Travelers and Explorers, Part 6: James Cook (1728-1797), England's Poseidon

James Cook came from a humble village upbringing. But by the end of his career, he circumnavigated the globe several times, discovered Australia and explored its west coast, mapped much of the South Pacific, and was worshipped as a deity by some Hawaiian natives. He also made incredible contributions to science. Two botanists on his second voyage collected over 3,000plant species and presented their findings to the Royal Society. His crew included severalartists, who documented the botanists' findings and completed 264 drawings. Cook evendetermined the cause of scurvy and implemented a diet for his crew full of fresh produce. Hedid not lose a single man to scurvy on his first voyage – an unprecedented accomplishment inthe naval exploration of the eighteenth century.During the captain's 12 years of sailing around the Pacific, he gathered enough longitudinal measurements and depth soundings for mapmakers to produce accurate charts of the South Pacific for the first time. Many were still in use through the mid-twentieth century. Global sea travel would now be safe to nearly any location on the globe. Thanks to Cook, the world had become interconnected.

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