" as an alternative name for the Aethiopian Ocean in a 1700 map of Africa
Ancient Greek historians
Diodorus and
Palaephatus mentioned that the
Gorgons lived in the
Gorgades, islands in the Aethiopian Sea. The main island was called Cerna and, according to
Henry T. Riley, these islands may correspond to
Cape Verde. '' during the
Age of Discovery. On 16th-century maps, the name of the Northern Atlantic Ocean was
Sinus Occidentalis, while the central Atlantic, southwest of present-day
Liberia, appeared as
Sinus Atlanticus and the Southern Atlantic as
Mare Aethiopicum. By the 17th century,
John Seller divided the Atlantic Ocean in two parts by means of the
equator. He named the northern portion of the Atlantic "Mar del Nort" and the southern part "Oceanus Æthiopicus" in his
Atlas Maritimus published in 1672.
Edward Wright did not label the North Atlantic at all but called the portion south of the
equator the "Aethiopian Sea" in a map that was published posthumously in 1683.
John Thornton used the term in "A New Map of the World" from 1703. Decades after the terms Ethiopian Ocean or Ethiopian Sea had fallen into disuse to refer to the Southern Atlantic Ocean, botanist
William Albert Setchell (1864–1943) used the term for the sea around certain islands close to
Antarctica. ==See also==