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Related: About this forumThis 509-year-old map contains the first known use of the word 'America' but not where you may thi
This 509-year-old map contains the first known use of the word 'America' but not where you may think
[center]1507
Universalis Cosmographia
The known world, and introducing "America"
by Alex Q. Arbuckle
The east coast of South America, the first known instance of "America" being used in a document.
Image: Library of Congress [/center]
In April 1507, German cartographer Martin Waldseemüller published his Universalis cosmographia secundum Ptholomaei traditionem et Americi Vespucii aliorumque lustrationes, or The Universal Cosmography according to the Tradition of Ptolemy and the Discoveries of Amerigo Vespucci and others.
It was the first known map to feature parts of the New World labeled America, derived from the Latin version of Vespuccis first name.
Vespucci had traveled up and down the east coast of South America a few years earlier, finding it to extend much farther south than previously thought a whole new continent.
Composed of 12 separate woodcut prints, the map was meant to be assembled and hung on a wall. Using a modified Ptolemaic projection, Waldseemüller aimed to reconcile the recent discoveries of Vespucci and others with existing knowledge.
More:
http://mashable.com/2016/12/24/universalis-cosmographia/
That is awesome. Truth, proof and no Rethuglicans to make it disappear. So nice to see something that will send the feeble minded Baggers to loose their their shit.
tenorly
(2,037 posts)[center]
Camarones, Argentina.
The late René Eggmann's tulip farm near Esquel, Argentina.
Torres del Paine National Park, Chile.
Lake Nahuel Huapi, Argentina.[/center]
Igel
(35,296 posts)He's using a strange projection.
Cleaned up, it's just S. America, not Patagonia per se.
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Waldseem%C3%BCller_map
aidbo
(2,328 posts)Brother Buzz
(36,410 posts)You know, all those fly over states between the east and west coasts. Especially the ones that start with a vowel.