzelman5838 Před rokem

    Awesome

  • @Svensk7119
    @Svensk7119 Před rokem

    Great pun at the end.

  • @user-ul5pt1yb8z
    @user-ul5pt1yb8z Před 5 měsíci

    Thanks a lot

  • @queuzed
    @queuzed Před rokem +3

    I really enjoyed the video and it was very interesting. Just one thing, the flag at 4:31 is not the Dutch flag, but the flag of Luxembourg.

    • @SignoreGalilei
      @SignoreGalilei  Před rokem

      Check out the note in the description - it's supposed to be an older Dutch flag, not today's.

  • @werren894
    @werren894 Před rokem

    you need to cover the mollucas navigator, which the reason why magellan reach phillipines by avoiding malaysian strait is insane, it is really interesting story for us global south.

  • @AnTiThesis-HaT-HoT
    @AnTiThesis-HaT-HoT Před rokem +1

    Wow! An American that can say “Antarctica”! Fascinating, concise and educational!

  • @uss_04
    @uss_04 Před rokem +1

    Sailing past there in that era, I guess you can say it’s traveling to A Place Further Than The (Known) Universe

  • @PimpDaddyFresh
    @PimpDaddyFresh Před rokem

    Thank you

  • @Idahoguy10157
    @Idahoguy10157 Před rokem +4

    America’s largest Aircraft Carriers can’t translate the Panama Canal. So they steam thru the southern straits as necessary

    • @SignoreGalilei
      @SignoreGalilei  Před rokem +1

      Yeah, though Panama expanded the canal recently so I think the Gerald Ford class can fit now if necessary.

    • @Idahoguy10157
      @Idahoguy10157 Před rokem +3

      @@SignoreGalilei …. Neither can the Nimitz class. All the “super carriers” constructed from the 1950’s on are beyond Panamax

    • @SignoreGalilei
      @SignoreGalilei  Před rokem +1

      True. Both the canal and the straits are very important strategically and have been for a long time, and they can only expand the canal so much.

    • @Idahoguy10157
      @Idahoguy10157 Před rokem

      @@SignoreGalilei … I don’t know the physical limits of a new canal. Although building one large enough to allow any of the twelve American carriers to pass thru probably makes little sense

    • @SignoreGalilei
      @SignoreGalilei  Před rokem

      @@Idahoguy10157 Panama made the canal wider and deeper in 2016 with a third set of locks so it could fit more ships at once for commercial reasons. "New Panamax" - the biggest size ship that can fit through the new locks - is big enough for the current US aircraft carriers, though just barely.

  • @renzgonzalez
    @renzgonzalez Před rokem

    Ushuaia is estimated to have around 127k people in 2022. I think the data you used is outdated. Thank you so much for this amazing video! 🇦🇷♥️

    • @SignoreGalilei
      @SignoreGalilei  Před rokem

      Hmm, even the more updated stats I've found still say around 80k. Do you mean the entire urban area rather than just the city? Also, thanks!

  • @incognito3620
    @incognito3620 Před rokem +3

    It amazes me that the explorers who traveled these territories are named after the explorers. Yet, people ( tribes) inhabited these areas long before their discovery. It would be appropriate to rename these territories after the tribes who originally discovered and lived in these areas THEY, are the true discovers. Not Hopes or Magellan. We did the same in Canada and in. North America.

    • @SignoreGalilei
      @SignoreGalilei  Před rokem

      That's fair. We often don't know the names of the individual people who first found these places though. Maybe something like the Yaghan Straits?

  • @Idahoguy10157
    @Idahoguy10157 Před rokem +1

    During the Falklands/Malvinas war Chile was a non combatant ally of the UK. Military movements were mad in the region by Chile

    • @SignoreGalilei
      @SignoreGalilei  Před rokem +4

      Yeah, Chile and Argentina had some long-standing disputes in the area so it makes total sense

  • @LucianoRicci182
    @LucianoRicci182 Před rokem +4

    MALVINAS ARGENTINAS

  • @HalifaxHercules
    @HalifaxHercules Před rokem +4

    I think that a crossing or tunnel connecting North and South America is needed, preferably from Panama to Colombia.
    As for tunnel connecting Tierra Del Fuego to Mainland South America, I think a first focus is for the Chilean Government to expand the Carretera Austral from the O'Higgin's area to Punta Arenas.

    • @SignoreGalilei
      @SignoreGalilei  Před rokem +1

      That makes sense about Chile. Panama to Colombia would be good for completing the Pan-American highway, but I wonder if there would there be enough local traffic.

    • @fyeahusa
      @fyeahusa Před rokem +5

      They've tried, but the Darien Gap, an area of marshes, forests, and mountains that prevented the completion of the Pan-American Highway. A combination of not wanting cattle disease to spread north, concerns from native peoples, and environmental damage that construction of the the road, including any necessary bridges or tunnels, as well as the general difficulty of doing anything in the region because of difficult terrain, and there are also various cartels and rebel and paramilitary organizations that operate in the region.

