@BTebbitt8564@cbnewham@sola_chad No, in Hebrew the place is the Yam Suf (Sea of Reeds, an area of lakes and marshes that still exists) that is between Goshen where the Hebrews lived and the eastern wilderness of Shur. Read Beitzel's book.
@BTebbitt8564@cbnewham@sola_chad It says Wikipedia right at the end. The other bit is from some unknown Canadian site, it seems. Hardly scholarly. Read the book.
@BTebbitt8564@cbnewham@sola_chad Be careful what you read on Wikipedia. I do research in the Red Sea. Such an underwater bridge or saddle does not exist. Read Barry Beitzel's "Where was the Biblical Red Sea?"