| Pharaoh Necho |
Egypt |
about 600 BC |
According to Herodotus, Necho dispatched a fleet of Phoenician sailors that successfully circumnavigated Africa |
| Scylax of Caria |
Greece |
about 515 BC |
Sailed down the R. Indus to Arabian Sea. Navigated W through Indian Ocean and Red Sea to Suez |
| Hanno |
Carthage |
about 480 BC |
Sailed along NW coast of Africa, perhaps as far as Cape Palmas |
| Himilco |
Carthage |
about 450 BC |
Explored SW coast of Europe N from Cadiz, Spain. Believed by some to have reached Britain and Ireland |
| Alexander the Great |
Macedonia |
334-323 BC |
Conquered and explored Syria, Palestine, Persia, Egypt, and a portion of N India |
| Pytheas |
Greek colony of Massalia (Marseille) |
about 300 BC |
Sailed along W coast of Britain as far as Orkney Islands |
| Eudoxus of Cyzious |
Asia Minor |
about 100 BC |
Explored the Arabian Sea. Said also to have sailed along W coast of Africa |
| Gaius Julius Caesar |
Rome |
58-52 BC |
Conquered and explored most of W Europe and invaded Britain |
| Ingólf Arnarson |
Norway |
874 |
Sailed to Iceland and made first permanent human settlement there |
| Eric the Red |
Norway |
982-986 |
Explored and colonized SW coast of Greenland |
| Leif Ericson |
Iceland |
about 1000 |
Explored Vinland, variously identified as coast of Labrador, of Newfoundland Island, of Nova Scotia, and of New England |
| Marco Polo |
Venice |
1271-1295 |
Travelled through Central Asia, India, China, and Malay Archipelago |
| Ibn Batuta |
Morocco |
1325-1349 |
Travelled in Africa, the Middle East, India, China, and in steppes of Central Asia |
| Gilianes |
Portugal |
1433 |
Sailed S along W coast of Africa, past Cape Bojador |
| Diogo Cam |
Portugal |
1482-1486 |
Explored mouth of R. Congo and explored part of coast of W Africa |
| Bartolomeu Dias |
Portugal |
1488 |
Explored Algoa and Mossel bays in S Africa, observing and naming Cape of Storms, later renamed Cape of Good Hope |
| Christopher Columbus |
Italy |
1492-1504 |
Explored America and established colonies during four voyages across the Atlantic |
| John Cabot |
Italy |
1497-1498 |
Made two voyages under English flag. Explored Cape Breton Island and Nova Scotia; on second voyage may have sailed south along N American coast as far as Gulf of Mexico |
| Vasco da Gama |
Portugal |
1497-1498 |
Sailed around Cape of Good Hope to Malindi on E coast of Africa, and then across Indian Ocean to Calicut (now Kozhikode), India |
| Amerigo Vespucci |
Italy |
1499-1502 |
Sailed through Caribbean along coast of South America. The German geographer Martin Waldseemüller published his accounts and suggested that New World be named America |
| Alonso de Ojeda |
Spain |
1499-1500 |
Explored N coast of South America |
| Vicente Yáñez Pinzon |
Spain |
1499-1500 |
Sailed from Spain, touched coast of Brazil not far from Recife, visited mouth of R. Amazon, and then proceeded N as far as Guiana |
| Pedro Álvares Cabral |
Portugal |
1500 |
Touched coast of Brazil and rounded Cape of Good Hope |
| Gasper Corte-Real |
Portugal |
1501 |
Explored NE coast of New France and Newfoundland |
| Rodrigo de Bastidas |
Spain |
1501 |
Explored Central America |
| Sebastian Cabot |
Italy |
1508-1509 |
Voyaged to Labrador while searching for the North West Passage, and possibly sailed as far as the Hudson Bay |
| Juan Ponce de León |
Spain |
1513 |
Explored and named Florida |
| Vasco Núñez de Balboa |
Spain |
1513 |
Explored Isthmus of Panama and named Pacific Ocean |
| Ferdinand Magellan |
Portugal |
1519-1521 |
Explored estuary of Rio de la Plata, sailed S, proceeding through strait which bears his name, and traversed Pacific Ocean to Philippine Islands, where he was killed. He was first person to sail W around the globe to a longitude previously reached on an E voyage |
