Exploring the Early Americas

The Jay I. Kislak Collection

{ object_type: 'Exhibit Item',embed_type: 'image',embed_detail: 'http://www.myloc.gov/_assets/Exhibitions/EarlyAmericas/ExplorationsandEncounters/PizarroandtheIncas/Assets/object72_t_125.Jpeg',embed_alt: 'Chart of the Pacific Coast',thumbnail: {url: 'http://www.myloc.gov/_assets/Exhibitions/EarlyAmericas/ExplorationsandEncounters/PizarroandtheIncas/Assets/object72_t_125.Jpeg',alt: 'Chart of the Pacific Coast',height: '66',width: '125'} }

See Silverlight version of this item » About this item        

This is a portion of a sixteenth-century portolan (or sailing) chart of the Pacific Coast of Central and South America, showing the region from Guatemala to northern Peru. The names of coastal towns on the map are written in two different hands, dating the chart to the middle of the sixteenth century. This chart may be the first to represent the Galapagos Islands, shown in red just off the coast of what is present-day Ecuador.
This is a portion of a sixteenth-century portolan (or sailing) chart of the Pacific Coast of Central and South America, showing the region from Guatemala to northern Peru. The names of coastal towns on the map are written in two different hands, dating the chart to the middle of the sixteenth century. This chart may be the first to represent the Galapagos Islands, shown in red just off the coast of what is present-day Ecuador.