Captain James Cook is considered by many to be greatest explorer of all time. His accomplishments over three voyages, ranging from the Northwest Coast of North America to Antarctica, assured his place in nautical history. Indeed some of his charts were so accurate they were used until the 1990s.
But Cook’s discoveries might be better understood if we consider not what he found, but what didn’t. He was sent to the South Pacific by the Royal Society to observe the transit of Venus and local Terra Australius Incognita, land mass which was thought by many to act as a counterweight to the northern hemisphere. Cook put the myth of the southern landmass to rest, and, on a later voyage, he called into question the existence of the North passage, a much sought after sea-lane that would give merchant ships a short cut between the Atlantic and Pacific.
More than any other explorer, Cook filled in the empty spaces that made so many nautical maps of his time more decorative than useful, and gave his contemporaries a sense of the world that we know today.
Adventurer- Captain Cooks third ship
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