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In a double-landlocked country you must cross at least two national borders to reach a coastline connected to the world’s oceans.
In this episode we talk about the nuances of landlocked definitions (including why the Caspian Sea doesn’t count) and identify the only two double-landlocked countries: Liechtenstein, surrounded by Switzerland and Austria, and Uzbekistan, surrounded by landlocked “stans.”
We talk about why ports and sea access matter for trade and geopolitics. We also explore the ideas and definitions for landlocked US states (including Nebraska as “triple landlocked”), the furthest points from the sea, disputed borders, recursive islands, and a Google Maps oddity between the Shetlands and Faroe Islands. It's definitely one for maps and geography nerds!
References:
Tom mentions Tim Marshall's book, Prisoners of Geography
Jono also references some of his other sketches: Recursive Islands and Triple Landlocked States
We also reference the previous podcast episode on Antipodes for how so much of the Earth is water.
Episode Summary:
00:00 What Double Landlocked Means
04:17 The Only Two Countries
05:45 Caspian Sea and Definitions
06:53 Recursive Borders in UAE
08:33 Why Ports Matter
12:13 Bolivia and Africa Surprise
13:52 Distance From the Sea
18:02 Landlocked US States Debate
25:23 More Geography Oddities
28:48 Shetlands to Faroes Map Quirk
30:06 Closing Thoughts
Hosted on Acast. See acast.com/privacy for more information.
By Bell Boy Productions4
55 ratings
In a double-landlocked country you must cross at least two national borders to reach a coastline connected to the world’s oceans.
In this episode we talk about the nuances of landlocked definitions (including why the Caspian Sea doesn’t count) and identify the only two double-landlocked countries: Liechtenstein, surrounded by Switzerland and Austria, and Uzbekistan, surrounded by landlocked “stans.”
We talk about why ports and sea access matter for trade and geopolitics. We also explore the ideas and definitions for landlocked US states (including Nebraska as “triple landlocked”), the furthest points from the sea, disputed borders, recursive islands, and a Google Maps oddity between the Shetlands and Faroe Islands. It's definitely one for maps and geography nerds!
References:
Tom mentions Tim Marshall's book, Prisoners of Geography
Jono also references some of his other sketches: Recursive Islands and Triple Landlocked States
We also reference the previous podcast episode on Antipodes for how so much of the Earth is water.
Episode Summary:
00:00 What Double Landlocked Means
04:17 The Only Two Countries
05:45 Caspian Sea and Definitions
06:53 Recursive Borders in UAE
08:33 Why Ports Matter
12:13 Bolivia and Africa Surprise
13:52 Distance From the Sea
18:02 Landlocked US States Debate
25:23 More Geography Oddities
28:48 Shetlands to Faroes Map Quirk
30:06 Closing Thoughts
Hosted on Acast. See acast.com/privacy for more information.

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