
Originally Posted by
Hogarthde
So that then leads me to think the Great Australian Bight was named as such because the cartographer saw the similarity to the bight in a rope .
dave
I may be able to help with that. From the " Oxford companion to ships and the sea"
Bight 1 . The name by which a loop of a rope is known when it is folded or any part of a rope between its two ends when it lies, or hangs, in a curve or loop.
Bight 2. The area of sea lying between two promontories, being in general wider than a gulf and larger than a bay is also known as a bight.
Which brings us as to who named it.
The Great Australian Bight was first encountered by European explorers in 1627 when a Dutch navigator François Thijssen sailed along its western margins. The coast was later first accurately charted by the English navigator Matthew Flinders in 1802, during his circumnavigation of the Australian continent.
I’m pretty sure the dinosaurs died out when they stopped gathering food and started having meetings to discuss gathering food
A bookshop is one of the only pieces of evidence we have that people are still thinking
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