Timeline of European exploration
The following timeline covers European exploration from 1418 to 1957.
The 15th century witnessed the rounding of the feared Cape Bojador and Portuguese exploration of the west coast of Africa, while in the last decade of the century the Spanish sent expeditions to the New World, focusing on exploring the Caribbean Sea, and the Portuguese discovered the sea route to India. In the 16th century, various countries sent exploring parties into the interior of the Americas, as well as to their respective west and east coasts north to California and Labrador and south to Chile and Tierra del Fuego. In the 17th century, the Russians explored and conquered Siberia in search of sables, while the Dutch roughly charted the emerging continent of Australia. The 18th century saw the first extensive exploration of the South Pacific and the discovery of Alaska, while the nineteenth was dominated by exploration of the polar regions (not to mention excursions into the heart of Africa). By the 20th century, the poles themselves had been reached.
15th century
- 1418 – João Gonçalves Zarco and Tristão Vaz Teixeira discover Porto Santo.[1]
- 1419 – Gonçalves and Vaz discover Madeira.[1]
- 1427 – Diogo de Silves discovers the Azores.[1]
- 1434 – Gil Eanes passes Cabo de Não and rounds Cape Bojador.[2]
- 1443 – Nuno Tristão passes Cape Blanco.[1]
- 1444 – Dinis Dias reaches the mouth of the Senegal River.[3]
- 1446 – The Portuguese reach Cape Verde and the Gambia River.[3]
- 1456 – Alvise Cadamosto and Diogo Gomes explored the Cape Verde Islands.[1]
- 1460 – Pêro de Sintra reaches Sierra Leone.[1]
- 1470 – Cape Palmas is passed.[3]
- 1472 – Fernão do Pó discovers Bioko.[4]
- 1473 – Lopo Gonçalves is the first to cross the equator.[3][4]
- 1474–75 – Ruy de Sequeira discovers São Tomé and Príncipe.[4]
- 1482 – Diogo Cão reaches the Congo River, where he erects a "padrão" (pillar of stone).[4]
- 1485–86 – Cão reaches Cape Cross, where he erects his last padrão.[4]
- 1487–92 – Pêro da Covilhã travels to Arabia, down to the mouth of the Red Sea, eastward by sail to the Malabar Coast (visiting Calicut and Goa); later sails down the east coast of Africa (visiting the trading stations of Mombasa, Zanzibar, and Sofala); on his return he visits Mecca and Medina before reaching Ethiopia in search of the mythical Prester John.[5]
- 1488 – Bartolomeu Dias rounds the "Cape of Storms" (Cape of Good Hope).[4]
- 1492 – Christopher Columbus discovers the Bahamas, Cuba, and "Española" (Hispaniola).[6]
- 1493–94 – Columbus discovers Dominica and Guadeloupe, among other islands of the Lesser Antilles; also discovers Puerto Rico and Jamaica.[6]
- 1497 – John Cabot discovers Newfoundland.[7]
- 1497–98 – Vasco da Gama sails to India and back.[3]
- 1498 – Columbus discovers the mainland of South America.[6]
- 1499 – Alonso de Ojeda explores the South American mainland from about Cayenne (in modern French Guiana) to Cabo de la Vela (in modern Colombia), discovering the mouths of the Orinoco and entering Lake Maracaibo.[2]
- 1499 – Amerigo Vespucci discovers the mouth of the Amazon River and reaches 6°S, in present-day northern Brazil.[8]
- 1499 – João Fernandes Lavrador, together with Pêro de Barcelos, sight Labrador.[9]
- 1499 – Gaspar and Miguel Corte-Real reach and map Greenland.[10]
16th century
- 1500 – Vicente Yáñez Pinzón reaches the northeast coast of what today is Brazil at a cape he names "Santa Maria de la Consolación" (Cabo de Santo Agostinho) and sails fifty miles up a river he names the "Marañón" (Amazon).[2]
- 1500 – Pedro Álvares Cabral makes the "official" discovery of Brazil,[2] leading the first expedition that united Europe, America, Africa, and Asia.[11][12]
- 1500 – João Fernandes reaches Cape Farewell, Greenland ("Tiera del Lavrador", or Land of the Husbandman).[7]
- 1500–02 – Gaspar and Miguel Corte Real discover and name the coasts of "Terra Verde" (likely Newfoundland) and Labrador.[7][10]
- 1500-01 – Diogo Dias discovers Madagascar and reaches the gate of the Red Sea, the Bab-el-Mandeb Strait.[2]
- 1500 – Rodrigo de Bastidas explores the Colombian coast from Cabo de la Vela to the Gulf of Urabá.[2]
- 1501-02 – Gonçalo Coelho discovers "Rio de Janeiro" (Guanabara Bay).[2]
- 1502–03 – Columbus explores the North American mainland from Guanaja off modern Honduras to the present-day border of Panama and Colombia.[2][6]
- 1505 – Juan de Bermúdez discovers Bermuda.[2]
- 1506 – Lourenço de Almeida reaches the Maldives and Sri Lanka.[13]
- 1506 – Tristão da Cunha discovers the island of Tristan da Cunha.
- 1509 – Diogo Lopes de Sequeira reaches Sumatra and Malacca.[14]
- 1511 – Duarte Fernandes leads a diplomatic mission to Ayutthaya Kingdom (Siam or Thailand).[15]
- 1511 – Rui Nunes da Cunha leads a diplomatic mission to Pegu (Burma or Myanmar).[15][16]
- 1511–12 – João de Lisboa and Estevão de Fróis discover the "Cape of Santa Maria" (Punta Del Este) in the River Plate, exploring its estuary, and traveling as far south as the Gulf of San Matias at 42ºS, in present-day Uruguay and Argentina (penetrating 300 km (186 mi) "around the Gulf").[17][18]
- 1511–12 – António de Abreu sails through the Strait of Malacca, between Sumatra and Bangka, and along the coasts of Java, Bali, Lombok, Sumbawa, and Flores to the "Spice Islands" (Maluku).[19]
- 1513 – Jorge Álvares lands off the coast of China, on Nei Lingding Island at the Pearl River Delta.[1]
- 1513 – Vasco Núñez de Balboa crosses the Isthmus of Panama and reaches the Bay of San Miguel, discovering the "Mar del Sur" (Pacific Ocean).[2]
- 1513 – Juan Ponce de León discovers "La Florida" (Florida) and the Yucatan.[2]
- 1514–15 – António Fernandes reaches present-day Zimbabwe.[20]
- 1515 – Gonzalo de Badajoz crosses the Isthmus of Panama at the site of Nombre de Dios, reaching as far as the interior of the Azuero Peninsula.[21]
- 1516 – Juan Díaz de Solís explores the River Plate estuary and names it "La Mar Dulce" ("The Fresh-Water Sea").[2]
- 1516 – Portuguese traders land in Da Nang, Champa, naming it Cochinchina (modern Vietnam).[22][23]
- 1518 – Lorenço Gomes reaches Borneo.[24]
- 1518 – Juan de Grijalva explores the Mexican coast from "Patouchan" (Champotón) to just north of the Pánuco River.[2]
- 1519 – Hernán Cortés travels from Villa Rica de la Vera Cruz to the Aztec capital of Tenochtitlan on Lake Texcoco.[25]
- 1519 – Alonzo Alvarez de Pineda sails around the Gulf of Mexico to the Pánuco, proving its insularity; also discovers the "Father of Waters" (the Mississippi).[2]
- 1519 – Gaspar de Espinosa sails west along the west coasts of modern Panama and Costa Rica as far as the Gulf of Nicoya.[21]
- 1519–22 – Ferdinand Magellan's expedition completes the first circumnavigation of the globe, exploring the coast of Patagonia and discovering and traversing the Strait of Magellan.[26]
- 1521 – Francisco Gordillo and Pedro de Quexos find the mouth of a river they name "Rio de San Juan Bautista" (perhaps Winyah Bay at the mouth of the Pee Dee River in modern South Carolina).[27]
- 1521 – Cristóvão Jacques explores the Plate River and discovers the Parana River, entering it for about 23 leagues (around 140 km), to near the present city of Rosario.[28]
- 1522 – Gil González Dávila explores inland from the Gulf of Nicoya, discovering Lake Nicaragua, while his pilot Andrés Niño explores along the coast to the west, discovering the Gulf of Fonseca and perhaps reaching as far as the southwestern coast of modern Guatemala.[21]
- 1524 – Giovanni da Verrazzano explores the eastern seaboard of the present United States from about Cape Fear to Maine; discovers the mouth of the Hudson River.[7]
- c. 1524 – Aleixo Garcia travels westward from Santa Catarina, across the Paraná (perhaps sighting Iguazu Falls) to the Paraguay near the site of Asunción, then across the Gran Chaco to the Andes and the Inca frontier, somewhere between Mizque and Tomina in modern Bolivia.[29]
