Settlers & explorers

This archive gathers milestones and stories involving settlers and explorers — people who traveled into unfamiliar territories, established new communities, or mapped the boundaries of the known world. Coverage spans historical achievements, cultural encounters, and the complex legacies these figures left behind.

image for article on Northwest Passage traverse

Roald Amundsen completes the first Northwest Passage traverse by sea

The Northwest Passage finally yielded in 1906, when Norwegian explorer Roald Amundsen sailed his small converted herring boat, the Gjøa, out of the Arctic into Nome, Alaska. His crew of six had spent nearly two winters learning from Netsilik Inuit — their clothing, sled-handling, and ice-reading — closing a search that had defeated European expeditions for three centuries.

image for article on Antarctic exploration

Russia’s Bellingshausen expedition becomes first to sight Antarctica

Antarctic exploration took a startling leap on January 27, 1820, when Russian sloops Vostok and Mirny glimpsed an ice shelf at the bottom of the world. Commanders Bellingshausen and Lazarev logged the sighting without fanfare, then sailed on, eventually circling the continent over two years. It closed a question European mapmakers had been sketching since the 1500s.