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| Explorers
of The World |
| First
man on the Moon!
 |
| Neil
Alden Armstrong |
Neil
Alden Armstrong US astronaut,born in 1930 was the first
person to walk on the moon. In 1966, he and David R. Scott
performed the first successful docking of two vehicles in
space on the Gemini 8 mission.
Armstrong
has piloted NASA's Apollo 11 mission, which took off on
July 16, 1969. Armstrong and Edwin E. (Buzz) Aldrin, Jr.,
landed on the moon on July 20, 1969, in the lunar module
(landing in the Mare Tranquilitatis), while Michael Collins
orbited the moon in the command module. His famous words
upon his first step on the moon, were, "One small
step for man, one giant leap for mankind." Armstrong
and Aldrin explored the Moon's surface for about 2 hours.
On July 20, Neil Armstrong became the first person to set
foot on the Moon. In July 1969, as commander of the Apollo
11 lunar mission, he became the first person to step onto
the moon |
| Wilderness
Explorer
 |
| Colonel
Daniel Boone |
Colonel
Daniel Boone lived from 1734 to 1820 was a famous American
explorer as well as pioneer/ frontiersman. Through his explorations
Boone founded the first US settlement west of the Appalachian
mountains.
From 1769 to 1782 he explored the Kentucky wilderness and
traveled down the Ohio River, trapping furs in the Green
and Cumberland Valleys.
On
May 1, 1769, Boone, Finley, and four other men, started
out. They passed Cumberland Gap and on the 7th of June,
they set up camp at Station Camp creek. It was nearly two
years before Boone returned home, and during that time he
explored Kentucky as far west as the Falls of the Ohio,
where Louisville is now. There was another visit to Kentucky
in 1773, and in 1774 he built a cabin at Harrodsburg. On
this trip, Boone followed the Kentucky River to its mouth.
He lived in Missouri the rest of his life, although he twice
revisited Kentucky before he died at the age of 85.
He
was buried beside his wife in Missouri. A quarter of a century
later they were brought back to the Bluegrass and laid to
rest in Frankfort's cemetery. There they rest, on a bluff
above the river and town, on a "high, far-seeing place"
like the ones he always climbed to see the land beyond...a
monument to the new country in the wilderness which they
had helped to explore and settle.
|
| Columbus
the Navigator
 |
| Christopher
Columbus |
Christopher
Columbus (1451-1506),
was the son of a wool merchant and weaver, was born in Genoa,
Italy and went to sea at the age of 14. Following a shipwreck
off the coast of Portugal in 1470, he swam ashore and settled
in that country. Christopher Columbus became one of the
more famous Italian explorers sailed across the Atlantic
Ocean in 1492, hoping to find a route to India (in order
to trade for spices). Columbus never discover" North
America, and the regions he did explore were already inhabited.
He only discovered them from the viewpoint of the Europeans.
Between
1492-1504 he had made four trips to the Caribbean and South
America , sailing for King Ferdinand II and Queen Isabella
of Spain. On his first trip, Columbus led an expedition
with three ships, the Niña (his flagship), the Pinta,
and the Santa Maria with 90 crewmen. On October 12, 1492,
Columbus first saw the islands of the new world, landing
in the Bahamas. Later, he sailed to Cuba, Hispaniola (now
Haiti). The widely published report of his voyage of 1492.
Columbus's first voyage did prove one thing for sure, that
the earth was not only round, but that it was bigger than
he had thought
Columbus,
who never abandoned the belief that he had reached Asia,
led three more expeditions to the Caribbean. |
| The
Exploring Cook
 |
| James
Cook |
James
Cook (October 27, 1728 - February 14, 1779) Cook rose
rapidly through the ranks after joining the Royal Navy in
1755. Through sheer determination and ability, Cook rose
in his military career. After serving in several battles
against the French, his mapping abilities earned him a posting
as surveyor of Newfoundland. A British explorer and astronomer
he went on many expeditions to the Pacific Ocean, Antarctic,
Arctic, and around the world.
Captain
Cook is universally regarded as one of the most ambitious
explorers of all time - in particular, his three expeditions
in 1768-1771, 1772-1775, and 1776-1779 accomplished an impressive
list of "firsts," including the first European
sighting of Hawaii.
