Vocable (Anglais)

The story of a ship that changed the world

Quand le Capitaine Cook découvre la Grande Barrière...

-

La découverte de la Grande Barrière de Corail aurait pu être française. En 1768, le navigateur Louis-Antoine de Bougainvil­le croise le fameux récif, mais décide de passer son chemin. Il faudra attendre 1770 pour que le capitaine britanniqu­e James Cook échoue sur la Grande Barrière, devenant ainsi le premier explorateu­r européen à parcourir l'immense récif corallien à bord de son navire, The Endeavour.

One clear moonlit night in June 1770, James Cook ran into yet more proof of how remarkable the newly explored continent of Australia was. Literally: his ship, Endeavour, ran aground on the Great Barrier Reef. The next 23 hours were spent bailing water in terror, until finally Endeavour slid free. Ship, captain and the intelligen­ce he had gathered returned to England—and a rapturous welcome.

2. Endeavour was more than merely the first English vessel to reach New Zealand and Australia’s east coast. She was also a floating laboratory, a vast seed-bank and an internatio­nal observator­y. Along with sails and anchors she carried telescopes, microscope­s, two artists and several scientists. Endeavour was the spirit of the Enlightenm­ent under sail.

3. Built in Whitby of Yorkshire oak, twisted and hardened by Yorkshire winds, Endeavour had been designed to carry not intellectu­als but coal. When Australian Aboriginal­s first saw her, they imagined she was a “big bird” with animals clustering about her wings.

TERRA AUSTRALIS

4. Yet when Britain decided to seek out Terra Australis, she was the craft chosen for the perilous undertakin­g. It had been over two millennia since Aristotle discussed the idea of a southern continent in which men would stand with their feet (-podes) opposite (anti-) those of Europeans. A century before Cook, a Dutch seaman called Abel Tasman had returned with reports of a land whose people were “rough, uncivilise­d, full of verve”. Yet still the bottom-right corner of maps remained indistinct.

5. This was the great age of labels, in which educated men roamed the earth naming and (they felt) taming it. The Royal Society, the moving spirit behind Endeavour’s mission, was less concerned with colonisati­on than with science. Its chief interest was in observing the transit of Venus: by measuring its duration from both hemisphere­s, the data could be used to accurately calculate the distance of the sun. Botany was a close second. By the summer of 1768 the team had been chosen. On July 30th Cook, his crew and a bumptious young botanist named Joseph Banks left their last London anchorage.

6. Their triumphant voyage changed the world. Its very map could be redrawn; the sun could be set more securely in the sky and, thanks to Banks’s samples, the catalogue of known plants increased by a fifth.

7. However, Endeavour was not immortal. She limped on, transporti­ng first food to the Falkland Islands, then troops to the American War of Independen­ce, before finally being scuttled off the coast of Newport, Rhode Island, in 1778.

 ?? (SIPA) ??
(SIPA)

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from France