In the middle of an unknown waters, James Cook the Pioneer Out can judge only by basic equipment and can not see anyone else's life on the planet. Covered with a layer of salt, your last meal consists of old water, sauerkraut and salt-packed meat. This trip lasted many years, not your last. These trips were done by many seafarers, but none of them was as important as oceanography than James Cook. The reason he traveled was to build a British collection in the waters of the South.
Here, I encountered the greatest conflict with academia as an oceanographer. I was taught to honor people like Captain James Cook and Pioneer - he was honored with his "wonderful" navigation skills and navigation. STEM and its history tend to overlook our ancestors, which is the history of the attempt I tried to dissolve as graduate students and future professors. If our ancestors sailed into the seven seas before the Europeans, why did not they blame? Why are they not considered a pioneer in our field?
In the middle of an unknown waters, James Cook the Pioneer Out can judge only by basic equipment and can not see anyone else's life on the planet. Covered with a layer of salt, your last meal consists of old water, sauerkraut and salt-packed meat. This trip lasted many years, not your last. These trips were done by many seafarers, but none of them was as important as oceanography than James Cook. The reason he traveled was to build a British collection in the waters of the South.
Captain James Cook - Bora Bora was discovered in 1769 by Captain James Cook. This is the first time that this island was regarded as an existing island. When he came to the island, Cook worked as a British explorer in the area. That was the beginning of a missionary founded there in 1820. Their main purpose is to turn Polynesians into Christianity. You can see that the importance of the island only grows over the years. World War II - Believe it or not, Bora Bora was an American supply base during the Second World War in 1940. The island is a perfect refuge for more than 10,000 American soldiers. Nonetheless, Mosmut on the island is the main entrance to the island and from the island, making it an important place. For protection, eight cannons are on both sides of the island. Among them, there is the only memorable thing about today 's fight.
In the 19th century, explorer James Cook was the first to discover this habit; the inhabitants of the island were on board wood boards. This custom is called He'e nalu which means "to slide on the wave" in Hawaiian. And ... If you want to know this story, James Cook completely banned this custom when these islands were colonized. In the 20th century of 1950 and 1960, thanks to the advancement of Hawaii's pioneer Duke Kahanamoku and the manufacture of sheet metal (extruded polyurethane foam board, polyester resin, fiberglass board) surfing reappears, It became popular on the coast of California and Australia.