- 1524–25 – Francisco Pizarro and Diego de Almagro explore from Punta Piña (7° 56’ N) on the southern coast of Panama to the San Juan River (4° N), on the west coast of Colombia.[30]
- 1525 – Estêvão Gomes probes Penobscot Bay, Maine.[27]
- 1525 – The Portuguese reach "Celebes" (Sulawesi).[31]
- 1525 – Diogo da Rocha and Gomes de Sequeira discover the Caroline Islands.[32]
- 1526 – Alonso de Salazar discovers the Marshall Islands (Bokak Atoll).[33]
- 1526–28 – Pizarro and his pilot Bartolomé Ruiz explore the west coast of South America from the San Juan River south to the Santa River (about 9° S), becoming the first to sight the coasts of Ecuador and Peru.[30]
- 1526–27 – Jorge de Menezes discovers New Guinea.[34]
- 1527–28 – Sebastian Cabot explores several hundred miles up the Paraná River, past its confluence with the Paraguay.[2]
- 1528 – Diogo Rodrigues explores the Mascarene Islands (which he names after Pedro Mascarenhas), naming the islands of Réunion, Mauritius, and Rodrigues.[35]
- 1528–36 – Álvar Núñez Cabeza de Vaca and three others are the only survivors of a group of several hundred colonists who travel from the coast of western Florida to the Rio Sinaloa in northern Mexico, where they encounter Spanish slavers.[36]
- 1531 – Diego de Ordaz ascends the Orinoco to the Atures rapids, just past its confluence with the Meta.[29]
- 1532–33 – Pizarro explores and conquers inland to Cajamarca and Cuzco.[29]
- 1533 – Fortún Ximénez finds the tip of Baja California.[37]
- 1534 – Jacques Cartier explores the Gulf of St. Lawrence, discovering Anticosti Island and Prince Edward Island.[7]
- 1535 – Fray Tomás de Berlanga discovers the Galapagos Islands.[38]
- 1535 – Cartier ascends "La Grande Rivière" or "La Rivière de Hochelaga" (the St. Lawrence River) to the village of Hochelaga (present-day Montreal).[7]
- 1535–37 – Diego de Almagro leads en expedition from Cuzco to the south, taking the Inca highway to the southwest shore of Lake Titicaca, through the altiplano and the Salta valley to Copiapó; a detachment continues south to the Maule River. Almagro takes the coastal route back, through the Atacama Desert.[29]
- 1539 – Francisco de Ulloa sails to the head of the Gulf of California and around Baja California to Cedros Island, establishing that Baja is a peninsula.[37]
- 1539–43 – Hernando de Soto's expedition explores much of the modern American South, becoming the first to cross the Appalachians (over the Blue Ridge Mountains) and the Mississippi.[2][27]
- 1540–42 – Francisco Vásquez de Coronado searches for the mythical Seven Cities of Cibola, only to find villages of mud and thatch. He sends out smaller parties, one of which, under García López de Cárdenas, discovers the Grand Canyon; another finds a city of gold called Quivira (in modern Kansas), which Coronado later visits — although he finds no gold.[27]
- 1540 – Hernando de Alarcón ascends the Colorado River to the confluence of the Gila River (near present-day Yuma, Arizona).[37]
- 1541–42 – Francisco de Orellana sails down the length of the Amazon.[39]
- 1542–43 – Juan Rodriguez Cabrillo explores the coasts of modern Baja and California from Punta Baja to the Russian River, discovering the Channel Islands; after his death, his second-in-command, Bartolomé Ferrer, reaches Point Arena.[40]
- 1542 or 1543 – Fernão Mendes Pinto, Diogo Zeimoto and Cristovão Borralho reach Tanegashima, Japan.[1]
- 1543 – Ruy López de Villalobos discovers three islands (Fais, Ulithi and Yap) in the Carolines and eight atolls (Kwajalein, Lae, Ujae, Wotho, Likiep, Wotje, Erikub and Maloelap) in the Marshall Islands.[33]
- 1543 – Jean Alfonce explores up the Saguenay River, believing it to be "la mer du Cattay".[7]
- 1553 – Hugh Willoughby seeks a Northeast Passage over Russia; reaches either Kolguyev Island or Novaya Zemlya.[41]
- 1556 – Steven Borough reaches as far as Kara Strait, between Novaya Zemlya and Vaygach Island.[41]
- 1557–59 – Juan Fernández Ladrillero and Cortés Hojea explore the Chilean coast from Valdivia (39° 48’ S) to Canal Santa Barbara (54° S); the former passes through the western entrance of the Strait of Magellan to its eastern entrance and back.[2]
- 1565 – Miguel López de Legazpi discovers Mejit, Ailuk and Jemo in the Marshall Islands, while his subordinate Alonso de Arellano discovers Lib in the same island group, as well as five islands (Oroluk, Chuuk, Pulap, Sorol and Ngulu) in the Caroline Islands.[33]
- 1568 – Álvaro de Mendaña discovers the Solomon Islands.[3]
- 1576 – Martin Frobisher discovers "Meta Incognita" ("the unknown bourne"; Baffin Island) and what he believes to be a passage to Cathay: "Frobishers Streytes" (Frobisher Bay).[7]
- 1577–80 – Sir Francis Drake completes the second circumnavigation of the globe.[42]
- 1578 – Frobisher sails part way up the "Mistaken Straites" (Hudson Strait).[7]
- 1581–82 – Yermak Timofeyevich and his men cross the Ural Mountains and reach as far as Isker on the banks of the Irtysh (near modern Tobolsk).[43][44]
- 1585 – John Davis explores Davis Strait, reaching 66°40′ N; also sails up Cumberland Sound, thinking it to be a "passage to Cathay".[7]
- 1587 – Davis sails up the west coast of Greenland as far as 72°46′ N (about modern Upernavik).[7]
- 1592 – Davis discovers the Falkland Islands.[45]
- 1595 – Mendaña discovers the Marquesas.[3]
- 1596 – Willem Barentsz discovers Spitsbergen.[46]
17th century
- 1600–01 – Prince Miron Shakhovskoi and D. Khripunov descend the Ob to the Ob Estuary and ascend the Taz River, establishing the ostrog of Mangazeya about 161 kilometres (100 mi) to 240 kilometres (150 mi) from its mouth.[44][47]
- 1602–06 – Bento de Góis travels overland from India to China, via Afghanistan and the Pamirs.[48]
- 1605 – Ketsk serving men ascend the Ket, portage to the Yenisei, and descend it to its confluence with the Sym.[49]
- 1606 – Willem Janszoon discovers Australia at the mouth of the Pennefather River on the western coast of the Cape York Peninsula, exploring its coast from Badu Island south to Cape Keerweer (13°58′ S).[50]
- 1606 – Pedro Fernandes de Queirós discovers Espiritu Santo, the largest island in what is now the nation of Vanuatu.[50]
- 1606 – Luís Vaz de Torres sails through the strait that now bears his name.[50]
- 1607 – Mangazeyan promyshlenniki and traders reach the lower Yenisei, establish Turukhansk, and ascend the Lower Tunguska, while Ketsk serving men ascend the Yenisei to the Angara, which they also ascend.[49]
- 1607 – Henry Hudson coasts the east coast of Greenland, naming "Hold-with-Hope" (around 73° N).[51]
- 1609 – Hudson sails the Halve Maen up the Hudson River as fall north as present day Albany, New York.[52]
- 1610 – Étienne Brûlé ascends the Ottawa River and reaches Lake Nipissing and Georgian Bay in Lake Huron.[53]
- 1610 – Kondratiy Kurochkin leads an expedition, sailing in kochi, from Turukhansk to the mouth of the Yenisei and east to the mouth of the Pyasina on the Taymyr Peninsula.[41][44]
- 1610 – A detachment from Mangazeya ascends the Yenisei a further 640 kilometres (400 mi) to its confluence with the Sym.[49]
- 1610–11 – Hudson sails through Hudson Strait into Hudson Bay, where he overwinters in James Bay.[54]
- 1611 – Mangazeyan men reach the Khatanga.[55]
- 1612–13 – Thomas Button is the first to explore the western shores of Hudson Bay, where he winters in the mouth of the Nelson River; also discovers Coats and Southampton Islands.[56]
- 1614 – Whalers discover Jan Mayen.[57]
- 1615–16 – Étienne Brûlé sights the western shore of Lake Ontario, descends the Niagara River, explores what are now parts of modern New York and Pennsylvania, and descends the Susquehanna River to Chesapeake Bay.[53]
