The extensive sandflats are the remains of a vast
sandur or outwash plain established by meltwaters as the last ice age waned. Sea-level was still some 3m below present day levels at the start of the
Holocene some 11,000 years ago. The Greek geographer and astronomer Claudius
Ptolemy (died c170 AD) referred in his writings to
Morikambe eischusis as a location on Britain's west coast, lying between the
Ribble and the
Solway. The sixteenth-century scholar
William Camden identified the locality as being near
Silloth, hence the
similar name of that bay but the eighteenth century antiquarian
John Horsley who translated Ptolemy into English in 1732 favoured it being the bay on the then
Lancashire—
Cumberland border. In 1771 historian
John Whitaker took up this latter suggestion and the name appeared on maps subsequently. The first recorded to do so being one associated with
Father Thomas West's
Antiquities of Furness of 1774. Camden believed the name originated with two words meaning
crooked sea whilst West offered up
white/beautiful haven though current thought is that it refers to a
curve of the sea. The bay has
quicksand and fast moving
tides. There have been royally appointed local guides (holding the post of
King's Guide to the Sands) for crossing the bay for centuries; appointment of guides is now delegated to a trust. This difficulty of crossing the bay added to the isolation of the land to its north which, due to the presence of the mountains of the Lake District, could only be reached by crossing these sands or by ferry, until the
Furness Railway was built in 1857. This skirts the edge of the bay, crossing the various estuaries. The
London-
Glasgow railway also briefly runs alongside the baythe only place where the
West Coast Main Line actually runs alongside the coast. The dangers presented by the bay were demonstrated in the 2004
Morecambe Bay cockling disaster when 23 illegal immigrants from China were drowned by an incoming tide, after being cut off while harvesting cockles. Criminal prosecution of the
gangmaster and his associates for manslaughter and aiding immigration offences resulted in terms of imprisonment. These
events were covered in a drama film and a non-fiction documentary. The incident has had a lasting effect on the community and estuary harvesting regulations. Morecambe Bay is also home to several of the UK's offshore wind farms:
West of Duddon Sands,
Burbo Bank,
Walney,
Barrow, and
Ormonde. ==Population==