| Juan Sebastián del Cano |
Spain |
1519-1522 |
A commander in Magellan's expedition. After Magellan's death, del Cano, in command of Victoria,the expedition's sole surviving ship, returned to Spain by way of Moluccas and Cape of Good Hope, thus being first to circumnavigate the globe |
| Hernán Cortés |
Spain |
1519-1536 |
Explored E coasts of Mexico and Yucatán, conquered Mexico, and explored Baja California |
| Francisco Pizarro |
Spain |
1523-1535 |
Explored W coast of South America and conquered Peru |
| Giovanni da Verrazano |
Italy |
1524 |
Explored E coast of North America N to Newfoundland, sailing into New York and Narragansett bays |
| Álvar Núñez Cabeza de Vaca |
Spain |
1527-1542 |
Explored SW region of what is now US. Headed an expedition to the Rio de la Plata region, and then across S Brazil to Asunción, Paraguay |
| Jacques Cartier |
France |
1534-1536 |
Explored W coast of Newfoundland and Gulf of Saint Lawrence sailing up the St. Lawrence as far as site of Montreal |
| Hernando de Soto |
Spain |
1539-1542 |
Explored what is now SE United States and part of lower Mississippi Valley |
| Hernando de Alarcón |
Spain |
1540 |
Explored the R. Colarado |
| Francisco de Orellana |
Spain |
1540-1541 |
Traced R. Amazon, from its headwaters in Andes to its outlet in the Atlantic Ocean |
| Francisco Vásquez de Coronado |
Spain |
1540-1542 |
Traced R. Colorado northward, and sighted Grand Canyon; explored S California, New Mexico, N Arizona, N Texas, Oklahoma, and E Kansas |
| Pedro de Valdivia |
Spain |
1540-1552 |
Explored Chile |
| Juan Rodriguez Cabrillo |
Portugal |
1542-1543 |
Explored W coast of Mexico and landed at Point Loma, Calif |
| Richard Chancellor |
England |
1553-1554 |
Sailed around N Scandinavia to White Sea and proceeded overland from Arkhangelsk to Moscow |
| Sir Martin Frobisher |
England |
1576-1578 |
Explored Frobisher Bay and Hudson Strait |
| Sir Francis Drake |
England |
1577-1580 |
In the Golden Hind, completed second circumnavigation of globe |
| John Davis |
England |
1585-1593 |
Skirted E coast of Greenland S to Cape Farewell, turned and sailed along W coast of Greenland to Baffin Bay. On a subsequent voyage to South America, he may have explored the Falkland Islands |
| Willem Barents |
Netherlands |
1594-1597 |
Explored Novaya Zemlya, Barents Sea, and Barents Island |
| Sir Walter Raleigh |
England |
1595-1616 |
Explored Guiana, coast of Trinidad, and Orinoco R |
| Pedro Fernandes de Queiros |
Portugal |
1596-1606 |
Explored Marquesas and Solomon Islands of Pacific Ocean |
| Sebastián Vizcaíno |
Spain |
1596-1603 |
Explored W coast of Mexico between Acapulco and Baja California; sailed to San Diego and Monterey bays |
| Samuel de Champlain |
France |
1603-1613 |
Traced course of St. Lawrence R. northward to Lachine Rapids above Montreal, explored the E coast of North America S from Nova Scotia to Vineyard Haven, founded and named Quebec, and explored Lake Champlain |
| Henry Hudson |
England |
1609-1610 |
Explored Hudson R., Hudson Strait, and Hudson Bay |
| Jakob Le Maire and Willem Cornelis Schouten |
Netherlands |
1615-1617 |
Rounded S tip of Tierra del Fuego, passed through Le Maire Strait, observed and named Cape Horn, and reached Moluccas |
| William Baffin and Robert Bylot |
England |
1616 |
Explored Baffin Bay |
| Abel Janszoon Tasman |
Netherlands |
1642-1644 |
Explored New Zealand and Tonga and Fiji Islands, Gulf of Carpentaria, and Tasmania |
| Jacques Marquette and Louis Jolliet |
France |
1673 |