    • @EduardoEscarez
      @EduardoEscarez Před rokem +2

      @@SignoreGalilei The problem with extending the Carretera Austral is that the area between O'Higgins and Puerto Natales is composed of a multitude of fjords, islands, glaciers and mountains, all part of a national park. It would be too expensive without really any economic benefits plus dividing a large national park in two in the process; so in reality there isn't a plan for that.
      On the other hand there has been a lot of investment to expand digital connectivity to that area though the Fibra Optica Austral project, and now almost all cities and towns have high speed internet service, with 5G so far as in Puerto Williams; with some feasibility plans to deploy an optic fiber link between Puerto Williams and Villa Las Estrellas in King George Island in Antartica.

    • @fabianreusch4870
      @fabianreusch4870 Před rokem +2

      The Chilean side of Tierra del Fuego is very sparsely populated though, they are constructing a road atm to the Chilean side of the beagle channel right through yendegaia national park. A tunnel however would mostly make sense for Argentina I think, as their side of tdf is way more important economically

    • @wingracer1614
      @wingracer1614 Před rokem +1

      @@fyeahusa Exactly. There's just no need for any further connections unless or until the Darien Gap is cut through and I just don't see that happening anytime soon.

  • @brileylampo
    @brileylampo Před rokem

    Nice

  • @thesailingkiwi
    @thesailingkiwi Před rokem

    The roaring forties the Clippers used are the strong westerly winds

  • @stephenmorton8017
    @stephenmorton8017 Před rokem

    interesting as heckfire. gads that's a rough neighborhood.

    • @SignoreGalilei
      @SignoreGalilei  Před rokem +1

      It's been the death of so many ships over the years

    • @stephenmorton8017
      @stephenmorton8017 Před rokem

      @@SignoreGalilei staggering to imagine traversing it the first time, unbeknownst.
      what strange stars are these we guide by?

  • @Hamboarding
    @Hamboarding Před rokem

    7:06 Wow! 2,000 vs 14,000 for the Panama Canal. I wouldn't've ever guessed they still had so much traffic in the Magellan Straight - even comparatively!

    • @SignoreGalilei
      @SignoreGalilei  Před rokem +2

      Yeah, traffic in the Panama Canal has been getting real bad, which I think is driving some traffic to the strait.

    • @Worldviewsandthoughts
      @Worldviewsandthoughts Před 5 měsíci

      His measurements are wrong!

  • @jmgallo99
    @jmgallo99 Před rokem +1

    Fun fact: the president of Chile, Gabriel Boric, is from Punta Arenas. His parents' home is right on the sea-front of the Magellan Strait.

    • @SignoreGalilei
      @SignoreGalilei  Před rokem

      Nice!

    • @JamesSmith-ui2hv
      @JamesSmith-ui2hv Před rokem

      ''Fun fact'' the great grandfather of the current President of Chile was nick named the ''Implacable'' , he was one of the culprits that killed Selknam, Yagans and any other indigenous people that you mention in 6:18 he killed them without any mercy , women men and children that is how got that nickname

    • @jmgallo99
      @jmgallo99 Před rokem

      @@JamesSmith-ui2hv source: trust me bro.

  • @ilikeweezerwhataboutithuh

    Does anyone know what the painting on 8:02 is called?

  • @jcl2435
    @jcl2435 Před rokem

    Someday I plan to travel to this place, the southernmost place in the world, where the two oceans meet. By the way is the Patagonia another region or other way to call it?

    • @SignoreGalilei
      @SignoreGalilei  Před rokem

      Patagonia includes the area near the straits but also a good bit to the North as well.

    • @inutilsuverzivo
      @inutilsuverzivo Před rokem +2

      patagonia is a biogeographical region that starts in Puerto Montt at the chilean side and Rio Negro province at the argentinian side. Tierra del fuego is just the southernmost tip of the patagonia.
      in the chilean side, patagonia marks the end of the central valley and breaks the country into hundreds of fjords with rainy oceanic climate and dense vegetation. the argentinian side is completely different as it takes the form of a cold dry steppe

  • @genekelly8467
    @genekelly8467 Před rokem

    Fascinating. There was a small aboriginal habitation in the Falkland Islands-is much known about these people?

    • @SignoreGalilei
      @SignoreGalilei  Před rokem

      I don't think much is known about them, but I haven't read the literature myself.

    • @martindione386
      @martindione386 Před rokem

      there wasn't american natives in the FI, there were some remains found, but belonged to Tierra del Fuego natives brought to the islands by a British missionary during the 19th century

  • @RyanBile
    @RyanBile Před rokem

    Well done well done