Exploration

In the 15th century, Europeans began to sail west across the Atlantic Ocean in search of new routes to China and the East. In the process, they discovered what they labeled a "New World," although Indigenous people had lived there for centuries. Other explorers have pushed the limits of flight and seafaring, and traversed the frozen Continent of Antarctica.

Featured Overview

From John Cabot to Bartolomé de las Casas, learn more about notable explorers NOT named Christopher Columbus in this web exclusive.

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Columbus fleet: Nina, Pinta and Santa Maria

DEA/G. Dagli Orti/Getty Images

Featured Overview

From John Cabot to Bartolomé de las Casas, learn more about notable explorers NOT named Christopher Columbus in this web exclusive.

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Galleon sailing in ocean.

These fast ships and navigational tools aided European sailors between the 15th and 17th centuries.

Christopher Columbus

Columbus's famed voyage to the New World was celebrated by Italian-Americans, in particular, as a pathway to their own acceptance in America.

The 'Endurance' Imperial Trans-Antarctic Expedition, 1914-17, led by Ernest Shackleton

The discovery of Ernest Shackleton's ship at the bottom of Antarctica's Weddell Sea recalls a grueling expedition when men endured entrapment, hunger, frigid weather, angry seas—and near madness.

4 Myths About When Montezuma Met Cortés

The encounter between the Spanish explorer and Aztec king changed the course of history. But the story has long been told from one side.

Matthew Henson Conquers the North Pole

More to History: Matthew Henson Conquers the North Pole

Robert Peary is famous as the first explorer to officially reach the North Pole, but Matthew Henson might deserve just as much credit.

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Exploration
Image of a man walking through a door.

Their ranks include daring criminals, a legendary pilot and a powerful union boss. None have been found.

Found alongside the Dead Sea Scrolls is a Biblical treasure map called the Copper Scroll.  It details dozens of hiding spots said to contain many tons of gold and silver worth billions today.

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A dramatic snowy whiteout Arctic landscape with a hot air balloon lying on its side

“Shall we be thought mad?” expedition leader Salomon August Andrée wrote in his journal, just before he perished.

A close up of the Isle of Lewis Chessmen reveals their comic expressions.

The question of who fashioned the precious ivory Lewis Chessmen lingers 800 years after the world’s most famous chess pieces were crafted.

Commander James Fitzjames

What happened to the Franklin expedition remains unclear, but cannibalized remains were identified as belonging to third-in-command James Fitzjames.

The team is determined to locate the remains of Explorer Ernest Shackleton's Endurance shipwreck - but plummeting temperates, missing AUVs, and an extreme ice threat stands in the way of their exploration, in this clip from Season 1, "The Hunt for Shackleton's Ice Ship."

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Galleon sailing in ocean.

These fast ships and navigational tools aided European sailors between the 15th and 17th centuries.

Amerigo Vespucci Italian explorer, financier, navigator and cartographer, Amerigo Vespucci (1454 - 1512), circa 1500. From an original painting by Bronzino. (Photo by Kean Collection/Getty Images)

Amerigo Vespucci was an explorer who helped establish the idea of a New World. The territories of South America and later North America were named in his honor.

Ferdinand Magellan expedition depicted in painting.

In 1519, Ferdinand Magellan set off on an audacious journey around the globe. Find out what made the expedition so dangerous—and why its leader did not survive.

Robert Peary is famous as the first explorer to officially reach the North Pole, but Matthew Henson might deserve just as much credit.

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SABLE ISLAND IN NOVA SCOTIA

Deadly mistakes doomed these early European settlements.

4 Myths About When Montezuma Met Cortés

The encounter between the Spanish explorer and Aztec king changed the course of history. But the story has long been told from one side.

The Endurance appears to have sunk keel-first, with the bow first impacting the Weddell Sea floor.

Tens of thousands of shipwrecks lie lost and forgotten on the sea floor—but efforts to locate and explore them have seen great advances.

How Portugal Kicked Off the Age of Exploration

In the 15th century, a small kingdom with a population of approximately 1 million launched the era of maritime exploration that would transform the world.