Travelled down Wisconsin and Mississippi rivers to mouth of the Arkansas R., and traced Illinois R. back to Lake Michigan |
| René-Robert Cavelier, sieur de La Salle |
France |
1682 |
Traced Mississippi R. to its mouth in Gulf of Mexico |
| Vitus Jonassen Bering |
Denmark |
1725-1741 |
Explored Bering Sea and Bering Strait |
| Pierre Gaultier de Varennes, sieur de la Vérendrye. |
Canada |
1742 |
Explored Manitoba, North Dakota, W Minnesota, and possibly a portion of Montana |
| Samuel Hearne |
England |
1768-1770 |
Traced Coppermine R. northwards from its basin to Arctic shores of Canada |
| James Cook |
England |
1768-1779 |
Explored and charted coast of New Zealand, finished charting of world's major bodies of water, and disproved long-standing theory that there was a large, unexplored, habitable land in southern hemisphere; explored coasts of Australia and Hawaii |
| James Bruce |
Scotland |
1770-1771 |
Visited source of Blue Nile, then followed river to its confluence with White Nile |
| Sir Alexander Mackenzie |
Scotland |
1789-1793 |
Set out from Fort Chipewyan in Alberta, skirted Great Slave Lake, and followed Mackenzie R. to its Arctic outlet. Second expedition made first crossing of N America to Pacific |
| Alessandro Malaspina |
Italy |
1789-1794 |
Explored west coast of the Americas, from Cape Horn to Alaska, before charting several islands in the Philippines for the first time |
| Robert Gray |
US |
1791-1792 |
Explored Grays Harbor and Pacific NW coast; sailed up Columbia R |
| Mungo Park |
Scotland |
1795-1796 |
Ascended Gambia R., traversed N district of Kaarta in Mali and reached Niger R |
| Meriwether Lewis and William Clark |
US |
1804-1806 |
Travelled overland from Saint Louis along Missouri and Columbia rivers to Pacific Ocean and back |
| Zebulon Montgomery Pike |
US |
1806-1807 |
Led expeditions to headwaters of Mississippi, Arkansas, and Red rivers; sighted Pikes Peak |
| John Davis |
US |
1821 |
Made first confirmed landing on the Antarctic continent |
| Richard and John Lander |
England |
1830-1831 |
Traced downstream Niger R. of W Africa, establishing its course and outlet |
| Sir James Clark Ross |
England |
1831-1843 |
Determined position at the time of north magnetic pole; discovered Ross Ice Shelf in Antarctica, and charted coast in neighbourhood of Ross Sea, Antarctica |
| Sir John Franklin |
England |
1845-1847 |
Naval expedition to find North West Passage became stuck in ice, and all died. Some 50 expeditions sent out to find them over the following decade mapped the Canadian Arctic archipelago and settled the route of the passage |
| Thomas Brunner |
England |
1846-1848 |
Explored the Buller and Grey valleys of New Zealand's South Island, pushing deep into the Southern Alps |
| David Livingstone |
Scotland |
1849-1859 |
Traversed S Africa, exploring Lake Ngami, Zambezi R., Victoria Falls, and Lakes Chilwa and Nyasa (Malawi) |
| Heinrich Barth |
Germany |
1850-1855 |
Made extensive explorations in W Africa, visiting upper Benue R., Tombouctou |
| Sir Richard Francis Burton |
England |
1854-1858 |
Made pilgrimage to Mecca; explored Somalia, Ethiopia, and Lake Tanganyika |
| John Hanning Speke |
England |
1856-1862 |
Explored Lake Victoria, which he identified as a source of the Nile |
| Robert O'Hara Burke and William John Wills |
Ireland |
1860-1861 |
First Europeans to cross continent of Australia, from S to N |
| Sir Samuel White Baker |
England |
1861-1864 |
Explored tributaries of R. Nile in Ethiopia and lake Albert in E Central Africa |
| Nain Singh |
India |
1865-1866 |
Explored southern Tibet and the upper reaches of the Brahmaputra in secret, establishing the position of Lhasa for the first time |
| Sir Henry Morton Stanley |
