Browse Explorations
11 results
The Future of Exploration
2000 - Present
At the turn of the millennium, a new age of expedition began β not of flags and colonies but of data, instruments and fragile human teams reaching into the deep, the ice, the genome and the sky to ask what remains unknown β and why it matters.
Modern Antarctic Expeditions
1955 - 2020
Between ice and politics, tractors and satellites, a generation of international scientists pushed across the white continent β mapping, drilling, and arguing with the weather until what they revealed changed how we think about the planet.
The Challenger Expedition
1872 - 1876
A battered corvette, a handful of scientists and sailors, and three years of salt and cold that remade how the world measured the sea β the Challenger voyage turned the ocean from an anonymous dark into a mapped, breathing realm.
Oceanographic Exploration
1872 - 2020
From hemp ropes trailing into black fathoms to autonomous floats circling the globe, this is the story of how humans learned to listen to the ocean and, in doing so, changed how we see the planet.
Geological Surveys of the West
1867 - 1879
Across cracked river canyons and wind-scoured plains, a generation of men and artists mapped the American West by the rigor of rock and the blunt instrument of endurance β a scientific campaign that remade maps, policy and the nation's imagination.
Alfred Russel Wallace
1854 - 1862
In the heat and humidity of the Malay Archipelago, a solitary naturalist turned the raw catalog of living things into a question that would reorder how we understand life itself.
Charles Darwin Voyage of the Beagle
1831 - 1836
A young naturalist signs on as a gentleman companion for a hydrographic survey β what begins as a voyage of charts and coastlines becomes the slow, corrosive work of seeing the world anew.
HMS Beagle Exploration
1831 - 1836
A small ship, a restless captain, and a young naturalist cut a path around the globe β mapping coasts by day, unravelling ancient bones by night, and returning with questions that would reshape how humanity understands life itself.
Alexander von Humboldt
1799 - 1804
A restless mind and an arsenal of instruments set sail at the turn of a century, cutting through tropical storms and imperial suspicion to map the invisible laws that bind mountain, river and climate β the voyage that reshaped how we measure the world.
Joseph Banks
1768 - 1771
A young naturalist with more curiosity than rank set out from Britain to measure a shadow on Jupiter's doorstep and returned having remade the map of the living world.
Natural History Expeditions
1750 - 1900
From ship-deck crates to tropical canopy and coral skeletons, this is the raw, often brutal tale of Victorian naturalists who crossed oceans and cultures to remake the world's catalogue of life β and paid dearly for what they learned.
