Misplaced Pages

Drakes Bay

Article snapshot taken from Wikipedia with creative commons attribution-sharealike license. Give it a read and then ask your questions in the chat. We can research this topic together.

Coast Miwok was one of the Miwok languages spoken in California , from San Francisco Bay to Bodega Bay . The Marin and Bodega varieties may have been separate languages. All of the population has shifted to English.

#895104

5-548: Drakes Bay ( Coast Miwok : Tamál-Húye ) is a 4 mi (6 km) wide bay named so by U.S. surveyor George Davidson in 1875 along the Point Reyes National Seashore on the coast of northern California in the United States , approximately 30 mi (50 km) northwest of San Francisco at approximately 38 degrees north latitude . The bay is approximately 8 mi (13 km) wide. It

10-504: Is believed to be the site of Francis Drake's 1579 landfall (which he called New Albion ), and also the location where a Spanish Manila galleon sank during a storm in 1595. Both Drake and the Portuguese commander of the galleon, Sebastião Rodrigues Soromenho , interacted with the local Coast Miwok . There are fifteen archaeological sites on the bay of Miwok settlements where European trade goods have been found, including materials that

15-491: Is formed on the lee side of the coastal current by Point Reyes . The bay is named after Sir Francis Drake and has long been considered Drake's most likely landing spot on the west coast of North America during his circumnavigation of the world by sea in 1579. An alternative name for this bay is Puerto De Los Reyes. The bay is fed by Drake's Estero , an expansive estuary on the Point Reyes peninsula. The estuary

20-479: Is protected by Estero de Limantour State Marine Reserve & Drakes Estero State Marine Conservation Area . Point Reyes State Marine Reserve & Point Reyes State Marine Conservation Area lie within Drakes Bay. Like underwater parks, these marine protected areas help conserve ocean wildlife and marine ecosystems. A portion of the coastal area of Drakes Bay is archaeologically and historically important. It

25-539: The Miwok probably recovered from the wrecked galleon. The region was designated a National Historic Landmark District on October 17, 2012. Coast Miwok language According to Catherine A. Callaghan's Bodega Miwok Dictionary , nouns have the following cases , expressed with suffixes: present subjective , possessive , allative , locative , ablative , instrumental , and comitative . Sentences are most commonly subject-verb-object , but Callaghan says that "syntax

#895104