While
his exploration of the coast of Alaska in 1778 was not one
of his greatest accomplishments, it added an enormous amount
of information to the blank spots on the maps of the northern
coast. During this first voyage he conducted the first detailed
mapping of Tahiti and New Zealand.
Cook's first journey was from 1768 to 1771, when he sailed
to Tahiti in order to observe Venus as it passed between
the Earth and the Sun. During this expedition, he also mapped
northern Australia.
Cook's
second expedition (1772-1775) took him to Antarctica and
to Easter Island.
Cook
was the first ship's captain to stop the disease scurvy
(now known to be caused by a lack of vitamin C) among sailors
by providing them with fresh fruits. Before this, scurvy
had killed or incapacitated many sailors on long trips.
He managed to prove that a high level of cleanliness and
a proper diet, scurvy could be prevented, regardless of
the length of time spent at sea.
Cook
sailed again this time his last expedition in 1776 with
the mission of locating the Northwest Passage from the east.
In 1778 he visited and named the Sandwich Islands (Hawaii)
and unsuccessfully searched the northwest coast of North
America for a Northwest Passage. On the return voyage in
1779 Feb. 14, 1779, he was killed by natives at Kealakekua
Bay on the island of Hawaii. After he tried taking the local
chief hostage to get the natives to return a sailboat they
had stolen. Cook's body was dismembered and burned, but
the remains were returned to Captain Clerke, who had taken
over command on the Resolution and the expedition. On February
21, as much of Cook's remains as could be recovered were
buried at sea. |
Mt.
Everest Conquered
 |
| Edmund
Hillary & Tenzing Norgay |
Sir
Edmund Percival Hillary born in 1919 , Auckland, New
Zealand. He made his living as a beekeeper, It was in
New Zealand that he became interested in mountain climbing.
He climbed mountains in New Zealand, then in the Alps,
and finally in the Himalayas, where he climbed 11 different
peaks of over 20,000 feet. The world's highest mountains
.
Tenzing
Norgay, born Namgyal Wangdi, (1919-1986) was a Nepalese
professional mountaineer from a Sherpa village. During World
War II (1939-1945) expeditions to Everest became scarce,
but Norgay continued to climb in other places. He successfully
climbed Nanda Devi, Tirich Mir, and Nanga Parbat. In 1952,
with his sights still on Everest's peak, Norgay accompanied
a Swiss expedition to Everest, not as a sherpa but as a
fellow climber. During that expedition, Norgay climbed to
a height of 28,260 feet.
Mt.
Everest lies between Tibet and Nepal.
On
May 29, 1953, Edmund Hillary and Tenzing Norgay, became
the first to reach the roof of the world Mount Everest (Chomolungma)
. Mount Everest is the highest mountain in the world (29,028
feet = 8,848 m). Their climb was made from the Nepalese
side. Hillary became a hero of the British empirethe
news reached London just in time for Elizabeth II's coronationand
Norgay was touted as a symbol of national pride by three
separate nations: Nepal, Tibet, and India.
While
Hillary was knighted by Queen Elizabeth II for his achievement,
Norgay became a worldwide celebrity, and received honors
from world leaders and heads of state. Norgay's achievement
became not only a victory for himself, but for Asia as well.
Tenzing Norgay climbed to Everest's summit many times during
the 20 years following his and Hillary's successful climb. |
| Undersea
explorer
Jacques-Yves
Cousteau (1910-1997) was a French undersea explorer,
environmentalist, and innovator. In 1943, Cousteau and the
French engineer Emile Gagnan invented the AquaLung®,
a breathing apparatus that supplied oxygen to divers and
allowed them to stay underwater for several hours. Cousteau
traveled the world's oceans in his research vessel "Calypso,"
beginning in 1948. (Calypso was a converted 400-ton World
War 2 minesweeper)
In
the next four decades, Calypso sailed literally around the
world exploring and filming the planet. Cousteau's popular
TV series, films and many books [including "The Living
Sea" (1963), and "World Without Sun" (1965)].
The Undersea World of Jacques Cousteau introduced the public
to a world of sharks, whales, dolphins, sunken treasure,
and coral reefs. In 1974, Cousteau started the Cousteau
Society to protect ocean life.
