Gulf watch
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I’ll check on this every week or so.
Google
Apple
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My guess is they’ll wait until the US Geological Survey officially changes the name.
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Is the Gulf of Mexico now considered its Deadname?
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I mean, the Gulf of Mexico was named by a country (Spain) that doesn't even live here, so GTFO. Plus, all of the countries surrounding it are part of the Americas, so really the name Gulf of America makes way more sense than naming it after a single country, and more specifically, after the Aztec/Mexica civilization who are clearly LOSERS, which we know Trump doesn't like. America...now that's a winner. Most of the time.
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Plus the US has the most gulf coastline... 1500 miles, compared to Mexico's 1100 miles. I can see it. Now if the USA takes over Canada or Greenland, that would have much more of an impact, mostly because I won't be living in the most northern state out of the lower 48.
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Why stop there? Washington is so old hat....
Link to video -
On the merits it seems weird. Europeans named it the Gulf of Mexico before the US was even founded.
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@89th said in Gulf watch:
Plus the US has the most gulf coastline... 1500 miles, compared to Mexico's 1100 miles.
The first time I checked that (yesterday) with Chat GPT and Grok, I got the same answer.
Yesterday, I started getting a different one.
ChatGPT
What is longer, the coastline of the us on the gulf o mexico or the coastline of mexico?
The coastline of the U.S. on the Gulf of Mexico is shorter than the coastline of Mexico. Here’s a comparison:
• U.S. Gulf of Mexico coastline: Approximately 1,631 miles (2,625 kilometers), spanning from Texas to Florida.
• Mexico’s Gulf of Mexico coastline: Approximately 2,000 miles (3,219 kilometers), stretching from the U.S. border in the northeast (Tamaulipas) to the Yucatan Peninsula.So, Mexico has a longer Gulf coastline.
Grok:
The coastline of Mexico on the Gulf of Mexico is longer than that of the United States. According to various data sources, Mexico has approximately 2,758 km (1,714 miles) of coastline along the Gulf of Mexico, while the United States has around 2,600 km (1,615 miles). Additionally, other sources confirm that Mexico has a slightly longer coastline with 1,743 miles compared to the U.S.'s 1,700 miles.
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I'm sure an official answer will come out when someone measures it again. From the eye, the US should have more... if anything for all the little deviations in the coastline in Florida and the Keys. Those add up. Trust me, in Minnesota, we are proud (besides Alaska) to have the most "coast line". If you include just Ocean and Lakes, we have more than California, we have more than Florida... LOL. If you include rivers, it's even better.
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@jon-nyc said in Gulf watch:
On the merits it seems weird. Europeans named it the Gulf of Mexico before the US was even founded.
A lot of those rinky-dink foreign nations that Britain used to own renamed themselves and their cities in an attempt to regain some kind of national pride. I guess you chaps are attempting to do the same, although naming your seashore after some Italian bloke seems a bit backward.
I also look forward to New York finally throwing off it's imperial past as per my previous suggestion.
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We just refer to it as The Gulf.
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@jon-nyc said in Gulf watch:
Europeans named it the Gulf of Mexico
Europeans?
Maybe the Europeans who came by way of the Alaskan land bridge about 15,000 years ago.
The name "Mexico" originates from the Nahuatl (Aztec) word "Mēxihco," which is believed to mean "the place of Mexi" or "the navel of the moon," referring to the Aztec capital Tenochtitlan's location on an island in Lake Texcoco, which was seen as the center of the world by the indigenous people; "Mexi" is thought to be related to the Aztec war god, Mexitli, who is associated with the moon.
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@jon-nyc said in Gulf watch:
My guess is they’ll wait until the US Geological Survey officially changes the name.
Or possibly until America's more serious problems have all been solved. So, maybe 2026?
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@Copper said in Gulf watch:
@jon-nyc said in Gulf watch:
Europeans named it the Gulf of Mexico
Europeans?
Maybe the Europeans who came by way of the Alaskan land bridge about 15,000 years ago.
The name "Mexico" originates from the Nahuatl (Aztec) word "Mēxihco," which is believed to mean "the place of Mexi" or "the navel of the moon," referring to the Aztec capital Tenochtitlan's location on an island in Lake Texcoco, which was seen as the center of the world by the indigenous people; "Mexi" is thought to be related to the Aztec war god, Mexitli, who is associated with the moon.
Nah, the Spaniards named it the Gulf of Mexico after they whooped up on the Aztecs but I guess felt bad enough to let them keep their name on the body of water.
Personally I'd rename it to Hurricane Alley.
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St. Petersburg, FL could be renamed New Leningrad.
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It’s Florida so just Leninsville.