The Atlantic Ocean got its name because ancient sailors thought it was a big, wide river that connected to a faraway land.
Long ago, when people traveled by boat, they noticed a huge body of water stretching out from the Mediterranean Sea. They called this new sea the "Atlantic," which came from the Greek word Atlantis, a mythical island in a story about a powerful king named Atlas.
Why "Atlantic" Makes Sense
Imagine you're drawing a picture with a wide, long river on your paper. That's kind of what the ancient Greeks saw when they looked at the ocean. They thought it was like a huge river flowing from their world to another land, maybe even the one where Atlas lived!
So instead of calling it something new and strange, they used a name that made sense to them: Atlantic.
A Modern Comparison
Think about it like this: if you had a big bathtub full of water, and you poured more water into it from another room, you might call that new flow a “big river” too. That’s what the ancient sailors did, they just used a name that felt familiar to describe something huge and new.
Examples
- A child learns that the Atlantic Ocean got its name from ancient Greek sailors who thought it was a sea between two lands.
- A parent explains how Roman explorers gave the ocean its name because they saw it as something far away.
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