- 1616 – Jacob Le Maire and Willem Schouten discover and name Le Maire Strait, Staten Island, and Cape Horn; also discover Tonga (Niuafo'ou, Niuatoputapu, and Tafahi), Futuna and Alofi (in modern Wallis and Futuna), and several islands in the Tuamotu (Takaroa, Takapoto, Manihi, Ahe and Rangiroa) and Bismarck Archipelagos (including New Hanover and New Ireland).[2][33]
- 1616 – Robert Bylot and William Baffin reach 77°30′ N, enter Baffin Bay, discover Smith, Jones, and Lancaster Sounds and sight the coasts of Ellesmere, Devon, and Bylot Islands.[58]
- 1616 – Dirk Hartog explores some 576 kilometres (358 mi) of coastline (the coast of Western Australia from about 22° to 28° S), discovering Dirk Hartog Island and Shark Bay.[59]
- 1617 – English walrus hunters sight the southern coast of "Sir Thomas Smith's Island" (Nordaustlandet).[46]
- 1618 – Pedro Páez is believed to be the first European to see and describe the source of the Blue Nile in Ethiopia.[60]
- 1618 – Lenaert Jacobszoon discovers an "island" at 22° S (the coast of Western Australia from Point Cloates to North West Cape).[50]
- 1619 – Frederick de Houtman sights the coast of Western Australia near Fremantle and sails along the coast north for over 640 kilometres (400 mi).[50]
- 1620 – Mangazeyan serving men reach the Vilyuy River and descend it to its confluence with the Lena.[49]
- 1621–23 – Étienne Brûlé and his companion Grenolle travel along the North Channel of Lake Huron (probably sighting Manitoulin Island) to "Grand Lac" (Lake Superior) via St. Mary's River.[53]
- 1622 – The Dutch ship Leeuwin discovers land near present-day Cape Leeuwin.[59]
- 1623 – Jan Carstenszoon discovers the western coast of Cape York Peninsula from Cape Keerweer to the southern mouth of the Gilbert River; while his consort Willem Joosten van Colster discovers "Arnhemsland" and "Speultsland" (modern Arnhem Land and perhaps Groote Eylandt).[59][61]
- 1624 – António de Andrade crosses the Himalayas through the Mana Pass and reaches Tibet.[48]
- 1627 – Jesuit missionaries Estêvão Cacella and João Cabral cross the Himalayas and are the first to enter Bhutan.[48][62]
- 1627 – François Thijssen, accompanied by Pieter Nuyts, discovers over 1,609 kilometres (1,000 mi) of coastline east of Cape Leeuwin to the eastern end of the Great Australian Bight.[50]
- 1628 – Cabral is the first to enter Nepal.[48]
- 1628 – Gerrit Frederikszoon de Witt captain of the Vianen discovers "Witsland" about 21° S, sailing 320 kilometres (200 mi) along the coast and discovering Barrow Island and parts of the Dampier Archipelago.[59]
- 1628–30 – Vasilii Bugor ascends the Upper Tunguska and portages to the upper Lena, descending it to its confluence with the Kirenga.[44][49]
- 1631–32 – Luke Foxe and Thomas James, in separate expeditions, both circumnavigate Hudson Bay in search of a Northwest Passage; Foxe sails through the channel and into the basin now named after him to 66°47′ N, while James winters in the bay named after him.[56]
- 1632–33 – Pyotr Beketov descends the Lena as far as its great bend, erects the ostrog Yakutsk, and sends a detachment some 720 kilometres (450 mi) downriver (where the zimovie Zhigansk is built) and another east up the Aldan as far as the Amga (which they also ascend in search of yasak).[44][47]
- 1633–34 – Jean Nicolet discovers Lake Michigan and likely reaches Green Bay, Wisconsin.[63]
- 1633–38 – Ilya Perfilyev and Ivan Rebrov sail from Zhigansk in kochi some 800 kilometres (500 mi) downriver to the mouth of the Lena and sail along the coast east and west, reaching the mouths of the Olenyok, Yana, and Indigirka rivers.[44][64]
- 1638–40 – Poznik Ivanov crosses the Verkhoyansk Range into the upper reaches of the Yana, and then portages over the Chersky Range into the Indigirka River system.[44][64]
- 1639–40 – Maksim Perfilyev ascends the Vitim River to the Tsipa, which he also ascends (until rapids force him to turn back), becoming the first Russian to enter Transbaikal.[44]
- 1639–41 – Ivan Moskvitin ascends the Maya, portages across the Dzhugdzhur Mountains, and descends the Ulya to the Sea of Okhotsk; two groups are sent to the north and south, reaching the mouths of the Taui and Uda rivers, respectively.[43][44]
- 1641 – Dmitri Zyrian discovers the Alazeya, which he ascends as far as the tree line.[44]
- 1642–43 – Abel Tasman discovers "Anthony van Diemenslandt" (Tasmania) and "Staten Landt" (New Zealand); following year discovers "'t Eylandt Amsterdam" (Tongatapu), Fiji and New Britain.[33][59]
- 1643 – Kurbat Ivanov reaches the western shores of Lake Baikal, opposite Olkhon.[65]
- 1643 – Maarten Gerritsz Vries sails along the eastern coast of "Yezo" (Hokkaidō), between Iturup and Urup, to Sakhalin.[3]
- 1643 – Vasiliy Sychev discovers the Anabar, where he establishes the zimovie Anabarskoye.[55][66]
- 1643–45 – Vassili Poyarkov crosses the Stanovoy Range and descends the Zeya to the Amur, which he follows to its mouth; from here, he coasts along the Sea of Okhotsk to the Ulya (on the way sighting the Shantar Islands).[67]
- 1644 – Tasman maps the northern coast of Australia, connecting "Nova Guinea" (the Cape York Peninsula) with "the land of D'Eendracht" (Western Australia).[59]
- 1644 – Mikhail Stadukhin reaches the Kolyma.[44]
- 1644–47 – Ivan Pokhabov is the first to ascend the Angara to Lake Baikal, which he crosses to the Selenga; he later ascends it and reaches Urga (in present-day Mongolia).[44][47]
- 1646 – Isaya Ignatyev reaches Chaunskaya Bay.[41]
- 1648–49 – Semyon Dezhnyov sails from the Kolyma, rounds Cape Dezhnev (thus proving Asia and America are separate), and reaches the Anadyr River, which he ascends for some 563 kilometres (350 mi) (here he builds the zimovie Anadyrsk).[43]
- 1649–51 – Yerofey Khabarov ascends the Olyokma River, crosses the northern Yablonoi Mountains, and descends the Amur to its confluence with the Songhua.[43][67]
- 1650 – Stadukhin and Semen Motora travel from the Kolyma, across the Anyuyskiy Range, to Anadyrsk.[43]
- 1651–57 – Stadukhin travels from Anadyrsk to the mouth of the Penzhina River, then west along the northern coast of the Sea of Okhotsk to Okhotsk.[44][64]
- 1653–54 – Beketov ascends the Khilok, crosses the southern Yablonoi Mountains, and descends the Ingoda and Shilka rivers to the latter's confluence with the Nercha (where his men build the ostrog Nerchinsk).[44]
- 1654 – Médard Chouart des Groseilliers explores the entire western shore of Lake Michigan.[68]
- 1659 – Groseilliers and Pierre-Esprit Radisson explore the southern shore of Lake Superior as far west as Chequamegon Bay.[68]
- 1661 – Johann Grueber and Albert Dorville are the first to visit Lhasa.[69]
- 1669 – Robert de la Salle discovers the Ohio, descending it as far as the Falls of Ohio at the site of modern Louisville, Kentucky.[70]
- 1673 – Louis Jolliet and Jacques Marquette reach the upper Mississippi, descending it to its confluence with the Arkansas; also discover the Missouri.[70]
- 1675 – Anthony de la Roché discovers South Georgia.
- 1682 – Robert de La Salle descends the "Rivière de Colbert" (Mississippi) to its mouth.[70]
- 1688–89 – Jacques de Noyon discovers Rainy Lake and Lake of the Woods.[68]
- 1690–92 – Henry Kelsey travels from York Factory southwestward, probably reaching the Saskatchewan and the headwaters of the Assiniboine—in the process becoming the first European to see the Canadian Prairies.[68]
- 1696 – Luka Morozko travels almost halfway down the west coast of Kamchatka, reaching the Tigil River.[64]
- 1697–99 – Vladimir Atlasov reaches as far as the Golygina River on the southwest coast of Kamchatka, from which he sights Atlasov Island; also crosses the Sredinny Range (twice), reaching Olyutorsky Gulf and the Kamchatka River.[44][64]
18th century
- 1706 – Mikhail Nasedkin reaches Cape Lopatka and sights Shumshu, northernmost of the Kuril Islands.[64]
- 1710 – Yakov Permyakov discovers Bolshoy Lyakhovsky Island.