Columbus fleet: Nina, Pinta and Santa Maria

Christopher Columbus’ arrival in the Caribbean in 1492 kicked off a massive global interchange of people, animals, plants and diseases between Europe and the Americas.

A vintage French postcard featuring the helicopter of Paul Cornu of Lisieux, France, who piloted the first manned flight of a rotary wing aircraft on 13th November 1907.

From hot-air balloons floating over Paris to a dirigible crashing over New Jersey, here are some of the biggest moments of aviation history.

From priceless unknown tombs to sunken treasure worth billions of dollars. Discover these 10 biggest treasure discoveries that left the whole world amazed, in this episode of History Countdown.

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Valhalla: How Viking Belief in a Glorious Afterlife Empowered Warriors

Mythology describes how female valkyrie would greet fallen Viking warriors and lead the boldest to a glorious afterlife.

Frank Hurley's photos were originally intended as scientific documentation of an unexplored continent. Instead, they recorded an epic survival story.

The 'Endurance' Imperial Trans-Antarctic Expedition, 1914-17, led by Ernest Shackleton

The discovery of Ernest Shackleton's ship at the bottom of Antarctica's Weddell Sea recalls a grueling expedition when men endured entrapment, hunger, frigid weather, angry seas—and near madness.

Christopher Columbus

Columbus's famed voyage to the New World was celebrated by Italian-Americans, in particular, as a pathway to their own acceptance in America.

The Franklin Expedition

In 1845, two ships left England to navigate the fabled Northwest Passage connecting the Atlantic and Pacific Oceans. Then they vanished without a trace.

Two of Christopher Columbus’ ships were so small that men had no refuge to sleep and poor food storage led to wormy meals.

Christopher Columbus sailed from Spain in 1492, but he wasn't Spanish. People claim he was Italian, but he wasn't quite that either. So what exactly is his story?

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Viking Drinking Hall

This is where 12-century warriors went to unwind.

Evidence suggests slavery may have been more central to the Viking story than previously thought.

Viking warrior women were thought to be the stuff of legends. A 2017 DNA analysis proves they were real.

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The revelation raised questions about the how Vikings may have understood gender roles—as well as gender identity.

Did the mass death of Indigenous Americans cool down the planet?

On the high seas, ships had their own system of “law and order.”

Viking king depicted by modern human.

Clothing made from cat pelts was fashionable with Viking warriors.

The Death of Blackbeard

After Blackbeard met a bloody end in 1718, his severed head became a ghoulish ornament.

History remembers the renaissance era as a time of poets, painters, and fair maidens, but the reality is much closer to a horror film.

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Settlers of Jamestown

Captain George Kendall is believed to be the first among the colonists to be executed, but which crime was he killed for?

The hulking skeletons are believed to have been the descendants of Vikings who colonized northern France and, later, southern Italy and Sicily.

HISTORY: The Northwest Passage

Where Is the Northwest Passage? The Northwest Passage spans roughly 900 miles from the North Atlantic north of Canada’s Baffin Island in the east to the Beaufort Sea north of the U.S. state of Alaska in the west. It’s located entirely within the Arctic ...

Close-up of the Orient Express Train exterior. (Credit: Wolfgang Kaehler/LightRocket via Getty Images)

Georges Nagelmackers had a dream—and he wasn’t afraid to copy Pullman to achieve it.

A 1581 map showing Sir Francis Drake's round-the-globe explorations.

After coordinating Drake's hugely profitable raid on Spanish loot in Panama, 'Diego' became the explorer's right-hand man.

Humans have known the earth is round for thousands of years.

It's the first genetic confirmation of a female Viking warrior.

Most Vikings were sent to the afterlife in one of two ways.

American aviator Amelia Earhart not only set flying records, but also championed the advancement of women in aviation.

Aviatrix. Pioneer. Record breaker. Fashion entrepreneur?

Robert F. Scott and two of his four companions set out for the South Pole pulling a sled. (Credit: Bettmann / Getty Images)

In the early 1910s, explorers Roald Amundsen and Robert Falcon Scott engaged in a frantic, and ultimately tragic, race to be the first man to reach the South Pole.

A Viking ship is approached by Byzantines at Constantinople.