Jacques
Cousteau produced more than 115 films, which have won numerous
Emmys and other awards, including three full-length theatrical
feature films: The Silent World (Oscar and Palme d'Or),
World Without Sun (Oscar and Grand Prix du Cinéma
Français pour la Jeunesse) and Voyage to the Edge
of the World
Cousteau was awarded the Medal of Freedom by President
Reagan in 1985 and in 1989 |
| Exploring
the Orient
Marco
Polo, 12541324,was a Venetian (Italian) explorer
who travelled through Central Asia and China.
His
father, Niccolò Polo, and his uncle, Maffeo Polo,
had made (125360) a trading expedition to Constantinople.
A war blocked their return, and they journeyed eastward
to reach Kublai Khan's eastern capital at Kaifeng in 1266.
They
returned to Venice in 1269, and in 1271 they left with Marco
for Kublai's court. The party reached Cambuluc (modern Beijing)
in 1275.
Marco
Polo became a favorite of the khan, who employed him on
business in central and N China and in the states of SE
Asia, including India. For three years he apparently ruled
a Chinese city (Yangchow). In 1292 the travelers, acting
as escort for a wife of the khan of Persia, left Kublai's
realm and were back in Venice in 1295. Marco Polo soon joined
the Venetian forces fighting Genoa and was taken prisoner
(1296).
During
his two-year captivity he dictated an account of his travels.
The prologue of the work tells of Polo's life. The remainder
of the book describes places he had visited and heard of
and recounts the customs of the inhabitants. Polo made reference
to much of Asia, including the Arab world, Persia, Japan,
Sumatra, and the Andaman Islands, and to E Africa as far
south as Zanzibar.
He
told of paper currency, asbestos, coal, and other phenomena
virtually unknown in Europe. Polo was wonder-struck at Asian
splendors and was sometimes credulous of exaggerated accounts,
but scholars agree that his accurate reports of the events
he witnessed and people he met are of great value. During
the Renaissance it was the chiefalmost the soleWestern
source of information on the East. Despite the fact that
many claim his book to be unreliable, it was a sort of regional
geography of Asia
Marco
Polo died in 1324 when he was 70 years old. On his death
bed, he said "I didn't tell half of what I saw,
because no one would have believed me." |
| The
Cold North Pole Reached
Robert
Edwin Peary, American arctic explorer lived
18561920, In
1881 he entered the U.S. navy as a civil engineer and for
several years served in Nicaragua, where he was engaged
in making surveys for the Nicaragua Canal.
He became
interested in arctic exploration and made a trip to the
interior of Greenland in 1886; later (189192), having
secured a leave of absence from the navy, he led an expedition
to Greenland for scientific study and exploration. Important
ethnological and meteorological observations were recorded,
a long sled journey to the northeast coast of Greenland
was made, Peary Land was explored, and the insularity and
approximate northerly extension of Greenland were confirmed.
He made
eight Arctic voyages before becoming the first person to
reach the North Pole, on 6 April 1909.
Granted
another leave of absence from naval duty, he again led an
expedition (18981902), this time to search for the
North Pole. He was only able to reach lat. 84°17'N,
but he made important surveys of Ellesmere Land and a study
of the surface and drift of the polar ice pack. His Nearest
the Pole (1907) recorded the events of his 19056 expedition,
when he attained lat. 87°6'N, which was only c. 174
mi (280 km) from his objective.
On March
1, 1909 he and his entourage of 23 men, 133 dogs, and 19
sleds set off from Ellesmere Island for his third and final
quest of the North Pole. By the time April 6, 1909, rolled
around, only six men, Peary, Henson, and four Eskimos --
Oatah, Egingwah, Seegloo, and Ookeah -- were left to witness
the planting of the American flag on the North Pole.
Peary's
wife, Josephine Diebitsch Peary,. 18631955, accompanied
him on several of his expeditions and gave birth in the
arctic to Peary's daughter, Marie Ahnighito Peary.