- 1713 – Ivan Kozyrevsky reaches Shumshu and Paramushir.[64]
- 1714 – Étienne de Veniard, Sieur de Bourgmont ascends the Missouri as far as the Platte, becoming the first to enter the present-day Nebraska.[27]
- 1720 – Pedro de Villasur travels from Santa Fe, through what is now part of southeastern Colorado, to the lower Platte in eastern Nebraska.[27]
- 1722 – Jakob Roggeveen discovers "Paasch Eiland" (Easter Island) and Tutuila and Upolu.[71][72]
- 1728 – Vitus Bering sails through the strait that now bears his name; also discovers and names Saint Lawrence Island.[41]
- 1732 – Mikhail Gvozdev discovers the "Large Country" (Alaska).[67]
- 1734 – Jean Baptiste de La Vérendrye discovers Lake Winnipeg.[68]
- 1734–37 – Stepan Muravev and Mikhail Pavlov chart the Russian coast from Arkhangelsk to just east of the Pechora, while Stepan Malygin charts it from there to the Ob River, including the Yamal Peninsula.[43]
- 1735–36 – Vasili Pronchishchev charts the Russian coast from the Lena west to the Khatanga.[43]
- 1737 – Dmitry Ovtsyn charts the Russian coast from the mouth of the Ob to the Yenisei.[43]
- 1738 – Pierre de La Vérendrye visits Mandan villages near the site of present-day Bismarck, North Dakota.[73]
- 1738–40 – Fyodor Minin charts the Russian coast from the Yenisei to the Pyasina.[43]
- 1739 – Jean Bouvet de Lozier discovers "Cape Circumcision" (Bouvet Island).[74]
- 1739–41 – Dmitry Laptev charts the Russian coast from the Lena to just east of the Kolyma.[43]
- 1741 – Bering sights Mount St. Elias, the entrance of Prince William Sound, the Alaska Peninsula (from Cape Providence to Chignik Bay) and several of the Aleutian Islands (discovering Great Sitkin, Atka, and Kiska), as well as discovering Kayak, Montague, Hinchinbrook, Sitkalidak, and the Shumagin and Commander Islands; his second-in-command, Aleksei Chirikov, sights Mounts Fairweather and Douglas and discovers Noyes and Baker Islands (both off the west coast of Prince of Wales Island), as well as Baranof, Chichagof, Kruzof, Yakobi, Kodiak, Afognak, the Aleutian Islands (Umnak, Adak, Agattu, Attu, and the Islands of Four Mountains), and the Kenai Peninsula.[75]
- 1741–42 – Khariton Laptev and Semion Chelyuskin chart the Taymyr Peninsula, with the latter reaching Cape Chelyuskin, the northernmost point of Asia.[43]
- 1742 – Christopher Middleton discovers Wager Bay and Repulse Bay.[76]
- 1742–43 – Louis-Joseph Gaultier de La Vérendrye and his brother François reach the Big Horn Mountains of modern Wyoming; on their return they reach the vicinity of present-day Pierre, South Dakota.[73][77]
- 1747 – Jeremiah Westall discovers Chesterfield Inlet and sails about sixty miles up it.[76]
- 1761–62 – William Christopher sails 370 kilometres (230 mi) into Chesterfield Inlet to the western end of Baker Lake.[76]
- 1767 – Samuel Wallis discovers "King George's Land" (Tahiti).[78]
- 1769 – José Ortega discovers San Francisco Bay.[37]
- 1769–70 – James Cook circumnavigates both islands of New Zealand, proving they aren't part of Terra Australis Incognita; also discovers the east coast of Australia from Cape Howe to Cape York.[78]
- 1771–72 – Samuel Hearne reaches the Coppermine, descending it to what would become known as Coronation Gulf; the following year, on his way back, he becomes the first to sight and cross Great Slave Lake.[27]
- 1772 – Yves-Joseph de Kerguelen-Trémarec discovers the Kerguelen Islands.[74]
- 1772 – Pedro Fages sights the Sierra Nevada.[79]
- 1773 – Ivan Lyakhov reaches Kotelny Island.[41]
- 1773–75 – Cook is the first to cross the Antarctic Circle, reaching 71° 10’ S, thus finally disproving the existence of Terra Australis Incognita; also discovers New Caledonia and the South Sandwich Islands.[78]
- 1774 – Juan José Pérez Hernández explores the western coast of North America from Cape Mendocino northwards, discovering the Queen Charlotte Islands, Vancouver Island, and Dall Island.[80]
- 1775 – Bruno de Heceta discovers the mouth of the Columbia River; his consort Juan Francisco de la Bodega y Quadra discovers Prince of Wales Island (Bucareli Bay).[81]
- 1776 – Francisco Atanasio Domínguez and Silvestre Vélez de Escalante follow the Rio Grande north to the modern state of Colorado, where they travel west, discovering Utah Lake.[27]
- 1777–78 – Cook discovers Christmas Island and Hawaii; also explores the Alaskan coast as far north as Icy Cape, discovering Cook Inlet and Prince William Sound.[78]
- 1787 – Charles William Barkley discovers the Strait of Juan de Fuca.[76]
- 1788 – Captain Arthur Phillip arrives with The First Fleet in Botany Bay on the coast of Sydney, Australia.
- 1789 – Alexander Mackenzie descends the Mackenzie River to its mouth in the Arctic Ocean.[82]
- 1791 – Francisco de Eliza discovers the "Canal de Nuestra Señora del Rosario" (Strait of Georgia); José María Narváez explores up it, passing the mouth of the Fraser River and reaching as far north as Texada Island.[81]
- 1791–94 – George Vancouver, together with William Broughton, Peter Puget, Joseph Whidbey, and James Johnstone, charts the modern states of Oregon and Washington, the coast of British Columbia, and the Alaska Panhandle, discovering Admiralty, Mitkof and Wrangell Islands in the Alexander Archipelago, as well as proving the insularity of Kuiu and Revillagigedo Islands; also charts Admiralty Inlet and Puget Sound and discovers the Chatham Islands and The Snares.[83]
- 1792 – Dionisio Alcalá Galiano and Cayetano Valdés y Flores circumnavigate Vancouver Island, proving its insularity.[27]
- 1792 – Jacinto Caamaño enters Clarence Strait, showing that much of the Alaska Panhandle is an archipelago, not mainland, as had been presumed; also sights the southwest coast of Revillagigedo Island.[27]
- 1792–93 – Mackenzie ascends the Peace and Parsnip, crosses the Canadian Rockies to the headwaters of the Fraser, ascends the West Road River and crosses the Coast Mountains, reaching the Bella Coola, which he descends to North Bentinck Arm and Dean Channel.[82]
- 1796 – Mungo Park reaches the upper Niger, exploring it from Ségou to Silla.[84]
- 1797–98 – George Bass explores from Cape Howe to Western Port, discovering Bass Strait.[59]
- 1798 – John Fearn discovers "Pleasant Island" (Nauru).[33]
- 1798 – Francisco de Lacerda travels from Tete northwest to Lake Mweru.[85]
- 1798–99 – Matthew Flinders and George Bass circumnavigate Tasmania, proving its insularity.[59]
19th century
- 1800 – James Grant discovers the Australian coastline from Cape Banks to Cape Otway.[59]
- c. 1801–04 – A fur trading post is built on Great Bear Lake.[86]
- 1802 – John Murray discovers Port Phillip Bay.[59]
- 1802 – Matthew Flinders explores the coast from Fowlers Bay to Encounter Bay, discovering Spencer Gulf, Kangaroo Island, and Gulf St. Vincent.[59]
- 1802 – Nicolas Baudin explores the coast from Cape Banks to Encounter Bay, where he meets Flinders.[59]
- 1802–03 – Flinders circumnavigates Australia.[59]
- 1805–06 – Meriwether Lewis and William Clark, from Fort Mandan, ascend the Missouri to its headwaters, cross the Continental Divide via Lemhi Pass in the Bitterroot Range to enter the present state of Idaho, and descend the Clearwater and Snake rivers to the Columbia, which they descend to its mouth; on the way back Lewis explores the Blackfoot and Sun rivers, as well as the headwaters of the Marias, while Clark travels through Bozeman Pass and descends the Yellowstone to its confluence with the Missouri.[87]
- 1805–06 – Mungo Park descends the Niger as far as the Bussa rapids, where he is drowned.[84]
- 1806 – Yakov Sannikov discovers New Siberia Island.[74]
- 1806 – Abraham Bristow discovers the Auckland Islands.[88]
- 1808 – Simon Fraser descends the Fraser River for some 800 kilometres (500 mi) to its mouth, reaching the Strait of Georgia.[27]
- 1810 – Frederick Hasselborough discovers Campbell and Macquarie Islands.[74]
- 1811–12 – Wilson Price Hunt discovers Union Pass in the Wind River Range and reaches the upper Snake River, while Robert Stuart discovers South Pass—his route would later become the Oregon Trail.[27]
- 1816 – Otto von Kotzebue discovers Kotzebue Sound.[27]
- 1819 – William Smith discovers the South Shetland Islands.[89]
- 1819–20 – William Edward Parry enters Lancaster Sound and reaches Melville Island, discovering and naming Cornwallis, Bathurst, and Somerset Islands; the following year sights "Banks Land" (Banks Island).[90]
- 1820 – Edward Bransfield sights the Antarctic Peninsula; also discovers northernmost islands of the South Shetlands.[74]
- 1820–21 – Fabian Gottlieb von Bellingshausen discovers the northernmost islands of the South Sandwich group; following year discovers Peter I and Alexander Islands.[91]
- 1821 – John Franklin explores over 800 kilometres (500 mi) of coastline from the mouth of the Coppermine River to Point Turnagain on the Kent Peninsula.[92]
- 1821 – Sealers Nathaniel Palmer and George Powell discover "Powell's Islands" (South Orkney Islands).[93]
- 1821–23 – Parry explores the eastern side of the Melville Peninsula, reaching the western entrance of Fury and Hecla Strait; also explores the northern coast of Foxe Basin.[94]
- 1823 – Dixon Denham, Walter Oudney, and Hugh Clapperton are the first Europeans to sight Lake Chad.[95]
- 1823 – Sealer James Weddell sails to 74°15′ S into "King George IV's Sea" (Weddell Sea).[96]
- 1824 – Samuel Black ascends the Finlay to Thutade Lake, source of the Finlay-Peace-Slave-Mackenzie river system; then portages to the Stikine and Turnagain.[97]
- 1824–25 – Étienne Provost, Jim Bridger, and Peter Skene Ogden independently reach Great Salt Lake.[27]
- 1825–26 – Franklin explores the Arctic coastline from the mouth of the Mackenzie River west to Point Beechey, while his partner John Richardson explores east to the Coppermine River, naming Dolphin and Union Strait and discovering "Wollaston Land" (part of the southern coast of Victoria Island) — combining to chart over 1,930 kilometres (1,200 mi) of coastline; Richardson also surveys the five arms of Great Bear Lake.[98]
- 1826 – Frederick William Beechey charts the Alaskan coastline from Icy Cape to Point Barrow; also discovers Vanavana, Fangataufa, and Ahunui in the Tuamotu archipelago.[99]
- 1826 – Alexander Gordon Laing becomes the first European to reach the fabled city of Timbuktu.[95]
- 1827 – Jedediah Smith crosses the Sierra Nevada (via Ebbetts Pass) and Great Basin.[27]
- 1828 – René Caillié is the first European to return alive from Timbuktu.
