Brasil has been charted on different maps at various locations, such as "a great Antarctic continent, extending to the South Pole, or a small island near the Arctic Circle; or.. the southern part of South America or.. the vicinity of the coast of Ireland..." Nautical charts identified an island called "Bracile" west of Ireland in the Atlantic Ocean in a
portolan chart by
Angelino Dulcert circa 1325, the Rex Tholomeus portolan chart circa 1360 and the
Catalan Atlas circa 1375. Later it appeared as in the Venetian map of
Andrea Bianco (1436), attached to one of the larger islands of a group of islands in the Atlantic. This was identified for a time with the modern island of
Terceira in the
Azores, where a volcanic mount at the bay of its main town,
Angra do Heroismo, is still named
Monte Brasil. A
Catalan chart of about 1480 labels two islands "Illa de brasil", one to the south west of Ireland and one south of "Illa verde" or
Greenland. In 1526, Roger Barlow translated
Martín Fernández de Enciso's into English and included the following description: {{Blockquote On maps the island was shown as being circular, often with a central
strait or river running east–west across its diameter. Despite the failure of attempts to find it, this appeared regularly on maps lying south west of
Galway Bay until 1865, by which time it was called "Brasil Rock". Several shallow water geographical features have been suggested as the site of the legendary Brasil, such as
Porcupine Bank, Yellow Ridge (), or
Rockall.
Map gallery File:El mar Mediterráneo en el Atlas catalán de Cresques Abraham.jpg|Catalan atlas from 1375 File:Piri Reis map of Europe and the Mediterranean Sea.jpg|
Piri Reis' map of Europe and the Mediterranean Sea from 1513 File:Europe map ca1570.jpg|Map of Europe from 1570 File:1595 Europa Mercator.jpg|
Gerardus Mercator's map from 1595 == Searches for the island ==