Published in Wytfliet's important first atlas devoted to the New World, this fascinating map is cartographically important for a number of reasons. It is the earliest map to focus on the central region of Canada and features the earliest description of the Native American settlement of Hochelaga, which would become Montreal. A large inland sea, Lago de Conibas, is variously considered to be the first description of Hudson Bay, the remnants of the Verrazzano sea theory, a misplaced representation of the Great Lakes from indigenous sources, or is just entirely imaginary as are most of the rivers and place names on the map. A cluster of cities labeled Septem Civitates is located in the lower portion of the map, a reference to the fabled Seven Cities of Cibola, one of the myths that lured Spaniards into the far reaches of northern New Spain in the 1500s. This example is the third state with an unnamed island at the entrance to the inland sea and the city name, Higuater, above the 275° meridian at bottom. It was published in the third printing of Descriptionis Ptolemaicae Augmentum in 1597 and in all subsequent editions of Augmentum and Histoire Universelle des Indes Occidentales et Orientales… through 1615.