- 1829–30 – John Ross discovers "Boothia Felix" (the Boothia Peninsula); the following year his nephew James Clark Ross crosses its narrow isthmus and reaches King William Island.[100]
- 1830 – Richard Lander and his brother John descend the Niger for more than 643 kilometres (400 mi) from Bussa to its mouth.[5]
- 1831–32 – John Biscoe discovers Enderby Land; following year discovers Adelaide, Anvers, and Biscoe Islands.[74]
- 1833 – Andrei Glazunov and Semyon Lukin discover the mouth of the Yukon River.[27]
- 1833–35 – Pyotr Pakhtusov and Avgust Tsivolko chart the entire east coast of Yuzhny Island, as well as the east coast of Severny Island north to nearly 74°24’ N.[74]
- 1834 – George Back descends the Back River to Chantrey Inlet.[101]
- 1837 – Glazunov ascends the Unalakleet and portages to the middle Yukon.[102]
- 1837–39 – Peter Warren Dease and Thomas Simpson reach Point Barrow from the east; following two summers they map the region from Point Turnagain to just north of the Castor and Pollux River on the Boothia Peninsula and chart the coastline of "Victoria Land" (Victoria Island) from Point Back to Point Parry.[103]
- 1838 – Pyotr Malakhov reaches Nulato, near the confluence of the Koyukuk and Yukon.[102]
- 1838–40 – Jules Dumont d'Urville discovers the Joinville Island group and Adélie Land (138°21′ E).[74]
- 1839 – John Balleny discovers the Balleny Islands and sights the Sabrina Coast (121° E).[88]
- 1840 – Charles Wilkes discovers Wilkes Land, mapping 2,414 kilometres (1,500 mi) of the Antarctic coast from Piner Bay (140° E) to the Shackleton Ice Shelf (97° E), proving that Antarctica is a continent.[104]
- 1841–43 – James Clark Ross discovers the Ross Sea, reaches 78°09′30″ S, and discovers the active volcano Mount Erebus on Ross Island, the Ross Ice Shelf, and Victoria Land; also sights Snow Hill, Seymour, and James Ross Islands.[105]
- 1845 – John Bell discovers the Porcupine, which he descends to its confluence with the Yukon.[102]
- 1846 – Candido José da Costa Cardoso discovers Lake Malawi.[85]
- 1846 – Rodrigues Graça travels from Angola to southwestern Katanga.[85]
- 1846–47 – John Rae maps over 1,046 kilometres (650 mi) of coastline, from Lord Mayor Bay to Cape Crozier, discovering Committee Bay.[106]
- c. 1847–48 – António da Silva Porto reaches the upper Zambezi.[85]
- 1848 – Johannes Rebmann is the first to sight Mount Kilimanjaro.[107]
- 1849 – David Livingstone and William Cotton Oswell cross the Kalahari Desert to Lake Ngami.[85]
- 1849 – James Clark Ross charts 240 kilometres (150 mi) of the west coast of Somerset Island south to Cape Coulman, discovering Peel Sound.[108]
- 1850 – Edwin De Haven sails up Wellington Channel, discovering and naming "Grinnell Land" (the Grinnell Peninsula, which forms the northwestern corner of Devon Island).[108]
- 1850–54 – Robert McClure transits the Northwest Passage (by boat and sledge); he and his men also chart some 2,736 kilometres (1,700 mi) miles of new coastline, consisting of the entire coast of Banks Island and much of the northwestern coast of Victoria Island (from just east of Point Reynolds in the north to Prince Albert Sound in the south), in the process discovering Prince of Wales Strait and McClure Strait.[109][110]
- 1851 – Rae charts over 965 kilometres (600 mi) of the southern coastline of Victoria Island, from Cape Back to Pelly Point.[106]
- 1851 – Erasmus Ommanney, Sherard Osborn and William Browne chart the northern half of Prince of Wales Island, Osborn west to Sherard Osborn Point (72°20’ N) and Browne east to Pandora Island; meanwhile, Robert D. Aldrich charts the west coast of the Bathurst Island group north to Cape Aldrich (about 76°11’ N, on Île Vanier) and Dr. Abraham Bradford charts the east coast of Melville Island north to Bradford Point.[74][111]
- 1851 – Robert Campbell descends the Pelly to the Yukon, which he descends to its confluence with the Porcupine, reaching Fort Yukon.[102]
- 1851–52 – William Kennedy and Joseph René Bellot discover Bellot Strait and cross Prince of Wales Island east to west, reaching Ommanney Bay.[108]
- 1852 – Edward Augustus Inglefield reaches 78° 28’ N, entering Smith Sound; also charts Jones Sound as far west as 84° 10’ W.[112]
- 1852–53 – Edward Belcher sails two of his squadron to the northwestern coast of the Grinnell Peninsula, wintering at 77° 52’ N, 97° W; later circumnavigates the peninsula via Arthur Strait (now Fiord), discovering Cornwall and North Kent.[108]
- 1853 – Richard Vesey Hamilton and George Henry Richards chart the Sabine Peninsula of Melville Island from Cape Mudge east to Bradford Point; the latter, along with Sherard Osborn, also charts the northern coast of Bathurst Island.[108][113]
- 1853 – George Mecham discovers Prince Patrick and Eglinton Islands and charts the southwest corner of Melville Island; along with Francis Leopold McClintock, he charts nearly the entire coast of Prince Patrick; McClintock also charts the northwest coast of Melville Island, from Cape Fisher northwest to Cape Scott and south along its west coast to Cape Purchase.[113][114]
- 1853–54 – Elisha Kent Kane and his men chart the Kane Basin and discover Kennedy Channel; one of his men, William Morton, reaches as far north as Kap Constitution (81° 22’ N).[115]
- 1853–56 – Livingstone becomes the first to traverse Africa from west to east, traveling from Luanda in Angola to Quelimane in Mozambique; also explores much of the upper Zambezi and discovers and names Victoria Falls.[85]
- 1854 – Rae charts the Boothia Peninsula from the Castor and Pollux River north to Point de la Guiche, discovering Rae Strait and proving the insularity of King William Island.[106]
- 1858 – Richard Francis Burton and John Hanning Speke discover Lake Tanganyika and Lake Victoria.[116]
- 1859 – McClintock charts the remaining 193 kilometres (120 mi) of the continental coastline of America (on the west coast of the Boothia Peninsula), while his companion Allen Young charts the southern half of Prince of Wales Island.[108]
- 1860–61 – Robert O'Hara Burke and William Wills are the first to cross Australia from south to north, traveling from Melbourne to the Flinders River.[5]
- 1862 – Speke discovers the Nile flowing from the northern end of Lake Victoria.[5]
- 1862 – Ivan Lukin ascends the Yukon to Fort Yukon.[102]
- 1864 – Samuel Baker discovers "Luta Nzige" (Lake Albert); in the distance he sights the Mountains of the Moon (the Rwenzori).[5]
- 1865 – Edward Whymper is the first to ascend the Matterhorn.[5]
- 1869–70 – Carl Koldewey and Julius von Payer explore the east coast of Greenland from 74°18’ to 77°01’N.[117]
- 1871 – Charles Francis Hall reaches Robeson Channel, sailing his ship as far north as 82° 11’ N; he later travels by sledge to 83° 05’ N.[118]
- 1872 – William Adams proves the insularity of Bylot Island.[74]
- 1873–74 – Karl Weyprecht and Von Payer discover and name Franz Josef Land.[117]
- 1875–76 – George Nares sails as far north as 82° 24’ N; following year Albert Hastings Markham sledges to 83° 20’ 26" N, while Pelham Aldrich sledges along the northern coast of Ellesmere Island east to Alert Point and Lewis A. Beaumont explores the northwestern coast of Greenland.[118]
- 1875–77 – Henry Morton Stanley circumnavigates both Lakes Tanganyika and Victoria, sights Lake George, and descends the Lualaba and Congo to the sea.[119]
- 1876 – Luigi D'Albertis ascends over 800 kilometres (500 mi) up the Fly River in New Guinea.[120]
- 1878–79 – Adolf Erik Nordenskiöld is the first to transit the Northeast Passage.[121]
- 1881–83 – Adolphus Greely explores the interior of Ellesmere Island, discovering Lake Hazen; one of his men, James Booth Lockwood, crosses the island and reaches Greely Fiord, as well as sledging eastwards to the vicinity of Kap Washington (reaching 83° 23’08" N in the process).[118]
