Jackalope Bay: Difference between revisions

From Black Rock Desert Wiki
Jump to navigation Jump to search
(Location from Information Packet. Details about second reading. Added Category: Pershing County)
(Michael Branch, NSBGN website)
Line 1: Line 1:
'''Jackalope Bay''' is a proposed name of the northeast arm of the small, unnamed playa to the west of the [[Blue Wing Mountains]].  The unnamed playa is not Blue Wing Flat.<ref>"[https://www.smithsonianmag.com/history/bureaucrats-who-rename-confederate-landmarks-180972774/ What’s in a Name? Meet the Government Employees Who Make the Call]," Michael Waters, Smithsonian Magazine, August 1, 2019.</ref>
'''Jackalope Bay''' is a proposed name of the northeast arm of the small, unnamed playa to the west of the [[Blue Wing Mountains]].  The unnamed playa is not Blue Wing Flat.<ref>"[https://www.smithsonianmag.com/history/bureaucrats-who-rename-confederate-landmarks-180972774/ What’s in a Name? Meet the Government Employees Who Make the Call]," Michael Waters, Smithsonian Magazine, August 1, 2019.</ref>


The idea was to promote the [https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Jackalope Jackalope], a mythical hybrid of a jackrabbit and an antelope.  Naming a bay on a dry lake was considered even more absurd.  The location is [https://geohack.toolforge.org/geohack.php?pagename=Blue_Wing_Mountains&params=40_24_26_N_119_1_57.5_W 40°24'26.0"N 119°01'57.5"W].<ref>"[https://clearinghouse.nv.gov/HTMLtoPDF/ViewSavedForms.aspx?DocLoc=SITE&DocKey=1112&ViewKey=Dvr75LCIZh Nevada State Board on Geographic Names Meeting Packet - January 8, 2019 - Reno ]". From the [https://clearinghouse.nv.gov/ch/publications/year/2019/type/2 2019 Informational Publication Records].</ref>
The idea was to promote the [https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Jackalope Jackalope], a mythical hybrid of a jackrabbit and an antelope.  Naming a bay on a dry lake was considered even more absurd.  The name was proposed by [https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Michael_P._Branch Michael P. Branch], an author and UNR faculty member.  Coincidentally, in 2021, the image used in the title of the Nevada State Board on Geographic Names [http://www.nbmg.unr.edu/geonames/index.html website] ([https://web.archive.org/web/20210418151959/http://www.nbmg.unr.edu/geonames/index.html archive.org]) showed Dry Lake and on the right side behind the word "Names" is the proposed Jackalope Bay.
 
The location is [https://geohack.toolforge.org/geohack.php?pagename=Blue_Wing_Mountains&params=40_24_26_N_119_1_57.5_W 40°24'26.0"N 119°01'57.5"W].<ref>"[https://clearinghouse.nv.gov/HTMLtoPDF/ViewSavedForms.aspx?DocLoc=SITE&DocKey=1112&ViewKey=Dvr75LCIZh Nevada State Board on Geographic Names Meeting Packet - January 8, 2019 - Reno ]". From the [https://clearinghouse.nv.gov/ch/publications/year/2019/type/2 2019 Informational Publication Records].</ref>


The first reading was in January, 2019.<ref>"[http://www.nbmg.unr.edu/geonames/Meeting_Minutes/1-8-2019_minutes.pdf Nevada State Board on Geographic Names Minutes]," January 8, 2019.</ref>
The first reading was in January, 2019.<ref>"[http://www.nbmg.unr.edu/geonames/Meeting_Minutes/1-8-2019_minutes.pdf Nevada State Board on Geographic Names Minutes]," January 8, 2019.</ref>

Revision as of 04:52, 28 December 2021

Jackalope Bay is a proposed name of the northeast arm of the small, unnamed playa to the west of the Blue Wing Mountains. The unnamed playa is not Blue Wing Flat.[1]

The idea was to promote the Jackalope, a mythical hybrid of a jackrabbit and an antelope. Naming a bay on a dry lake was considered even more absurd. The name was proposed by Michael P. Branch, an author and UNR faculty member. Coincidentally, in 2021, the image used in the title of the Nevada State Board on Geographic Names website (archive.org) showed Dry Lake and on the right side behind the word "Names" is the proposed Jackalope Bay.

The location is 40°24'26.0"N 119°01'57.5"W.[2]

The first reading was in January, 2019.[3]

At the second hearing in May 2019, the Nevada State Board on Geographic Names stated that they had received an objection from the Pershing County Commissioners and a motion for a third reading was passed.[4]

References

External links