His
tombstone today bears the Latin inscription: "Inveniam
Viam Aut Facium," meaning "I shall find a way
or make one." These words describe Peary's quest to
find the North Pole, and his staunch determination to overcome
all obstacles. |
| Conquering
the Explorations
Alexander
the Great or Alexander III, 356323 B.C., king of Macedon,
conqueror of much of Asia.
Though
he only lived 33 years, he conquered most of the world known
by the Ancients. Upon one occasion when he needed a bridge,
his troops knocked down a nearby village and threw it into
the river, thus providing a means of passage. But, you know,
that's why they call him Great.
In his
youth, Alexander was tutored by none other than Aristotle.
Alexander
captured Gaza, the main spice entrepot for the whole Middle
East. As always, he sent presents home to his mother and
his sister.
Alexander
would wear the sacred clothes of the gods at dinner-parties,
sometimes the purple cloak, the slippers and horns of Ammon,
sometimes the dress of the goddess Artemis, which he would
often wear even on his chariot... Sometimes, he would also
dress as Hermes, especially at parties when he would wear
the winged sandals and the broad hat and hold a caduceus
in his hand: often he carried a lion-skin and a club, like
Heracles. |
| Race
for the South Pole
 |
|
Roald Amundsen |
Roald
Amundsen (Roald Engelbregt Grauning Amundsen), (18721928)
Norwegian polar explorer; the first person to reach the
South Pole.
He then
purchased Fridtjof Nansen's Fram and prepared to drift toward
the North Pole and then finish the journey by sledge.
The
news that Robert E. Peary had anticipated him in reaching
the North Pole caused Amundsen to consider going south ,the
Antarctic region instead. Another team led by an Englishman,
Robert Scott was also heading to the South Pole. The race
to reach the South Pole began.
Amundsen
spent three months preparing supplies for the trip. He set
out with four men, four sledges and forty-eight dogs. Scott
was using motor sleighs and ponies for travelling. Amundsen
knew that the motors in Scotts sleighs would break
down in the fierce cold. In January 1911 Amundsen and Scott
set off on their journey to the South Pole. Amundsens
companions had to wear dark goggles to protect their eyes
from the glare of the bright sun on the white snow. They
had to wear many different layers of clothing. During the
journey blizzards slowed them down and their noses and cheeks
froze.
At last
on the 14 th of December 1911 Amundsen and his four companions
- Hansse, Hassel, Bjaaland and Wisting - pushed the flag
of Norway in the snow. It had taken ninety-nine days to
travel 3000 kilometers across the snow. When Amundsen reached
home he was a Hero! His book, My Life as an Explorer,
told people all about his many adventures
He was
successful in reaching the South Pole on Dec. 14, 1911,
after a dash by dog team and skis from the Bay of Whales
(an inlet of Ross Sea). He arrived there just 35 days before
Robert F. Scott. This story he told in The South Pole (tr.
1913). In the course of these expeditions, he added much
valuable scientific and geological information to the knowledge
of Antarctica.
Amundsen
teamed up with Lincoln Ellsworth in 1925 and failed to complete
a flight across the North Pole, but the next year in the
dirigible Norge, built and piloted by Umberto Nobile, they
succeeded in flying over the pole and the hitherto unexplored
regions of the Arctic Ocean N of Alaska. A bitter controversy
followed with Nobile as to the credit for the success. Yet
in 1928, when Nobile crashed in the Italia, Amundsen set
out on a rescue attempt that cost him his life. |
| Medieval
Explorer
 |
| Ibn
Batuta |
Ibn Batuta lived somewhere between 13041378, Muslim
traveler. Batuta was born in Tangier, Morocco. His full
name was Muhammad ibn Abdullah ibn Batuta (also spelled
Battuta). He was educated in Islamic law and religion, and
began traveling in 1325.No other medieval traveler has journeyed
so extensively.
In 30
years ( from 1325 to 1354) he made a series of journeys
recorded in a dictated account.At age 20 he traveled overland
in North Africa and Syria to make the pilgrimage to Mecca
which is now Saudia Arabia. Afterward he visited Arabia,
Mesopotamia, Persia, and Asia Minor. He made a journey by
way of Samarkand to India, where he resided for almost eight
years at the court of the sultan of Delhi, who sent him
to China as one of his ambassadors.He covered a total of
75,000 miles visiting the equivalent of 44 modern countries
in all.