The Vikings coveted Constantinople but could never breach its walls. Only by becoming the personal bodyguards of the Byzantine emperor did the Nordic warriors grab a piece of its wealth.

Ireland appeared to be an easy target for the Vikings, but the politically fractured island’s apparent weakness turned out to be its greatest strength.

Explore eight of the most important maps from the early history of cartography.

Lathgertha, 1913. Lathgertha is a semi-legendary Danish Viking shieldmaiden, one time wife of Ragnar Lodbrok. Illustration from The Northmen in Britain by Eleanor Means Hull, published 1913. (Photo by Historica Graphica Collection/Heritage Images/Getty Images)

Women in the Viking Age enjoyed more freedom and held more power in their society than many other women of their day.

Montezuma II (Credit: Hulton Archive/Getty Images)

From the Ark of the Covenant to the Aztec gold of Montezuma, these six historic treasures continue to elude us.

From John Cabot to Bartolomé de las Casas, learn more about notable explorers NOT named Christopher Columbus in this web exclusive.

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President Abraham Lincoln, photographed by Mathew Brady

From America’s sixteenth president to a world-famous aviator, these seven historical heavyweights had second careers as inventors.

Queen Elizabeth Knighting Sir Francis Drake.

Explore ten fascinating facts about Queen Elizabeth’s favorite pirate.

Scandinavian roots run deep in Minnesota, and so does the belief among some that the first Vikings who inhabited the state were not of the National Football League variety. The theory that the ancient Norsemen explored Minnesota as much as 1,000 years ago blossomed after Swedish-American farmer Olof Ohman and his son discovered a 200-pound, […]

Viking king depicted by modern human.

Despite their barbaric reputation, the Vikings left a legacy of achievements that forever changed the way we speak, travel, exercise—and even groom ourselves.

Nobleman and explorer Vasco da Gama established a trade route that linked Portugal directly with the Indian spice market. Learn how he managed to sail around Africa's Cape of Good Hope in this video.

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French explorer Jacques Cartier named Canada after "kanata," the Huron-Iroquois word for settlement. Learn more about his search for a passage to East Asia and how he laid the original French claim for Canada in this video.

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Hernando De Soto began his career in exploration at age 14 when he traveled to the West Indies. Find out how he became known as the first European to discover the Mississippi River in this video.

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After establishing a colony in Mexico, Spanish nobleman Hernán Cortés rallied native allies and conquered the Aztec Empire. Learn more about what led him to destroy one of the greatest civilizations in human history in this video.

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English explorer Henry Hudson was determined to find the Northwest Passage via the Arctic Circle - even after his crew mutinied. Learn more about his lifelong search in this video.

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Spanish conquistador and eventual Governor of Peru Francisco Pizarro acquired wealth through kidnapping, ransom, and murder. Find out more about his violent rise to power in this video.

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HMS Endeavour, James Cook

From Christopher Columbus’ flagship to one of the most legendary commerce raiders of the American Revolution, learn the stories behind five vessels whose watery graves are still missing in action.

Pirate treasure history

Pirate lore is rife with tales of hidden treasure and maps where “X” marks the spot, but there are only a few reliable accounts of buccaneers actually burying their loot.  One early example concerns the English privateer Francis Drake. After a 1573 raid on a Spanish mule train, he and his men interred several tons […]

st augustine, florida

On the 450th anniversary of its founding, get the facts on the oldest U.S. city.

pirates

In 1695, Henry Every became the world’s most prosperous pirate—and its most wanted man—after leading a bloody raid on an Indian treasure fleet.

Treasures From Spanish Galleon Sunk in 1622 Set For Auction, the first of ten bronze cannons located by Treasure Salvage Inc.

Part of the large cache of treasure recovered from the wreck of a 400-year-old Spanish galleon near the Florida Keys will go on auction early next month.

Warship Sailing The Sea At Dawn

Take a look back at the criminal careers of five of history’s most formidable seafaring women.

