Magdalena Bay

Magdalena Bay
Bahía Magdalena
Magdalena Bay
Coordinates 24°35′N 112°00′W / 24.583°N 112.000°W / 24.583; -112.000Coordinates: 24°35′N 112°00′W / 24.583°N 112.000°W / 24.583; -112.000
Ocean/sea sources Pacific Ocean
Max. length 50 km (31 mi)

Magdalena Bay (Spanish: Bahía Magdalena) is a 50 km long bay in Comondú Municipality along the western coast of the Mexican state of Baja California Sur. It is protected from the Pacific Ocean by the unpopulated sandy barrier islands of Isla Magdalena and Isla Santa Margarita.

Ecology

This bay is particularly noted for the seasonal migration of the California gray whales that come here during winter to mate. The bay is also popular for commercial and sports fishing. Nearby mangrove swamps provide sanctuaries for sea birds. The bay includes the small fishing port of San Carlos, as well as Puerto López Mateos, which provides a good place to observe the whales.

Islands

Sandy barrier islands Isla Magdalena and Isla Santa Margarita separate the bay from the Pacific Ocean. Magdalena, mostly to the north and facing northwest, is a long, slender, segmented island that rejoins the coast a few miles north. Its area is 231 km2 (89 sq mi).

Santa Margarita, to the south, parallels the southwest-facing coast and has an area of 314 km². On its inland side is Puerto Cortés, the only settlement on either island, the site of a naval base administered from the 2nd Military Naval Region in Ensenada, Baja California. It has a military-only airstrip and no official registered population.

History

"Man of War Cove", Magdalena Bay, March 1908

As early as 1837 American whaleships visited the bay to cooper their oil and hunt sperm whales outside the bay. Between 1845-46 and 1865–66, American, as well as a few French, Dutch, and Russian, whaleships hunted gray whales in the bay during their winter calving season.[1][2] They primarily caught cows and calves, but began catching bulls as the former became scarce. During the peak years from the winters of 1855-56 to 1864-65, an estimated 1,250 gray whales were caught in the bay, with a peak of about 250 whales taken by seventeen vessels in the winter of 1856-57.[1] They also visited the bay to obtain wood, catch fish and turtles, and harvest oysters.[3]

In 1908, an American fleet of sixteen battleships on a cruise around the world, the Great White Fleet, stopped in the Bay and carried out gunnery practice.

In 1912, there were rumors that Japan tried to purchase the harbor from Mexico.[4] Barbara Tuchman's book The Zimmerman Telegram mentions both the German kaiser as well as the Japanese Emperor were attempting to utilize this bay and perhaps Whale Bay for military naval purposes.

References

  1. 1 2 Henderson, David A. (1972). Men & Whales at Scammon's Lagoon. Los Angeles: Dawson’s Book Shop.
  2. Storfursten Constantin, of Helsinki, winters of 1858-59 and 1859-60. In Lindholm, O. V., Haes, T. A., & Tyrtoff, D. N. (2008). Beyond the frontiers of imperial Russia: From the memoirs of Otto W. Lindholm. Javea, Spain: A. de Haes OWL Publishing.
  3. Tiger, of Stonington, Nov. 19, 1846-Feb. 25, 1847, George Blunt White Library; Bowditch, of Warren, Oct. 14, 1847-Feb. 18, 1848, Nicholson Whaling Collection.
  4. "Japan and International Coaling Stations," The Advocate of Peace (1894-1920), Vol. 73, No. 5 (May, 1911), p. 98.
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