- 1883–84 – Franz Boas is the first to see Nettilling Lake.[74]
- 1887–89 – Stanley traverses the Ituri Rainforest, explores the Rwenzori, and follows the Semliki to its source (which he names Lake Edward).[119]
- 1892 – Robert Peary discovers and names Independence Bay and Peary Land.[117]
- 1893–96 – Fridtjof Nansen and Hjalmar Johansen sledge to 86°13'06" N; their ship, the Fram, under Otto Sverdrup, drifts in the ice from the New Siberian Islands west to the northwest coast of Spitsbergen, reaching 85°55'05" N—a new record for a ship.[117]
- 1898–1902 – Sverdrup and Gunnar Isachsen chart the western coast of Ellesmere Island and discover and name Axel Heiberg, Ellef Ringnes, Amund Ringnes, and King Christian Islands.[122]
20th century
- 1900 – Peary explores the north coast of Greenland from Kap Washington to Kap Clarence Wyckoff, on the way reaching Cape Morris Jesup, the most northern point of mainland Greenland.[123]
- 1902–04 – Robert Falcon Scott traces the length of the Ross Ice Shelf, discovers the Edward VII Peninsula, reaches about 82°11’ S (in the process tracing 600 kilometres (370 mi) of the west coast of the shelf), crosses the Transantarctic Mountains and discovers the Antarctic Plateau, penetrating nearly 240 kilometres (150 mi) into it; he is also the first to see the dry valleys of the Antarctic.[124]
- 1903–06 – Roald Amundsen transits the Northwest Passage in the sloop Gjøa; Godfred Hansen, his second-in-command, charts the east coast of Victoria Island north to Cape Nansen (72°02' N, 104°45' W).[125]
- 1906–07 – Ludvig Mylius-Erichsen and Johan Peter Koch chart the northeast coast of Greenland from Kap Bismarck (76°42' N) to Kap Clarence Wyckoff (82°52' N), discovering Danmark Fjord.[74]
- 1908–09 – Frederick Cook and Peary each claim to have reached the North Pole—the former is a fraud, the latter widely doubted.[117]
- 1910–11 — Bernhard Hantzsch crosses Baffin Island from Cumberland Sound to the Koukdjuak River, exploring the west coast of the island north to 68°45’N.[74]
- 1911–12 – Amundsen is the first to reach the South Pole; Scott and his team reach the Pole over a month later, all perishing on the return journey.[124]
- 1913–14 – Boris Vilkitsky and Per Novopashennyy discover Severnaya Zemlya, surveying parts of its eastern coast from Mys Arkticheskiy to Mys Vaygacha (its southeast point), as well as much of its south coast west to Mys Neupokoyeva.[126]
- 1915–17 – Vilhjalmur Stefansson discovers Brock, Mackenzie King, Borden, Meighen, and Lougheed Islands; one of his men, Storker T. Storkerson, charts part of the northeast coast of Victoria Island, discovering the Storkerson Peninsula and Stefansson Island.[74][127]
- 1924–29 — Joseph Dewey Soper explores the interior of Baffin Island before surveying its west coast north to Hantzsch River.[74]
- 1926 – Amundsen, Lincoln Ellsworth and Umberto Nobile in the airship Norge are the first definitely known to have sighted the North Pole.[117]
- 1927 — George P. Putnam charts the north coast of the Foxe Peninsula from Cape Dorchester to Bowman Bay.[74]
- 1930–32 – Georgy Ushakov and Nikolay Urvantsev survey the entire coast of Severnaya Zemlya, showing it to be made up of four main islands: October Revolution, Komsomolets, Pioneer, and Bolshevik Islands—in all surveying some 2,200 kilometres (1,400 mi) of coastline and interior.[126]
- 1932 — W. A. Poole discovers Prince Charles Island.[128]
- 1934 — Richard E. Byrd discovers and names Roosevelt Island.
- 1937–41 — Thomas and Ella Manning map the west coast of Baffin Island from the Hantzsch River to Steensby Inlet.[74]
- 1940 — Byrd discovers Thurston Island, believing it to be a peninsula.
- 1948 — E. C. Kerslake charts Prince Charles, Air Force, and Foley Islands.[27]
- 1950 — Maurice Herzog and Louis Lachenal are the first to ascend Annapurna.[129]
- 1953 — Edmund Hillary and Tenzing Norgay are the first to ascend Mount Everest.[130]
- 1954 — Lino Lacedelli and Achille Compagnoni are the first to ascend K2.[131]
- 1957 — Finn Ronne discovers Berkner Island.
References
- 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 Diffie, Bailey (1977). Foundations of the Portuguese Empire, 1415–1580. University of Minnesota Press. pp. 465–474. ISBN 0-8166-0782-6.
- 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 10 11 12 13 14 15 16 17 18 Morison, Samuel (1974). The European Discovery of America: The Southern Voyages, 1492–1616. New York: Oxford University Press.
- 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 Whitfield, Peter (1998). New Found Lands: Maps in the History of Exploration. Routledge.
- 1 2 3 4 5 6 Ravenstein, Ernest George (1900). The voyages of Diogo Cão and Bartholomeu Dias, 1482–88. London: W. Clowes and Sons.
- 1 2 3 4 5 6 Fleming, Fergus (2004). Off the Map: Tales of Endurance and Exploration. New York: Atlantic Monthly Press.
- 1 2 3 4 Taviani, Paulo (1991). Columbus: The Great Adventure, His Life, His Times, and His Voyages. New York: Random House.
- 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 10 11 Morison, Samuel (1971). The European Discovery of America: The Northern Voyages. New York: Oxford University Press.
- ↑ Pohl, Frederick J. (1966). Amerigo Vespucci: Pilot Major. New York: Octagon Books. pp. 54, 55.
- ↑ Diffie, Bailey (1960). Prelude to empire: Portugal overseas before Henry the Navigator. University of Nebraska Press. pp. 463–464. ISBN 0-8032-5049-5.
- 1 2 Diffie 1977, pp. 464–465.
- ↑ Foundations of the Portuguese Empire, 1415-1580, Bailey Wallys Diffie and George D. Winius - Page 187, University of Minnesota Press, 1977
- ↑ The Coming of the Portuguese by Paul Lunde, London University’s School of Oriental and African Studies, in Saudi Aramco World - July/August 2005 Volume 56, Number 4,
- ↑ Ferguson, D. W. The discovery of Ceylon by the Portuguese in 1506 (Journal of the Ceylon Asiatic Society, vol. xix, no. 59, 1907, pp. 284–384).
- ↑ Marsden, William (1811). The history of Sumatra: containing an account of the government, laws, customs, and manners of the native inhabitants, with a description of the natural productions, and a relation to the ancient political state of that island. London: J. McCreery.
- 1 2 Lach, Donald F. (1994). Asia in the Making of Europe, Volume I: The Century of Discovery. University of Chicago Press. p. 520. ISBN 0-226-46731-7.
- ↑ Galvano, Antonio Galvano (2009). The Discoveries of the World from Their First Original unto the Year of Our Lord 1555. BiblioBazaar, LLC. p. 114. ISBN 1-113-68747-9.
- ↑ Newen Zeytung auss Presillg Landt
- ↑ Bethell, Leslie (1984). The Cambridge History of Latin America, Volume 1, Colonial Latin America. Cambridge: Cambridge University Press. p. 257.
- ↑ Cortesão, Armando (1944). The Suma Oriental of Tomé Pires: an account of the east, from the Red Sea to Japan, written in Malacca and India in 1512–1515/The Book of Francisco Rodrigues rutter of a voyage in the Red Sea, nautical rules, almanack and maps, written and drawn in the east before 1515. The Hakluyt Society.
- ↑ Russell-Wood, A. J. R. (1998). The Portuguese empire, 1415–1808: a world on the move. Baltimore, MD: Johns Hopkins University Press.
- 1 2 3 Bancroft, Hubert Howe (1882). History of Central America. San Francisco: A. L. Bancroft.
- ↑ Li, Tana Li (1998). Nguyễn Cochinchina: southern Vietnam in the seventeenth and eighteenth centuries. SEAP Publications. p. 72. ISBN 0-87727-722-2.
- ↑ Yule, Sir Henry Yule, A. C. Burnell, William Crooke (1995). A glossary of colloquial Anglo-Indian words and phrases: Hobson-Jobson. Routledge. p. 34. ISBN 0-7007-0321-7.
- ↑ Keane, A. H. (1892). Eastern geography: a geography of the Malay peninsula, Indo-China, the Eastern archipelago, the Philippines, and New Guinea. London: E. Stanford.