UNSPECIFIED - CIRCA 2002: Portrait of James Cook (Marton in Cleveland, 1728-Hawaii, 1779), painted by Holland Nathaniel Dance. (Photo by DeAgostini/Getty Images)

Two hundred forty-five years after he landed in Australia, learn 10 surprising facts about the explorer who vowed to sail “as far as I think it possible for man to go.”

appalachian trail

Get the facts on America’s most famous long-distance footpath.

For the first time in a millennium, Iceland will have a shrine honoring the ancient Norse gods once worshipped by the Vikings.

Leif Eriksson landing on the shores of North America.

From Erik the Red, who founded Greenland’s first Norse settlement, to Cnut the Great, who ruled a vast empire in northern Europe, find out about six fascinating figures of the Viking Age.

(Original Caption) Charles August Lindbergh, Jr: this is the first photograph taken of the kidnap victim.

A look back at the big break in the search for the Lindbergh baby’s kidnapper that led to the arrest of Bruno Hauptmann.

Portrait of Ferdinand Magellan (1470-1521). Found in the collection of Musée de l'Histoire de France, Château de Versailles.

The Portuguese explorer Ferdinand Magellan is often credited as being the first person to have circumnavigated the globe, but the reality of his journey is a bit more complicated.

Charles Lindbergh (1902-1974), American aviator. He is seen here posing by the plane in which he completed the first nonstop solo flight across the Atlantic, the Spirit of St. Louis.

Learn 10 surprising facts about the heroic and controversial life of the aviator known as “The Lone Eagle.”

Find out more about the famous waterway connecting the Atlantic and Pacific oceans.

Map of 16th-century exploration in Canada

Explore six incredible stories of people who were stranded in unforgiving territory and lived to tell the tale.

Woman cooking Historical re-enactment Saxon, Viking, Norman history, Woodbridge, Suffolk

What did these warriors eat to survive in such a forbidding landscape?

Pirates Of The Caribbean, Ann Bonny And Mary Read, 1724

Take a tour through some of history’s most notorious pirate havens, and meet the swashbuckling marauders who helped build them.

From a deep-sea pioneer to the man credited with the modern discovery of Machu Picchu, get to know five intrepid explorers.

A scuba diver observes a shipwreck in the Red Sea.

Find out about some of history’s deadliest—and lesser-known—shipwrecks.

The Viking Explorer Who Beat Columbus to America, Leif Eriksson discovers America painted by Christian Krohg

Leif Eriksson Day commemorates the Norse explorer believed to have led the first European expedition to North America.

Pirates, Walk the Plank

The blindfolded captive, prodded at cutlass-point out onto a narrow beam dangling over the sea, has been as much a part of pirate lore as the buccaneer snarling “Argh!” However, there is no proof that swashbucklers ever made their enemies and victims walk the plank. Instead, real pirates during the 17th and 18th centuries were […]

Undated illustration of Juan Ponce de Leon being given water from the "Fountain of Youth."

Find out how the Spanish explorer's name became inextricably linked with the Fountain of Youth.

Detail of a Viking helmet from grave one at Vendel, Uppland, Sweden. In the Staten Historika Museum's collection in Stockholm, 7th century.

Forget almost every Viking costume you’ve ever seen. Yes, the pugnacious Scandinavians probably sported headgear when they marched into battle, but there’s no reason to believe it was festooned with horns. In depictions dating from the Viking age—between the eighth and 11th centuries—warriors appear either bareheaded or clad in simple helmets likely made of either […]

Colonel Percy Fawcett. This photograph may have been taken in Mato Grosso, Brazil, Brazil, 1925. (Photo by Royal Geographical Society via Getty Images)

These famous explorers journeyed to the far reaches of the earth, only to never be seen again.

Portrait of Marco Polo

Discover fascinating facts about the life of Marco Polo and his legendary travels to the Far East.

A Viking ship at sunset.

Explore 10 surprising facts about the seafaring Scandinavians.

There's a lot more to these seafaring warriors than their famous longships. Get the full story.

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Explore 10 little-known aspects of one of naval history’s most legendary—and deadly—voyages.

Columbus fleet: Nina, Pinta and Santa Maria

Check out 10 things you may not know about the Genoese explorer who sailed the ocean blue in 1492.