Ibn
Batuta visited the Maldives, the Malabar coast, Ceylon (Sri
Lanka), and Sumatra. He returned in 1350 to Tangier. Later
he went to Spain, then to Morocco, and from there he crossed
the Sahara to visit Timbuktu and the Niger River. Batuta
is still considered a most reliable source for the geography
of his period and an authority on the cultural and social
history of Islam.
Near
the end of Ibn Battuta's own life, the Sultan of Morocco
insisted that Ibn Battuta dictate the story of his travels
to a scholar and today we can read translations of that
story called "Rihla - My Travels". It has served
as a valuable and interesting record of places which add
to our understanding of the Middle Ages. |
| The
Early Circumnavigator
 |
| Ferdinand
Magellan |
Ferdinand
Magellan a Portuguese navigator lived from 14801521,
Born of a noble family, he was reared as a page in the royal
household. He served (150512) in Portuguese India
under Francisco de Almeida and later under Alfonso de Albuquerque.
The
first circumnavigation of the globe was led by Ferdinand
Magellan. Magellan believed he could get to the Spice Islands
by sailing west. He knew he would have to sail around or
through the
New
World to do so. Like so many explorers before him, he thought
the earth was much smaller than it actually is.
While
in service (151314) in Morocco, he was accused of
financial irregularities; he lost the favor of Manuel I,
who rejected his proposal to reach the Moluccas by a western
route. In 1517 he went to Spain, where his plan was approved
(1518) by Charles I (later Holy Roman Emperor Charles V).
Portuguese
efforts failed to prevent the voyage.
In September
Sept. 20,1519, he set sail with 270 in his fleet The Trinidad,
the San Antonio, the Concepcion, the Victoria, and the Santiago.
Magellan sailed from Sanlúcar de Barrameda Sighting
the South American coast near Pernambuco, he searched for
the suspected passage to the South Sea. In Jan., 1520, the
Río de la Plata was explored. While wintering in
Patagonia (Mar.Aug., 1520), he summarily put down
a mutiny of some of his officers.
On Oct.
21, Magellan discovered and entered the strait which bears
his name, and on Nov. 28 he reached the Pacific. Since not
one storm was encountered during that period, they named
the ocean "Pacific," meaning "peaceful."
His fleet, by then consisting of three vessels, the Concepción,
the Trinidad, and the Victoria, sailed NW across the Pacific.
No land was sighted for nearly two months, no provisions
obtained for three; the men suffered intensely.
Magellan
reached the Marianas and on Mar. 6, 1521, the Philippines,
where he was killed (Apr. 27) while supporting one group
of natives against another. Soon after, the Concepción
was burned as unseaworthy, but the remaining two vessels
visited Borneo and then the Moluccas, where they loaded
spices. The Trinidad sailed for Panama but was wrecked;
only four of her crew eventually reached Spain. The Victoria,
commanded by Juan Sebastián del Cano, sailed across
the Indian Ocean and rounded the Cape of Good Hope. The
Portuguese detained 13 of her crew at the Cape Verde Islands,
but finally, with only 18 men, she reached Sanlúcar
on Sept. 6, 1522, thus completing the first voyage around
the world.
Although
he did not live to complete the journey, Magellan provided
the skill and determination that took the vessels over the
great unknown portion of the globe, one of the greatest
achievements of navigation. The voyage proved definitely
the roundness of the earth, it revolutionized ideas of the
relative proportions of land and water, and it revealed
the Americas as a new world, separate from Asia.Though Magellan's
route proved impractical for the spice trade, his voyage
has been called the greatest single human achievement on
the seas. |
| The
British Explorer
 |
| Sir
Francis Drake |
Sir
Francis Drake lived (1545-1596) was a British explorer,
slave-trader, privateer
Drake
grew up in a seafaring atmosphere. While still a boy he
worked as a sailor. When he was 20 he sailed with his cousin,
Sir John Hawkins, to Guinea on the west coast of Africa
to obtain slaves. He rose to command a ship under Hawkins
and was with him when Spaniards attacked the fleet off the
port of Veracruz in Mexico. All but two of the English ships
were destroyed in this battle, and Drake lost nearly everything
he possessed. Drake never forgave the Spanish for their
treachery on this occasion or for their cruel treatment
of their English prisoners. He devoted the rest of his life
to a relentless war against Spain. Drake gathered together
his own band of adventurers and made three profitable voyages
to the New World, plundering Spanish settlements and destroying
Spanish ships.
