* Your assessment is very important for improving the workof artificial intelligence, which forms the content of this project
Download Lesson 2 - Baptist Hill Middle/High School
Ocean acidification wikipedia , lookup
Arctic Ocean wikipedia , lookup
Southern Ocean wikipedia , lookup
Pacific Ocean wikipedia , lookup
Sea in culture wikipedia , lookup
Marine debris wikipedia , lookup
Physical oceanography wikipedia , lookup
Indian Ocean wikipedia , lookup
USS Albatross (1882) wikipedia , lookup
Marine habitats wikipedia , lookup
Effects of global warming on oceans wikipedia , lookup
Marine pollution wikipedia , lookup
The Marine Mammal Center wikipedia , lookup
Marine biology wikipedia , lookup
History of research ships wikipedia , lookup
Starter Activity 1 Is the ocean bigger, smaller, or the same size that you thought it was? How so? Use evidence from yesterday’s lesson to support your response. Use complete sentences! Lesson 2: Ocean Exploration Social Science Today we will study the history of ocean exploration and navigation 3 A timeline of famous explorers and their discoveries The inventors of technology that innovated the way we study the sea Terms and facts related to navigating the ocean Late BC – 1 BC Early exploration Late BC 4000-3000 2000-1000 Egyptian Voyages First Sea Routes The earliest recorded sea voyage was undertaken by ancient Egyptians around 3200BC. Photo: NOAA 4 150 Ptolemy’s Map 1 BC Late BC – 1 BC Early exploration Late BC 4000-3000 2000-1000 Egyptian Voyages First Sea Routes 150 Ptolemy’s Map The Polynesians were the first known people to undertake regular, longdistance voyages. They built elaborate canoes (like the replicas at left) to carry supplies and developed a navigational system based on the position of the stars. Photo: NOAA 5 1 BC Late BC – 1 BC Early exploration Late BC 4000-3000 2000-1000 Egyptian Voyages First Sea Routes 150 1 BC Ptolemy’s Map Photo: Library of Congress The Greek astronomer Ptolemy makes a map of the world and is one of the first known to include latitude and longitude lines. Photo: NOAA 6 The map at left is a representation displayed by the Library of Congress. 800 AD – 1600 AD Longer voyages & new discoveries 800AD 900 1400 1500 Viking Voyages Vasco da Gama Around the World Photo: LoC The Vikings explore and colonize Iceland, Greenland and Newfoundland. They are also among the first to use the North Star to determine their latitude. 7 1600 AD 800 AD – 1600 AD Longer voyages & new discoveries 800AD 900 1400 1500 Viking Voyages Vasco da Gama Around the World Photo: LoC The Portuguese explorer Vasco da Gama sails around the southern tip of Africa becoming the first European to reach India by sea. 8 1600 AD 800 AD – 1600 AD Longer voyages & new discoveries 800AD 900 1400 1500 Viking Voyages Vasco da Gama Around the World 1600 AD Photo: LoC 1519 9 Ferdinand Magellan leads the first fleet in a voyage around the world. Although his fleet completes the journey, Magellan dies before its end on an island in the Phillippines. The photo shows one of the crew’s landing sites in Guam. Photo: NOAA 1600 AD – 1800 AD New navigational technology 1600AD First Submarine 1700 Voyage of Endeavor Cornelis Drebbel, a Dutch physician, builds the world’s first submarine. It can dive to a depth of 12-15 ft. 10 1800 AD The Nautilus 1600 AD – 1800 AD New navigational technology 1600AD First Submarine 1700 Voyage of Endeavor 1800 AD The Nautilus James Cook explores and maps the Pacific Ocean throughout the 1760s and 1770s. He is one of the first people to accurately determine longitude and his position at sea using a new invention called the chronometer. 11 1600 AD – 1800 AD New navigational technology 1600AD First Submarine 1700 Voyage of Endeavor Robert Fulton develops a submarine that uses a horizontal rudder to control vertical movement. This system forms the basis for modern submarines. 12 1800 AD The Nautilus 1800 AD – 1900 AD Surveying marine life 1800AD 1825 SCUBA 1872-1876 1882 The Challenger The Albatross William H. James of England designs a Self-Contained Underwater Breathing Apparatus (SCUBA) that allows the wearer to breathe underwater for up to an hour. 13 1900AD 1800 AD – 1900 AD Surveying marine life 1800AD 1825 SCUBA 1872-1876 1882 The Challenger The Albatross The Challenger circumnavigates the globe in the first great oceanographic expedition. Modern oceanography is based on the physical and biological research conducted on this expedition. 14 1900AD 1800 AD – 1900 AD Surveying marine life 1800AD 1825 SCUBA 1872-1876 1882 The Challenger The Albatross The U.S. Fisheries Commission launches the first oceanographic vessel built solely for research of marine life. This steamer was a major source of marine research for 40 years. The photo shows The Albatross in the early 1900s. Photo: NOAA 15 1900AD 1900 AD – present Exploration continues 1900AD 1943 Trieste Exploration Photo: NOAA Modern SCUBA 1960 Jacques Cousteau and Emile Gagnan develop modern SCUBA gear that allows explorers to stay underwater for extended time. 16 1985 present Titanic Discovered 1900 AD – present Exploration continues 1900AD 1943 Photo: NOAA Modern SCUBA 17 1985 1960 Trieste Exploration present Titanic Discovered Jacques Piccard and Don Walsh explore the Marianas Trench aboard the submersible Trieste (pictured left in 1960) To date, they are still the only two people to have traveled to the bottom of the Trench. 1900 AD – present Exploration continues 1900AD 1943 Photo: NOAA Modern SCUBA 18 1960 Trieste Exploration 1985 present Titanic Discovered A team of scientists discovers the remains of the Titanic, which sank in 1912. Did you know… …most of the Earth’s ocean is unexplored? 19 Less than 5% of the ocean has been discovered Today scientists rely on modern technology like satellites, buoys and submersibles to explore They also use computers and mathematical models