8 Famous Pirates from History

From state-sponsored privateers to outright outlaws, these pirates made their reputations as fearsome raiders.

Who was D.B. Cooper?

The advent of cutting-edge forensic technology and DNA analysis techniques can shed new light on many of the world’s most famous (and infamous) disappearances—but only to an extent.

Portrait of Marco Polo (Venice, 1254-1324) by Annibale Strata

Marco Polo: The Early Years Marco Polo was born around 1254 into a prosperous merchant family in the Italian city-state of Venice. His father, Niccolò, and his uncle Maffeo had left the year before on a long-term trading expedition. As a result, he was ...

Amelia Earhart

Explore theories about Amelia Earhart’s final days—some more plausible than others.

Fred Noonan with Amelia Earhart on June 11, 1937.

Forever remembered as "Amelia Earhart's navigator," Fred Noonan disappeared with the famous aviator on July 2, 1937.

The Vikings are known as masters of the sea, but what was the viking life like before these warriors began their raids?

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When Columbus made landfall in the Caribbean, he believed it to be Asia--his intended destination.

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Columbus used his celestial knowledge to scare native people into thinking a lunar eclipse was a sign of his angry god.

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Though he didn't produce much profit for the monarchs of Spain, Columbus opened a path to the new world for all of Europe.

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Did a Viking explorer travel from Greenland to modern day Canada in the 11th century, beating Christopher Columbus by nearly 400 years?

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After 60 days and no sign of land, Columbus' doubtful crew wanted to turn back.

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Pirates used a variety of plundered cannons and ammunition to intimidate ships on the high seas.

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Pirates have hunted ships' bounty for as long as sailors have charted the open seas.

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Viking warrior Ivar the Boneless unleashes his Great Heathen Army upon England, opening nearly a century of raids and plunder during the Dark Ages.

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A qualified navigator was second only to the Captain as the most important member of a pirate crew.

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On Christopher Columbus's second voyage to the Americas, he enslaved the indigenous people and forced them to mine for gold.

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Amelia Earhart, pictured with the Lockheed Electra in which she disappeared in 1937.

The trailblazing aviator’s disappearance remains a source of fascination—and controversy.

Leif Erickson

Leif Eriksson was a Norse explorer, and the first known European to have set foot on continental North America, on what is now called Greenland. He reached North America nearly four centuries years before Christopher Columbus arrived in 1492.

Vasco Núñez de Balboa. Found in the collection of Museo Naval de Madrid. Artist: Anonymous.

Vasco Nuñez de Balboa was a Spanish conquistador, governor and explorer who helped settle South America and the Pacific coast of Central and South America.

Portrait of Vasco da Gama

The Portuguese nobleman Vasco da Gama (1460-1524) sailed from Lisbon in 1497 on a mission to reach India and open a sea route from Europe to the East. After sailing down the western coast of Africa and rounding the Cape of Good Hope, his expedition made numerous stops in Africa before reaching the trading post of Calicut, India, in May 1498.

Illustration depicting the marriage ceremony of British colonist John Rolfe (1585 - 1622) to Native American Pocahontas (1595 - 1617), the daughter of Chief Powhatan of the Algonquian tribe, in 1614.

John Rolfe’s Early Life Not much is known about Rolfe’s early life except that he was born around 1585 and was probably the son of a small landholder in Norfolk, England. In June 1609, Rolfe and his first wife, Sarah Hacker, sailed for North America abo...

Walter Raleigh

Sir Walter Raleigh’s Early Life Sir Walter Raleigh was born in 1552 to Walter Raleigh and Catherine Champernowne. He was raised in a farmhouse near the village of East Budleigh in Devon, England. Raleigh studied at Oxford before serving in the Huguenot ...

Circa 1585, Francis Drake (1540-1596). English admiral, first English sailor to reach the Pacific Ocean 1572, circumnavigated the globe 1577-80, preyed successfully on Spanish shipping, under Howard commanded in the defeat of the Spanish Armada 1588, died in the West

Sir Francis Drake was an English sailor and pirate who achieved fame fighting against the Spanish Armada, plundering Spanish galleons and traveling around the globe.

Portrait (based on a 16th century painting) of Spanish explorer Juan Ponce de Leon (1460 - 1521).

