This is an accepted version of this page Explorers are listed below with their common names, countries of origin (modern and former), centuries of activity and main areas of exploration.
15th/16th 15th
Leif Erikson
(
c.
970
–
c.
1020
) was a famous
Norse
explorer who is credited for being the first European to set foot on
American
soil.
Zheng He
(1371 –
c.
1435
) was a Chinese explorer who sailed along the Southeast Asian, South Asian, Western Asian, and East African coasts along with his fleet of large ships and several hundred men.
Christopher Columbus
(1451–1506) was an Italian explorer who led an expedition to the New World in 1492.
His voyages
are celebrated as the discovery of the Americas from a European perspective, and they opened a
new era
in the history of humankind and sustained contact between the two worlds.
John Cabot
(
c.
1450
– c.
1500
) was an Italian navigator who was the first European that sailed along to North American coast in 1497 since the Norse 500 years prior.
Vasco da Gama
(
c.
1460
– 1524). Famous Portuguese explorer who sailed to India in 1497–98. He accomplished finding a sea route to Asia which Europeans had been attempting to do for decades prior.
Amerigo Vespucci
(1451–1512). Italian navigator who made several trips to the
New World
. He is known for convincing the Europeans that the New World is not Asia, but an entirely new unknown continent. This new continent was soon named after him,
America
.
Juan Sebastián Elcano
(
c.
1486
– 1526) took command after Ferdinand's death and completed the voyage, becoming the first person (along with 17 other crewmates) to
circumnavigate
the
Earth
.
Francis Drake
(
c.
1540
– 1596) was an English
privateer
who plundered many Spanish towns and ships in the
Caribbean
and elsewhere. However, he is most notable for completing the second circumnavigation of the world (1577–1580).
Samuel de Champlain
(1567–1635) is known as "The Father of
New France
". He founded the first permanent European settlements in
Canada
, and explored many
lakes
and rivers in the interior lands from early age to his death.
David Livingstone
(1813–1873) is a Scottish explorer and missionary who sought to convert the locals to Christianity and expand British colonization, all the while discovering lakes and rivers within Africa's interior.