Drake
led the second expedition to sail around the world in a
voyage lasting from 1577 to 1580 (Magellan led the first
voyage around the world).
Among
many adventures, the 'famous voyage', his successful circumnavigation
of the world between 1577 and 1580.
In
1577 Francis Drake set sail from England with a handful
of small ships on what became one of best known but least
understood circumnavigations of the world. The primary destination
was the Pacific coast of South America, the private and
incredibly rich domain of Spain.
Drake
set out sailing with five ships. He intended to pass through
the Strait of Magellan, near the southern tip of South America,
and then explore the waters he had seen from the Isthmus
of Panama. When the straits were passed, Drake's ship, the
Golden Hind,pushed on alone, the other vessels having either
turned back or been lost. As he went up the coast, he plundered
Spanish settlements in Chile and Peru and captured treasure
ships bound for Panama
In June,
1579, Drake landed off the coast of present-day California
and sailed as far north as the area that would become the
United States-Canadian border. He then turned southwest
and crossed the Pacific Ocean in two months time. It took
another year to make his way through the Indies, across
the Indian Ocean, around the Cape of Good Hope and back
to England.
Upon
arrival, the Queen knighted Drake aboard the Golden Hind.
|
| Great
Viking Exploration
 |
|
Leif Ericsson |
Leif
Ericsson (also spelled Eriksson) the Lucky (980?-1020?)
was a Viking (Norse) explorer
The
Vikings were great explorers who lived between the 8th and
11th centuries. Many of them lived in Iceland and Norway
and were known for their fanciful boat and seamanship skill.
He was
possibly the first European to sail to North America. Leif
sailed north from the southern tip of Greenland, then went
south along the coast of Baffin Island down to Labrador,
and then landed in what is now called Newfoundland (which
he called Vinland). Ericsson sailed around the year 1000.
Ericsson was born in Iceland and was one of the sons of
the explorer Eric the Red.
Ericsson
sailed for North America in the year 1000 with a crew of
35. He landed in what is probably southern Baffin Island
(which he called Helluland, meaning the "land of the
flat stone"). He then went on the what is now Labrador
(which he called Markland, meaning "forest land").
In 1001 they reached Vinland (perhaps the southern tip of
Newfoundland), where remains of an ancient Norse settlement
have been found). Ericsson and his crew returned to Greenland
in the spring of 1002. |
| In
Search of a Route
 |
|
Vasco da Gama |
Vasco
da Gama (1460-1524) was a Portuguese explorer who discovered
an ocean route from Portugal to the East.
In the
winter of 1497-1498, a Portuguese explorer named Vasco da
Gama made a voyage that forever changed the balance of trade
around the world. A fleet of ships under his command was
the first to sail from Europe to Asia around the Cape of
Good Hope on the southern trip of Africa. At that time,
many people thought that this was impossible to do because
it was assumed that the Indian Ocean was not connected to
any other seas.
Da Gama's
patron was King Manuel I of Portugal, who sent da Gama,
then an Admiral, on another expedition to India (1502-1503).
After King Manuel's death, King John III sent da Gama to
India as a Portuguese viceroy (the King's representative
in India). Da Gama died in India in 1524.
Vasco
da Gama returned to Lisbon in 1499 with a cargo of spices
that pad for his expedition's coast sixty times over.
Before
the discovery of this new route, Europeans has been dependent
of traders in the Middle east who brought spices from Asia
partway by sea, then by long overland caravan treks.
|
| Dr
Livingstone, I presume?
 |
|
David Livingstone |
David
Livingstone (1813-1873) was a British missionary and
explorer who explored the interior of Africa. He arrived
as a misionary in Africa in 1841, but began to explore the
land in 1853.
Dr.
David Livingstone (1813-1873) was one of the greatest explorers
of the African continent, along the way pioneering the abolition
of the slave trade.