Juan Ponce de León was a Spanish explorer who served as governor of Hispaniola and Puerto Rico, and allegedly searched for a Fountain of Youth in Florida.

"The Departure of John Cabot and Sebastian Cabot from Bristol on their First Voyage of Discovery in 1497," 1906.

John Cabot, born Giovanni Caboto, was an Italian explorer and trader who is credited with being among the first Europeans to set foot in the New World of North America.

Painting by Frederic Remington of Spanish explorer Francisco Vasquez de Coronado (1510 - 1554) on his expedition to conquer the legendary Seven Cities of Cibola, accompanied by a Native American guide.

Francisco Vázquez de Coronado (c. 1510-1554) was a 16th-century Spanish explorer. In 1540, Coronado led a major Spanish expedition up Mexico’s western coast and into the region that is now the southwestern United States.

Explorer Jacques Cartier

Jacques Cartier, a French navigator and explorer, led expeditions to North America along the St. Lawrence River and helped France lay claim to modern-day Canada.

Hernando de Soto (c.1496/1497-1542). Spanish explorer and conquistador.

Hernando de Soto was a 16th-century Spanish explorer and conquistador who grew rich through slavery and his conquests of the Inca and other Native Americans.

How Hernán Cortés Conquered the Aztec Empire

Spanish conquistador Hernán Cortés (1485-1547) traveled to Mexico in 1519, where he eventually overthrew the Aztec empire and helped build Mexico City.

Circa 1595, English navigator Henry Hudson (d. 1611) who while traveling in the ´Half Moon´ for the Dutch East India Company, discovered the Hudson River and reached Hudson Bay in 1610-11. He died after mutineers set him adrift, and he was lost at sea. (Photo by Stock Montage/Getty Images)

Henry Hudson was an English navigator and explorer who made four trips to North America, encountering the Hudson River, Hudson Bay and other important landmarks.

Francisco Pizarro: Early Life Francisco Pizarro was born in 1474 in Trujillo, Spain. His father, Captain Gonzalo Pizarro, was a poor farmer. His mother, Francisca González, was also of low birth, and was not married to Pizarro’s father. Tempted by tales...

Amelia Earhart, pictured with the Lockheed Electra in which she disappeared in 1937.

Amelia Earhart was the first woman to fly solo across the Atlantic Ocean. She vanished while trying to circumnavigate the globe in 1937, her plane never found.

Christopher Columbus

Christopher Columbus was an Italian explorer who stumbled upon the Americas and whose journeys marked the beginning of centuries of transatlantic colonization.

Charles Lindbergh (Photo by Library of Congress/Corbis/VCG via Getty Images)

Spirit of St. Louis Earlier pilots had crossed the Atlantic in stages, but most planes of the era weren’t equipped to carry enough fuel to make the trip without stopping to fuel up. Lindbergh decided, with the backing of several people in St. Louis, to ...

Painting of Bartolomeu Dias (Portugal, 1457-Cape of Good Hope, 1500), cartographer and navigator

Bartolomeu Dias (c. 1450-1500) was a Portuguese explorer who became the first European to round the southern tip of Africa.

Illustration of a Viking Trading Ship Leaving Norway for an Expedition (Original Caption) Viking trading ship of the 8th century leaving on an expedition from Dawn Ladir Cliffs, Norway.

The Vikings were a group of Scandinavian seafaring warriors who left their homelands from around 800 A.D. to the 11th century, and raided coastal towns. Over the next three centuries, they would leave their mark on much of Britain and the European continent, as well as parts of modern-day Russia, Iceland, Greenland and Newfoundland.

HISTORY: Exploration of North America

The Vikings Discover the New World The first attempt by Europeans to colonize the New World occurred around 1000 A.D. when the Vikings sailed from the British Isles to Greenland, established a colony and then moved on to Labrador, the Baffin Islands and...

Portrait of Ferdinand Magellan (1470-1521). Found in the collection of Musée de l'Histoire de France, Château de Versailles.

Ferdinand Magellan led the first expedition to circumnavigate the globe and became the first European to cross the Pacific Ocean.