- ↑ Marks, Richard Lee (1993). Cortés: the Great Adventurer and the Fate of Aztec Mexico. New York: Knopf.
- ↑ Bergreen, Laurence (2003). Over the Edge of the World: Magellan's Terrifying Circumnavigation of the Globe. New York: William Morrow.
- 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 10 11 12 13 14 15 16 17 Hayes, Derek (2004). America Discovered: A Historical Atlas of North American Exploration. Vancouver: Douglas & McIntyre.
- ↑ John/Silva, Harold/Maria Beatriz Nizza da (1992). Nova História da Expansão Portuguesa (direcção de Joel Serrão e A. H. de Oliveira Marques)- O Império Luso-brasileiro (1500-1620), vol. VI. Lisboa: Editorial Presença. pp. 114–170.
- 1 2 3 4 Goodman, Edward J. (1992). The Explorers of South America. Norman: University of Oklahoma Press.
- 1 2 Prescott, William H. (1890). History of the Conquest of Peru. New York: John B. Aldan.
- ↑ Crawfurd, J. 1856. A descriptive dictionary of the Indian islands and adjacent countries. London: Bradbury & Evans.
- ↑ Galvano, Antonio (1563–2004 reissue). The Discoveries of the World from Their First Original Unto the Year of Our Lord 1555, issued by the Hakluyt Society. Kessinger Publishing. p. 168. ISBN 0-7661-9022-6. Check date values in:
|date=
(help) - 1 2 3 4 5 6 Quanchi, Max, and John Robson (2005). Historical dictionary of the discovery and exploration of the Pacific Islands. Lanham, Md.: Scarecrow Press.
- ↑ Whiteway, Richard Stephen (1899). The rise of Portuguese power in India, 1497–1550. Westminster: A. Constable.
- ↑ Fonseca, José Nicolau da (1994). An historical and archaeological sketch of the city of Goa: preceded by a short statistical account of the territory of Goa. New Delhi: Asian Educational Services ISBN 81-206-0207-2.
- ↑ Reséndez, Andrés (2007). A land so strange: the epic journey of Cabeza de Vaca : the extraordinary tale of a shipwrecked Spaniard who walked across America in the sixteenth century. New York: Basic Books.
- 1 2 3 4 Hayes, Derek (2007). Historical Atlas of California. University of California Press.
- ↑ Markham, Clements R. Discovery of the Galapagos Islands (Proceedings of the Royal Geographical Society, Vol. XIV, May 1892, pp. 314–16).
- ↑ Smith, Anthony (2004). Explorers of the Amazon. University of Chicago Press. ISBN 0-226-76337-4.
- ↑ Kelsey, Harry (1986). Juan Rodriguez Cabrillo. San Marino: The Huntington Library.
- 1 2 3 4 5 6 Vaughan, Richard (2007). The Arctic: A History. Stroud: A. Sutton.
- ↑ Bawlf, Samuel (2003). The Secret Voyage of Sir Francis Drake, 1577–1580. Walker & Company.
- 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 10 11 Lincoln, W. Bruce (2007). The Conquest of a Continent: Siberia and the Russians. Ithaca, N.Y.: Cornell University Press.
- 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 10 11 12 13 14 15 Lantzeff, George V., and Richard A. Pierce (1973). Eastward to Empire: Exploration and Conquest on the Russian Open Frontier, to 1750. Montreal: McGill-Queen's U.P.
- ↑ Markham, Clements (1889). A life of John Davis: the navigator, 1550–1605, discoverer of Davis straits. New York: Dodd, Mead.
- 1 2 Conway, William Marten (1906). No Man's Land: A History of Spitsbergen from Its Discovery in 1596 to the Beginning of the Scientific Exploration of the Country. Cambridge: University Press.
- 1 2 3 Forsyth, James (1992). A History of the Peoples of Siberia: Russia's North Asian colony 1581–1990. Cambridge: Cambridge University Press.
- 1 2 3 4 Wessels, C. (1992). Early Jesuit travellers in Central Asia: 1603–1721. Asian Educational Services. p. 90. ISBN 81-206-0741-4.
- 1 2 3 4 5 Fisher, Raymond Henry (1943). The Russian Fur Trade, 1550–1700. University of California Press.
- 1 2 3 4 5 6 Mutch, T. D. (1942). The First Discovery of Australia. Sydney: Mutch, Project Gutenberg of Australia. p. 55.
- ↑ Asher, Georg Michael (1860). Henry Hudson: The Navigator. London: Hakluyt Society.
- ↑ Hunter, Douglas (2009). Half Moon: Henry Hudson and the voyage that redrew the map of the New World. New York: Bloomsbury Press.
- 1 2 3 Butterfield, Consul Willshire (1898). History of Brulé's discoveries and explorations, 1610–1626: being a narrative of the discovery, by Stephen Brulé of Lakes Huron, Ontario and Superior : and of his exploration (the first made by civilized man) of Pennsylvania and western New York, also of the province of Ontario, Canada. Cleveland: Helman-Taylor.
- ↑ Mancall, Peter (2009). The Fatal Journey: The Final Expedition of Henry Hudson. Basic Books.
- 1 2 Armstrong, Terence (2010). Russian Settlement in the North. Cambridge University Press.
- 1 2 Christy, Miller (1894). The voyages of Captain Luke Foxe of Hull, and Captain Thomas James of Bristol, in search of a northwest passage, in 1631–32; with narratives of the earlier northwest voyages of Frobisher, Davis, Weymouth, Hall, Knight, Hudson, Button, Gibbons, Bylot, Baffin, Hawkridge, and others. London: Hakluyt Society.
- ↑ Hacquebord, Louwrens (2004). "The Jan Mayen Whaling Industry" in Jan Mayen Island in Scientific Focus, Stig Skreslet, editor, Springer Verlag.
- ↑ Markham, Clements (1881). The voyages of William Baffin, 1612–1622. London: Hakluyt Society.
- 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 10 11 12 13 Wood, George Arnold (1922). The discovery of Australia. London: Macmillan & Company.
- ↑ Budge, E.A. Wallis (1970). A History of Ethiopia: Nubia and Abyssinia, 1928. Oosterhout: Anthropological Publications.
- ↑ Peters, Nonja (2006). The Dutch down under, 1606–2006. Crawley, W.A.: University of Western Australia Press.
- ↑ Kapadia, Harish (2005). Into the untravelled Himalaya: travels, treks, and climbs. Indus Publishing. p. 72. ISBN 81-7387-181-7.
- ↑ Fischer, David Hackett (2008). Champlain's Dream: The European Founding of North America. New York: Simon & Schuster.
- 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 March, G. Patrick (1996). Eastern destiny: Russia in Asia and the North Pacific. Westport, Conn: Praeger.
- ↑ Haywood, A. J. (2010). Siberia: a cultural history. Oxford: Oxford University Press.
- ↑ Holland, Clive (1994). Arctic Exploration and Development, c. 500 B.C. to 1915: an encyclopedia. New York: Garland.
- 1 2 3 Golder, Frank Alfred (1914). Russian expansion on the Pacific, 1641–1850 an account of the earliest and later expeditions made by the Russians along the Pacific coast of Asia and North America; including some related expeditions to the Arctic regions. Cleveland: Authur H. Clark Co.
- 1 2 3 4 5 DeVoto, Bernard (1980). The Course of Empire. Boston: Houghton Mifflin.
- ↑ Sandberg, Graham (1904). The Exploration of Tibet, its history and particulars from 1623 to 1904. Calcutta: Thacker, Spink & Co.
- 1 2 3 Parkman, Francis (1999). La Salle and the Discovery of the Great West. New York: The Modern Library.
- ↑ Fischer, Steven R. (2005). Island at the End of the World: the Turbulent History of Easter Island. London: Reaktion.
- ↑ Tcherkezoff, Serge (2008). First contacts in Polynesia: the Samoan case (1722–1848) : western misunderstanding about sexuality and divinity. Canberra: ANUE Press.
- 1 2 Parkman, Francis (1893). France and England in North America: A Series of Historical Narratives. Boston: Little, Brown.
- 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 10 11 12 13 14 15 16 17 Mills, William James (2003). Exploring polar frontiers: a historical encyclopedia. Santa Barbara: ABC-CLIO.
- ↑ Golder, Frank Alfred and Leonhard Stejneger (1922). Bering’s voyages: an account of the efforts of the Russians to determine the relation of Asia and America. New York: American Geographical Society.
- 1 2 3 4 Williams, Glyndwr (2003). Voyages of delusion: the quest for the Northwest Passage. New Haven: Yale University Press.
- ↑ Champagne, Father Antoine. The Vérendryes and Their Succossors, 1727–1760 (MHS Transactions, Series 3, No. 25, 1968–69 Season).
- 1 2 3 4 Hough, Richard (1994). Captain James Cook: a biography. New York: Norton.
- ↑ Farquhar, Francis P. (2007). History of the Sierra Nevada. University of California Press. ISBN 0-520-25395-7.
- ↑ Hayes, Derek (2001). Historical atlas of the North Pacific Ocean: maps of discovery and scientific exploration, 1500–2000. Vancouver: Douglas & McIntyre.