For
over two decades he traveled over land, walking across the
continent, and exploring the Zambezi River. He searched
for the source of the Nile River. Livingstone was the first
European to see the enormous Victoria Falls.
Few
Europeans have contributed as much to the exploration of
Africa as this missionary named David Livingstone.
Although
popular among native tribes in Africa, Livingstone made
enemies of some white settlers there because he learned
African languages and had an unusually keen understanding
and sympathy for native people and cultures. In 1843, while
settling the Mabotsa valley, Livingstone shot a lion. Before
it died, however, the lion attacked Livingstone, costing
him the use of his left arm.
While
he was exploring the interior of the continent in the 1860s
his last and most famous journey. He lost his medicine,
animals and porters, but struggled on almost alone and his
long absence became a matter of international concern, Livingstone
was thought to be dead (because of rumors started by deserters
of his expedition). Then the New York Herald sent explorer
Henry M. Stanley with supplies to find him in 1869.
Stanley
finally found Livingstone in November 10, 1871 in the village
of Ujiji, a small town on Lake Tanganyika. He greeted Livingstone
with the famous words, "Dr. Livingstone, I presume."
These were the first words spoken by a white man that the
famous British explorer David Livingstone had heard in five
years. With Stanley's supplies Livingstone continued his
explorations, but he was weak, worn out and suffering from
dysentery.
Livingstone
died a year later in Africa. On the morning of April 30,
1872, his two African assistants found him kneeling at his
bedside, dead. They dried his body and carried it and his
papers on a dangerous 11-month journey to Zanzibar, a trip
of 1,000 miles.His heart was buried there, but his body
was buried in Westminster Abbey, London, England. |
| The
Deepest Explorer
 |
|
Jacques Ernest-Jean Piccard |
Jacques
Ernest-Jean Piccard (1922- ) is a Swiss ocean explorer
and scientist who was the first person to go to the deepest
parts of the Pacific Ocean.
On January
23, 1960, he and U.S. Navy Lt. Don Walsh descended over
35,802 feet or 7 miles (10,912 m) in a pressured bathyscape,
called Trieste which withstood over 16, 000 pounds per square
inch of water pressure (more than a thousand times greater
than the pressure at sea level).
The
bathyscape was built by Piccard and his father, Auguste
Piccard (1884-1962), a notable Belgian physicist and inventor.
They went to the bottom of the Challenger Deep of the Marianas
Trench (200 miles southwest of Guam), the deepest place
on Earth. The trip took five hours.
Piccard
and Walsh touched down onto the floor of the very deepest
part of the ocean where Piccard reported seeing a fish swimming
by. The divers then released the steel shot, and began their
rise to the surface.
The
Trieste was later used to locate the sunken nuclear submarine
U.S.S. Thresher, and collected photos and other data from
another sunken submarine, U.S.S. Scorpion, but it would
never again touch the bottom of the sea. The original Trieste
is now on display at the Navy Museum in Washington, DC. |
| El
Dorado
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| Sir
Walter Raleigh |
Sir
Walter Raleigh (1554-1618) was a British explorer, poet,
historian, and soldier.
Raleigh
led expeditions to both North America and South America;
he was trying to found new settlements, find gold, and increase
trade with the New World.
The
first voyage, in 1584, was commanded by members of Raleghs
own household. In 1585, Raleigh sent colonists to the east
coast of North America; Raleigh later named that area Virginia,
in honour of Elizabeth, the Virgin Queen.
He is
often credited with bringing tobacco and potatoes from the
New World to Britain, but they were already known there.
Indian
tales of a fabulous city of gold, Eldorado, in the South
American interior caught the adventurers fancy, and
led him to explore further at great peril. Although he did
discover gold mines, he was unable to obtain funding for
further expeditions inland . El Dorado, was this 'Golden
Land' situated somewhere beyond the mouth of the Orinoco
river in Guiana, now Venezuela. After his release from the
Tower, Ralegh took an expedition there and tried without
success to get evidence of this gold, but had to abandon
his plans. It was only after the death of Queen Elizabeth
that he was ordered back to Guiana on a mission for King
James.
Sir
Walter Raleighs adventurous life in 16th century England
focuses on his seafaring explorations of the Americas
Raleigh
was later executed by King James I for treason. |
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