randy_byers: (2009-05-10)


State board adds Salish Sea to region's watery lexicon

OLYMPIA — Local tribes called it Whulge. George Vancouver named it for his buddy Peter. And now yet another name for Puget Sound is nearly official: the Salish Sea.

The Washington State Board on Geographic Names Friday voted 5-1 in favor of adding Salish Sea as an approved name for the body of water encompassing Puget Sound, the Strait of Juan de Fuca, the Strait of Georgia and the many watery connections in between.


Salish Sea (Wikipedia)

The term Salish Sea is a neologism for the inland waterway stretching from Tumwater, Washington to Quadra Island, British Columbia. Its first known use was in 1988: marine biologist Bert Webber from Bellingham, Washington, proposed that U.S. and Canadian authorities officially apply this name to what its proponents describe as a large, dilute, estuarial inland sea but is really a series of interconnected straits, sounds and inlets focussed on Puget Sound, the Strait of Georgia, and adjoining waterbodies, plus the Strait of Juan de Fuca which connects the Georgia-Puget Basin to the Pacific Ocean.

The waterbody in question was the central resource of the indigenous (First Nations and Native American) Coast Salish peoples who historically and presently inhabit the area, although the basin also includes territory of the Northern Wakashan Kwakwaka'wakw and Southern Wakashan peoples (the Nuu-chah-nulth, Makah, and Ditidaht) and, formerly, that of the Chemakum (who are now extinct).
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This morning as I was walking on campus, a guy on a bike hailed a guy walking next to me, and the two of them fell into conversation. I didn't hear the beginning of it, since they fell behind and then caught up with me, but I heard the guy on the bike say something about the Snoqualmie glacier.

The second guy replied, "There hasn't been any funding to study local glaciers for decades. It's all Greenland and Antarctica."

The guy on the bike said, "Well, King County wants a study of the possible impact of climate change, and they want it to be from creditable sources ..." And they wandered off ahead of me out of earshot.

And I thought, well, that was fast! Just recently King County Executive Ron Sims announced the formation of a King County Global Warming Team to study the impact of climate change on the county (which is where Seattle resides) and ways for the county to reduce carbon emissions. Clearly University of Washington researchers are being tapped to participate in the project.

And this reminded me that yesterday the Seattle Times ran an article about a University of Washington study using a computer simulation that indicates climate change could make the Puget Sound even more overcast than it is now, at least in the spring. It also indicates that we'd have more 90 degree days in the summer, so we'd really get the worst of both worlds. Earlier I saw an article about another study that said the Puget Sound will likely rise higher than the open ocean.

Okay, I'm still waiting for the bright side of all this news! Well, it's good that Sims (and also Seattle's mayor, Greg Nickels) are looking for ways to reduce emissions locally while the Feds whistle past the graveyard. (Gee, Greg, too bad you didn't support the monorail.)

Lately it seems we're in the midst of a poltical sea change on the issue, but then again it could just be a news cycle, I suppose.

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