- 1 2 Hayes, Derek (1999). Historical altas of the Pacific Northwest: Maps of exploration and discovery; British Columbia, Washington, Oregon, Alaska, Yukon. Seattle: Sasquatch Books.
- 1 2 Mackenzie, Alexander (1801). Voyages from Montreal, on the river St. Lawrence, through the continent of North America, to the Frozen and Pacific oceans; in the years 1789 and 1793. London: T. Cadell, jun. and W. Davies.
- ↑ Vancouver, George, and John Vancouver (1801; vols. I-VI). A voyage of discovery to the North Pacific ocean, and round the world. London: J. Stockdale. Check date values in:
|date=
(help) - 1 2 Fernandez-Armesto, Felipe (2006). Pathfinders: A Global History of Exploration. New York: W.W. Norton & Company.
- 1 2 3 4 5 6 Jeal, Tim (1973). Livingstone. New York: G. P. Putnam’s Sons.
- ↑ Keith, Lloyd (2001). North of Athabasca: Slave Lake and Mackenzie River documents of the North West Company, 1800–1821. Rupert's Land Record Society series. Montreal: McGill-Queen's University Press.
- ↑ Ambrose, Stephen E. (1996). Undaunted Courage: Meriwether Lewis, Thomas Jefferson, and the Opening of the American West. New York: Simon & Schuster.
- 1 2 Mawar, Granville Allen (1999). Ahab's Trade: The Saga of South Seas Whaling. New York: St. Martin's Press. ISBN 0-312-22809-0.
- ↑ Riffenburgh, Beau (2007). Encyclopedia of the Antarctic. New York: CRC Press.
- ↑ Parry, William Edward (1821). Journal of a voyage for the discovery of a North-West passage from the Atlantic to the Pacific: performed in the years 1819–20. London: John Murray.
- ↑ Cook, F. A. Captain Fabian Gottlieb von Bellingshausen, 1819–21. The Discovery of Alexander I., Peter I., and other islands (Bulletin of the American Geographical Society of New York, Vol. XXXIII, 1901, pp. 36–41).
- ↑ Franklin, John (1824). Narrative of a journey to the shores of the Polar Sea, in the years 1819-20-21-22. London: John Murray.
- ↑ Spears, John Randolph (1922). Captain Nathaniel Brown Palmer, an old-time sailor of the sea. New York: The Macmillan company.
- ↑ Parry, William Edward (1824). Journal of a second voyage for the discovery of a north-west passage from the Atlantic to the Pacific: performed in the years 1821-22-23, in His Majesty's ships Fury and Hecla. London: John Murray.
- 1 2 Fleming, Fergus (1998). Barrow's Boys. New York: Atlantic Monthly Press.
- ↑ Weddell, James (1825). A voyage towards the South Pole, performed in the years 1822–'24. Containing ... a visit to Tierra del Fuego, with a particular account of the inhabitants. London: Longman, Hurst, Rees, Orme, Brown, and Green.
- ↑ Hayes, Derek (2002). Historical Atlas of Canada: Canada’s History Illustrated with Original Maps. Vancouver: Douglas & McIntyre.
- ↑ Franklin, John (1828). Narrative of a second expedition to the shores of the Polar sea in the years 1825, 1826 and 1827, by John Franklin,... including an account of the progress of a detachment to the Eastward, by John Richardson. London: J. Murray.
- ↑ Beechey, Frederick William (1832). Narrative of a voyage to the Pacific and Beering's Strait: to co-operate with the Polar expeditions : performed in His Majesty's Ship Blossom, under the command of Captain F.W. Beechey, R.N. ... in the years 1825,26,27,28. Philadelphia: Carey & Lea.
- ↑ Edinger, Ray (2003). Fury Beach: The Four-year Odyssey of Captain John Ross and the Victory. New York: Berkley Books.
- ↑ Back, George (1836). Narrative of the Arctic land expedition to the mouth of the Great Fish River, and along the shores of the Arctic Ocean, in the years 1833, 1834 and 1835. Philadelphia: E.L. Carey & A. Hart.
- 1 2 3 4 5 Bockstoce, John R. (2009). Furs and Frontiers in the Far North: the Contest Among Native and Foreign Nations for the Bering Strait Fur Trade. New Haven: Yale University Press.
- ↑ Simpson, Thomas (1843). Narrative of the discoveries on the north coast of America: effected by the officers of the Hudson's Bay Company during the years 1836–39. London: R. Bentley.
- ↑ Philbrick, Nathaniel (2003). Sea of Glory: America's Voyage of Discovery, the U.S. Exploring Expedition, 1838–1842. New York: Viking.
- ↑ Ross, James Clark (1847). A voyage of discovery and research in the southern and Antarctic regions, during the years 1839–43. London: John Murray.
- 1 2 3 McGoogan, Kenneth (2003). Fatal passage: the true story of John Rae, the Arctic hero time forgot. New York: Carroll & Graf Publishers.
- ↑ Krapf, J. L. (1860). Travels, researches, and missionary labors during an eighteen years' residence in Eastern Africa together with journeys to Jagga, Usambara, Ukambani, Shoa, Abessinia and Khartum, and a coasting voyage from Mombaz to Cape Delgado. Boston: Ticknor and Fields.
- 1 2 3 4 5 6 Savours, Ann (1999). The Search for the North West Passage. New York: St. Marten's Press.
- ↑ McClure, Robert (1856). Osborn, Sherard, ed. The Discovery of the North-West Passage. London: Longman, Brown, Green, Longmans, & Roberts.
- ↑ Armstrong, Alexander (1857). A Personal Narrative of the Discovery of the Northwest Passage. London: Hurst and Blackett.
- ↑ Osborn, Sherard (1852). Stray leaves from an Arctic journal, or, Eighteen months in the polar regions : in search of Sir John Franklin's expedition, in the years 1850–51. New York: Putnam’s.
- ↑ Inglefield, E. A., George Dickie, and Peter C. Sutherland (1853). A Summer Search for Sir John Franklin: with a Peep Into the Polar Basin. London: T. Harrison.
- 1 2 M'Dougall, George F. (1857). The eventful voyage of H.M. discovery ship "Resolute" to the Arctic regions, in search of Sir John Franklin and the missing crews of H.M. discovery ships "Erebus" and "Terror," 1852, 1853, 1854. London: Longman, Brown, Green, Longmans, & Roberts.
- ↑ Murphy, David (2004). The Arctic Fox: Francis Leopold McClintock, discoverer of the fate of Franklin. Toronto: Dundurn Press.
- ↑ Kane, Elisha Kent (1856). Arctic Explorations: The Second Grinnell Expedition in Search of Sir John Franklin, 1853, ’54, ’55. Chicago: S. C. Griggs & Co.
- ↑ Speke, John Hanning (1864). What led to the discovery of the source of the Nile. Edinburgh: Blackwood & Sons.
- 1 2 3 4 5 6 Fleming, Fergus (2001). Ninety Degrees North: The Quest for the North Pole. New York: Grove Press.
- 1 2 3 Dick, Lyle (2001). Muskox Land: Ellesmere Island in the Age of Contact. Calgary, Alta: University of Calgary Press.
- 1 2 Jeal, Tim (2007). Stanley: The Impossible Life of Africa’s Greatest Explorer. New Haven: Yale University Press.
- ↑ D’Albertis, L. M. (1879). "Journeys up the Fly River and in other parts of New Guinea". Royal Geographical Society 1: 4–16.
- ↑ Leslie, Alexander (1879). The Arctic Voyages of Adolf Erik Nordenskiöld. 1858–1879. London: Macmillan and Co.
- ↑ Sverdrup, Otto and Ethel Harriet Hearn (1904). New Land; Four Years in the Arctic Regions. London: Longmans, Green, and Co.
- ↑ Mirsky, Jeannette (1970). To the Arctic: The story of northern exploration from earliest times to the present. Chicago: University of Chicago Press.
- 1 2 Crane, David (2006). Scott of the Antarctic: A Life of Courage and Tragedy. New York: Alfred N. Knopf.
- ↑ Amundsen, Roald and Godfred Hansen (1908). Roald Amundsen’s "The North West Passage"; being the record of a voyage of exploration of the ship "Gjøa" 1903–1907. London: A Constable and Co.
- 1 2 Barr, William (1975). "Severnaya Zemlya: the last major discovery". Geographical Journal 141 (1): 59–71. doi:10.2307/1796946.
- ↑ Stefansson, Vilhjalmur (1922). The Friendly Arctic: The Story of Five Years in Polar Regions. New York: Macmillan.
- ↑ Hayes, Derek. Newestfoundland (Canadian Geographic, October -November 2003 issue).
- ↑ Herzog, Maurice (1997). Annapurna, first conquest of an 8000-meter peak (26,493 feet). New York: Lyons & Burford.
- ↑ Hillary, Edmund (1955). High Adventure: The True Story of the First Ascent of Everest. Hodder & Stoughton, London.
- ↑ Curran, Jim (1995). K2: The Story of the Savage Mountain. Hodder & Stoughton. ISBN 978-0-340-66007-2.
|