Pre-Columbian The earliest known humans to arrive on the coast found an arid landscape. There was some larger game, but archaeologists have found that they hunted mostly rabbits, hare, and rodents to supplement a wide range of foraged plants. After climatic changes around 5,000 BC, a greater number of stable waterways, lakes, shoals, and lagoons increased the viability of fishing, agriculture, and permanent settlements. Local plants were domesticated inland and made their way to the coast along rivers. Barrier islands began to form along the coast by around 1,000 BC, and the sea level rose about a meter to near modern levels. Native peoples around the gulf were using dugout canoes hollowed and carved from the trunks of felled trees when the first Europeans wrote accounts of the area. Archaeologists have found dugout canoes dating back to 0 AD, and suspect that earlier examples likely existed. In modern-day Florida, the eastern boundary of the gulf, archaeologists have found human remains dating back to 10,000 BC. At the close of the Ice Age around 9,000 BC, the climate in Florida began a gradual shift from a dry prairie to wetlands. By 3,000 BC, Florida had reached its modern wetland climate. From the
Florida Keys to the
mangrove islets, the peoples of the
Glades culture developed a complex society that relied heavily on fishing, harvesting wild shellfish, and gathering plants. The
Deptford culturestretching from
Cedar Key north along the
Florida panhandledeveloped a distinct kind of fired pottery. Along the gulf's northern shore, people developed stable lifestyles and villages throughout the first millennium AD. Archaeological research on several pre-agricultural sites showed a reliance on farming and harvesting shellfish like the
eastern oyster, likely timing their fishing to the annual cycles of high and low tides (when large quantities of oysters could be harvested in the mornings). Maize spread around the Gulf coast, likely as a trade good, as it was often adopted first by peoples who had already domesticated local plants. Off the coast of present-day
Veracruz and the
Yucatán Peninsula, the
Maya civilization used the Gulf
as a major trade route. They paddled in long dugout canoes, each carved from a single hardwood tree trunk, like Mahogany. Staying near the coast, Maya traders could navigate by onshore landmarks and lookout towers. Major ports included islands with natural harbors like
Isla Cerritos north of the Yucatan, and
Isla Mujeres where the Gulf meets the
Caribbean Sea. Mayan ports traded a variety of goods, typically trading coastal goods (such as seafood, salt, cotton, cacao, spices, feathers, and jaguar pelts) for highland goods (such as obsidian, basalt, and jade). Across the
Yucatan Channel from modern-day Mexico, the only significant Gulf coast not connected to mainland North America is northwestern Cuba. As a result, it was inhabited millennia later than the other regions. The earliest known site of human habitation is Levisa, dated to 3100 BC. After 2000 BC, there are more sites across a broader range. Concentrated in western Cuba, the
Guanahatabey culture and the Cayo Redondo culture centered around employed largely stone and shell tools.
Spanish exploration The Spanish voyages of
Christopher Columbus reached Cuba, but are not recorded entering the Gulf of Mexico. The
map of Juan de la Cosa, who saild with Columbus and later
Amerigo Vespucci shows a speculative body of water beyond Cuba. In 1506,
Hernán Cortés participated in the conquest of Hispaniola and Cuba, receiving a large estate of land and enslaving
Indigenous people for his efforts. In 1510, he accompanied
Diego Velázquez de Cuéllar, an aide to the governor of Hispaniola, on his expedition to conquer Cuba. In 1518, Velázquez put him in command of an expedition to explore and secure the interior of Mexico for colonization. In 1517,
Francisco Hernández de Córdoba discovered the Yucatán Peninsula. This was the first European encounter with an advanced civilization in the Americas, with solidly built buildings and complex social structures which they found comparable to those of the
Old World. They also had reason to expect that this new land would have gold. All of this encouraged two further expeditions, the first in 1518 under the command of
Juan de Grijalva, and the second in 1519 under the command of
Hernán Cortés, which led to the Spanish exploration, military invasion, and ultimately settlement and colonization known as the
Conquest of Mexico. Hernández did not live to see the continuation of his work: he died in 1517, the year of his expedition, as the result of the injuries and the extreme thirst suffered during the voyage, and disappointed in the knowledge that Velázquez had given precedence to Grijalva as the captain of the next expedition to Yucatán. In 1523, a
treasure ship was wrecked en route at
Padre Island, Texas. When word of the disaster reached Mexico City, the viceroy requested a rescue fleet and sent
Ángel de Villafañe from Mexico City, marching overland to find the treasure-laden vessels. Villafañe traveled to
Pánuco and hired a ship to transport him to the site, which that community had already visited. He arrived in time to greet García de Escalante Alvarado (a nephew of
Pedro de Alvarado), commander of the salvage operation, when Alvarado arrived by sea on July 22, 1554. The team labored until September 12 to salvage the Padre Island treasure. This loss, combined with other ship disasters around the Gulf of Mexico, led to a plan for establishing a settlement on the northern Gulf Coast to protect shipping and rescue castaways more quickly. As a result, the expedition of
Tristán de Luna y Arellano was sent and landed at
Pensacola Bay on August 15, 1559. On December 11, 1526,
Charles V of the
Holy Roman Empire granted
Pánfilo de Narváez a license to establish colonial settlements along the present-day Gulf Coast of the United States, known as the
Narváez expedition. The contract gave him one year to gather an army, leave Spain, be large enough to found at least two towns of 100 people each, and garrison two more fortresses anywhere along the coast. On April 7, 1528, they spotted land north of what is now
Tampa Bay. They turned south and traveled for two days, looking for a great harbor the master pilot Miruelo knew of. Sometime during these two days, one of the five remaining ships was lost on the rugged coast, but nothing else is known. In 1697, French sailor
Pierre Le Moyne d'Iberville was chosen by the Minister of Marine to lead an expedition to rediscover the mouth of the
Mississippi River and to settle
Louisiana, which French explorer
René-Robert Cavelier, Sieur de La Salle had named. The English coveted this region, however in 1682 it was named to honor King
Louis XIV of France. D'Iberville's fleet sailed from
Brest on October 24, 1698, reaching
Santa Rosa Island near
Pensacola; he sailed from there to
Mobile Bay and explored
Massacre Island. He anchored between
Cat Island and
Ship Island. On February 13, 1699, he went ashore at what is now
Biloxi, with his teenage brother
Jean-Baptiste Le Moyne de Bienville, and completed
Fort Maurepas on the northeast side of the Bay of Biloxi on May 1. Three days later, d'Iberville sailed for France leaving his brother Jean-Baptiste as second in command. The first permanent settlement, Fort Maurepas (now
Ocean Springs, Mississippi), was founded in 1699 by d'Iberville. By then the French had also built a small fort at the mouth of the Mississippi at a settlement they named
La Balize (or La Balize), "
seamark" in French. ==Geography==