The Exploration ArchiveThe Exploration Archive

Browse Explorations

Filtering by:Region: PacificClear filter

24 results

Deep Sea ExplorationPacific

Mariana Trench Expedition

1960 - 2019

Beneath a blue calm lies a world of crushing silence: four explorers, three machines and six decades of stubborn curiosity into the deepest scar on our planet.

Maritime VoyagePacific

The Kon-Tiki Expedition

1947 - 1947

A handmade raft, six men and a stubborn hypothesis: across a thousand miles of blue risk, the Kon‑Tiki would test whether drift and daring could rewrite the origins of an ocean people.

Maritime VoyagePacific

Thor Heyerdahl

1947 - 1970

A Norwegian’s raft and reed boats challenged the ocean’s silence — one fragile voyage across the Pacific stretched a hypothesis into history and set a scientist against orthodoxy.

Deep Sea ExplorationPacific

The Challenger Deep

1875 - 2020

Beneath the black tide of the western Pacific lies a place where pressure becomes a presence and silence is so dense that a single bead of light seems obscene — this is the story of how humans found, visited, and tried to understand the deepest hole in the ocean.

Maritime VoyagePacific

Dumont d'Urville

1826 - 1840

A driven officer of the old Navy sets sail to stitch together the last blank edges of the Pacific — and in the process reaches a frozen shore that will bear his wife's name and a science that will outlive empires.

Maritime VoyagePacific

George Vancouver

1791 - 1795

A hard-edged cartography of the edge of empire: George Vancouver’s four-year search for coastline, sovereignty and scientific truth in a Pacific that would not be tamed without blood, bitterness and meticulous charts.

Maritime VoyagePacific

The Bounty Voyage

1787 - 1789

A small merchant ship, a botanical obsession of empire, and the crack of mutiny that split the Pacific—this is the story of the Bounty, a voyage that exposed the Age of Enlightenment’s ambitions to the raw human costs of discovery.

Maritime VoyagePacific

William Bligh

1787 - 1789

A stern navigator, a cargo of breadfruit, and an island so bewitching it would topple a ship's order — the Bounty's voyage across the Pacific became a lesson in seamanship, anthropology and the brittle limits of command.

Maritime VoyagePacific

La Pérouse Expedition

1785 - 1788

A royal commission into the wide blue — a meticulously outfitted French squadron sets out to catalogue the Pacific, and within three years the ocean swallows its ships and leaves a question that will haunt science, empire and every chart-maker who followed.

Maritime VoyagePacific

The Discovery of Hawaii by Europeans

1778 - 1778

When a string of green roofs rose from an unending blue, a European fleet stopped mid-ocean — and the world expanded in a single, cold dawn.

Maritime VoyagePacific

James Cook

1768 - 1779

He sailed with instruments and notebooks into an ocean of unknown stars and islands—and returned with charts that remade the map, but did not spare him from the violence of contact and the sea's indifference.

Scientific ExpeditionPacific

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.

Maritime VoyagePacific

Louis-Antoine de Bougainville

1766 - 1769

He sailed to stitch a broken nation back together with science and glory, and returned with islands in his notebooks, a woman in the margins, and a name that would bloom on gardens worldwide.

Maritime VoyagePacific

Vitus Bering

1728 - 1741

Across a sea of ice and silence, a Danish sailor in Russian service sailed the thin seam between two continents — and in the effort paid the price that made the map of the North Pacific possible.

Maritime VoyagePacific

The Discovery of Easter Island

1722 - 1722

On an Easter morning in the vast Pacific, a Dutch commander and his ragged flotilla glimpsed a shore of silent stone faces — a moment that would expose both the hunger of Enlightenment curiosity and the brutal cost of contact.

Maritime VoyagePacific

Abel Tasman

1642 - 1644

A voyage cut from iron ropes and salt wind: Abel Tasman's small fleet crossed the Roaring Forties, sketched unknown coasts and returned with names that would haunt maps for centuries.

Maritime VoyagePacific

The Discovery of the Galápagos

1535 - 1835

A drifting bishop, a scattered map of islands, and a young naturalist's careful collecting — across three centuries the Galápagos rose from a navigational accident into the raw laboratory that would force humanity to reimagine life itself.

Maritime VoyagePacific

The Exploration of the South Pacific Islands

1521 - 1900

Across three centuries the South Pacific was not passively discovered but contested: a dark, salt-stung sea that swallowed captains, carried star-charts and missionaries, and remade islands and peoples in its wake.

Mapping ExpeditionPacific

The Mapping of the Pacific

1521 - 1900

An ocean of blank paper and ruthless ambition: how five centuries of sailors, scientists and sovereigns drew the Pacific into the world map — and how that cartography reshaped the lives that met its lines.

Maritime VoyagePacific

Zheng He

1405 - 1433

A vast Chinese armada cuts a silver line across the ocean in the early fifteenth century — a state spectacle of power, religion, and commerce that remade coastlines and then, almost as quickly, vanished from the state record.

Maritime VoyagePacific

Chinese Exploration of the Indian Ocean

100 - 1433

From the salt-slick stalls of an early port to the thunder of a hundred-ship armada, this is the story of how Chinese sailors remade the Indian Ocean and then, as suddenly, folded that vast experiment into silence.

Maritime VoyagePacific

Polynesian Navigation

-1500 - 1200

Across a rim of salt and stars, the wayfinders of Polynesia set their compasses on nothingness and, by breath, swell and unerring memory, carved a highway across the greatest ocean on Earth.

Maritime VoyagePacific

Austronesian Ocean Voyages

-3000 - 500

They left by the thousands on vessels no larger than houses, guided by invisible highways of stars and sea; across three millennia, peoples from the littoral of Taiwan braided islands into an ocean of homes.

Maritime VoyagePacific

Polynesian Wayfinding

-3000 - 1200

Across an ocean that swallowed the horizon, generations of unseen pilots read stars, swells and birds to carve human presence into islands no map had named — a patient, brutal mastery of the blue that remade the world.