Bonus points if you understand the title without reading ahead to the end.
Tonight’s Final Jeopardy answer was about someone being killed by a spear (1700’s I believe), and the price said spear fetched in auction. The correct question – which I didn’t know – was Captain Cook, who was skewered in the Sandwich Islands, now known as Hawaii. The host of the show tossed in another little tidbit. The spear was recovered from Captain Cook’s body by his navigator, a man named Bligh who later became a captain of his own ship – the Bounty.
This kind of historical trivia floats my boat, so off I went into the realm of Google to see what more I might find.
Here’s a site maintained by a distant ancestor of Captain Cook with some nice background information about the man and his voyages. I especially like this part:
What he had bequeathed to future generations was at once grand and simple: a coherent map of the Pacific.
Helluva legacy.
After reading this stuff for a while, I became curious about historic maps in general. Back to Google.
The very first site I found was this nifty online collection of historical maps. I love maps, especially old ones. They just fascinate me. In fact, when I worked at the US Department of State in Washington D.C., I went to a special seminar once in their research library that was totally devoted to the maps in their collection. So I went looking for a link to that.
What I came across instead was this extensive link list to online cartography resources, which includes the above link, the Library of Congress archives, and much more both modern and historic.
Back to Google, and looking for ‘antique map’ brings up a long list of map auction houses and retailers. This non-commercial site jumped out at me, it lists antique maps of Iceland. Their home page displays a map from 1547, and there are many more to view.
Frozen rocky bits of land in the middle of nowhere made me think about maps of the planets in our solar system. This link, from the Jet Propulsion Laboratory, is pretty cool. The maps are stitched together from satellite images and such.
Further Googling led to this page containing a map that many scientists believe shows positive evidence of the asteroid strike that ended the reign of the dinosaurs. You can read more about it here.
From NASA to Vasa. Why? Because I knew a little about the Vasa already, and was curious about the progress. You see, the Vasa was a Swedish vessel that was designed to be the most powerful warship afloat. Unfortunately, she capsized and sank on her maiden voyage in 1628 – within a mile of her starting point and in sight of throngs of people gathered to watch her launch. After more than 300 years on the bottom, she was salvaged and raised, and a museum built to display her and tell her story. There’s another nice site about her here, which includes detailed lists of the items salvaged from the wreck.
The Vasa wasn’t the first ship to sink in such a manner. The British ship Mary Rose had suffered a similar fate about 80 years before. This site gives a little history, as well as a look at underwater archeological techniques.
Unlike James Burke, who manages to neatly wrap everything up at the end of his columns (no longer in Scientific American – drat) or shows on the Learning Channel, I’m going to take the easy way out here. By the way, if you’ve never had the chance to read or watch his Connections, you should. It’s a fun look at history, in ways you’ve never dreamed of.
Anyway, back to my copout... The Mary Rose was a British ship, and Captain Cook was the leader of a British exploration voyage. All wrapped up into one neat little package, right back where we started from. C'mon, if I was any good at this, I'd get paid for it!
Here's a little personal map story. When we first got married my wife could not read a map. One long weekend we travelled to a nearby city to shop and just get away for a few days. When we got inside the city limits I handed my wife a street map and told her that she had to navigate every bit of the way around town. We spent most of that weekend lost, but by the end of it my wife could read a map and get us to where we wanted to go. To this day she keeps an accordian folder full of maps in her trunk, and she knows how to use them when she travels.
Posted by Ted at October 10, 2003 09:27 PM | TrackBackYou really should check out the Patrick O'Brien novels if you haven't already.
Cook was brilliant. Bligh was brilliant, too, but a misguided soul. A Lieutenant still when the Bounty mutiny went down. No political or familial game with the Admiralty, and that's what it was all about. Funny how they all worshipped Nelson. He was their Lee, their Grant, their Farragut, their Dewey. All in one self-aggrandized package.
Posted by: Velociman at October 10, 2003 10:09 PMYou really should check out the Patrick O'Brien novels if you haven't already.
Cook was brilliant. Bligh was brilliant, too, but a misguided soul. A Lieutenant still when the Bounty mutiny went down. No political or familial game with the Admiralty, and that's what it was all about. Funny how they all worshipped Nelson. He was their Lee, their Grant, their Farragut, their Dewey. All in one self-aggrandized package.
Posted by: Velociman at October 10, 2003 10:10 PMJames Burke rocks! You know what was a better show than Connections?
The Day the Universe Changed.
Boy I hope that comes out on DVD.
Posted by: The Meatriarchy at October 11, 2003 08:42 PMVelociman, I got a couple of O'Brien's books at the library today. They didn't have the start of the series, so I got the second and third or fourth.
I haven't seen Universe. I'll have to look for it. Thanks.
Posted by: Ted at October 12, 2003 12:04 AMSpeaking of planetary maps ... for maps of moons and asteroids that aren't even round, graze over here.
Posted by: Jay Manifold at October 13, 2003 08:06 PM