Wales |
1874-1889 |
Explored Lake Edward, surveyed Lake Tanganyika, and traced course of R. Congo from Nyangwe to its mouth on W coast of Africa. Later explored Ruwenzori ('Mountains of the Moon') in E Central Africa, and followed Semliki R. to its source in Lake Edward |
| Verney Lovett Cameron |
England |
1875 |
First European to traverse equatorial Africa, from E to W |
| Sir Francis Younghusband |
British India |
1886-1904 |
Journeyed from Peking to Kashmir, then led a British expedition into Tibet |
| Fridtjof Nansen |
Norway |
1888-1896 |
Made first crossing of Greenland, mostly on skis. On second expedition sailed from Framinto the Arctic pack ice before making a sledge journey towards the North Pole |
| Sven Anders Hedin |
Sweden |
1890-1908 |
Explored Chinese (or Eastern) Turkistan, Tibet, and Mongolia; found sources of Indus, Brahmaputra, and Sutlej rivers |
| Sir Aurel Stein |
Hungary |
1900-1916, 1930 |
Made four expeditions in central Asia, tracing ancient caravan routes between China and West and mapping little-known regions |
| Ludwig Mylius-Erichsen |
Denmark |
1902-1907 |
Explored coast of Greenland |
| Roald Amundsen |
Norway |
1903-1926 |
Made first transit of North West Passage; first to reach South Pole; and crossed North Pole in the dirigible Norge |
| Sir Ernest Henry Shackleton |
Ireland |
1907-1909 |
Located south magnetic pole |
| Robert Edwin Peary |
US |
1908-1909 |
First person to reach North Pole |
| Hiram Bingham |
Hawaii |
1911 |
Explored Incan lands and located ancient ruins of Machu Picchu in Peru |
| Harry St. John B. Philby |
England |
1917-1932 |
Crossed Arabia from sea to sea. First European to visit Najd |
| Lincoln Ellsworth |
US |
1925-1939 |
Explored Arctic regions by aeroplane, dirigible, and submarine, and crossed Antarctica by aeroplane |
| Umberto Nobile |
Italy |
1926 |
Flew across North Pole with Amundsen and Ellsworth in the dirigible Norge,which he had designed |
| Richard Evelyn Byrd |
US |
1926-1957 |
Flew over or near North and South Poles; established base at Little America in Antarctic Circle; led numerous expeditions that explored and mapped coastal and interior regions of Antarctica |
| Bertram Thomas |
England |
1930-1931 |
First European to traverse Rub al-Khali, great desert of Saudi Arabia |
| Charles William Beebe |
US |
1934 |
Descended to record ocean depth of 923 m (3,028 ft) in waters off Bermuda, using a bathysphere that he invented |
| John Rymill |
England |
1934-1937 |
Explored Antarctic Peninsula |
| Finn Ronne |
US |
1946-1958 |
Determined Antarctica to be one continent; explored and mapped Ronne Ice Shelf |
Sir Edmund Hillary and Sir Vivian Fuchs |
New Zealand England |
1955-1958 |
Made first completely overland crossing of Antarctica |
| International Geophysical Year (IGY) |
|
1957-1958 |
Scientists of many countries made discoveries concerning climatology, oceanography, the nature of the earth's crust, the geography of Antarctica, and other matters |
Jacques Piccard and Don Walsh |
Switzerland US |
1960 |
Descended to record depth of 10,912 m (35,800 ft) in Mariana Trench of Pacific Ocean, using bathyscaphe Trieste |
| Neil A. Armstrong and Edwin E. Aldrin, Jr. |
US |
1969 |
First persons to land on the moon |
| Naomi Uemura |
Japan |
1978 |
First person to reach North Pole alone by dogsled |
Sir Ranulph Fiennes and Charles Burton |
England |
1979-1982 |
First to cross both the North Pole and the South Pole on a single circumnavigation of the Earth |
Bertrand Piccard and Brian Jones |
Switzerland England |
1999 |
Made first non-stop balloon flight around the world, in 21 days, taking off from Switzerland and landing in Egypt |