European and American voyages of scientific exploration
The era of European and American voyages of scientific exploration followed the Age of Discovery and were inspired by a new confidence in science and reason that arose in the Age of Enlightenment. Maritime expeditions in the Age of Discovery were a means of expanding colonial empires, establishing new trade routes and extending diplomatic and trade relations to new territories, but with the Enlightenment scientific curiosity became a new motive for exploration to add to the commercial and political ambitions of the past. See also List of Arctic expeditions and List of Antarctic expeditions.
Maritime exploration in the Age of Discovery
From the early 15th century to the early 17th century the Age of Discovery had, through Spanish and Portuguese seafarers, opened up southern Africa, the Americas, Asia and Oceania to European eyes: Bartholomew Dias had sailed around the Cape of southern Africa in search of a trade route to India; Christopher Columbus, on four journeys across the Atlantic, had prepared the way for European colonisation of the New World; Ferdinand Magellan had commanded the first expedition to sail across the Atlantic and Pacific oceans to reach the Maluku Islands and was continued by Juan Sebastián Elcano, completing the first circumnavigation of the Earth. During the 17th century the naval hegemony started to shift from the Portuguese and Spanish to the Dutch and then the British and French. The new era of scientific exploration began in the late 17th century as scientists, and in particular natural historians, established scientific societies that published their researches in specialist journals. The British Royal Society was founded in 1660 and encouraged the scientific rigour of empiricism with its principles of careful observation and deduction. Activities of early members of the Royal Society served as models for later maritime exploration. Hans Sloane was elected a member in 1685 and travelled to Jamaica from 1687 to 1689 as physician to the Duke of Albemarle who had been appointed Governor of Jamaica. In Jamaica Sloane collected numerous specimens which were carefully described and illustrated in a published account of his stay. Sloane bequeathed his vast collection of natural history 'curiosities' and library of over 50,000 bound volumes to the nation, prompting the establishment in 1753 of the British Museum. His travels also made him an extremely wealthy man as he patented a recipe that combined milk with the fruit of Theobroma cacao he saw growing in Jamaica, to produce milk chocolate. Books of distinguished social figures like the intellectual commentator Jean Jacques Rousseau, Director of the Paris Museum of Natural History Comte de Buffon, and scientist-travellers like Joseph Banks, and Charles Darwin, along with the romantic and often fanciful travelogues of intrepid explorers, increased the desire of European governments and the general public for accurate information about the newly discovered distant lands.One of the earliest French expeditions on the coasts of Africa, South America and through the Strait of Magellan was made by a squadron of French men-of-war under the command of M. de Gennes in 1695–97. The young French explorer, engineer and hydrographer François Froger described this expedition in his A Relation of a Voyage.
Maritime exploration in the Age of Enlightenment
By the 18th century maritime exploration had become safer and more efficient with technical innovations that vastly improved navigation and cartography: improvements were made to the theodolite, octant, precision clocks, as well as the compass, telescope, and general shipbuilding techniques.From the mid-18th century through the 19th century scientific missions mapped the newly discovered regions, brought back to Europe the newly discovered fauna and flora, made hydrological, astronomical and meteorological observations and improved the methods of navigation. This stimulated great advances in the scientific disciplines of natural history, botany, zoology, ichthyology, conchology, taxonomy, medicine, geography, geology, mineralogy, hydrology, oceanography, physics, meteorology etc. – all contributing to the sense of "improvement" and "progress" that characterized the Enlightenment. Artists were used to record landscapes and indigenous peoples, while natural history illustrators captured the appearance of organisms before they deteriorated after collection. Some of the world's finest natural history illustrations were produced at this time and the illustrators changed from informed amateurs to fully trained professionals acutely aware of the need for scientific accuracy.
By the middle of the 19th century all of the world's major land masses, and most of the minor ones, had been discovered by Europeans and their coastlines charted. This marked the end of this phase of science as the of 1872–1876 began exploring the deep seas beyond a depth of 20 or 30 meters. In spite of the growing community of scientists, for nearly 200 years science had been the preserve of wealthy amateurs, educated middle classes and clerics. At the start of the 18th century most voyages were privately organized and financed but by the second half of the century these scientific expeditions, like James Cook's three Pacific voyages under the auspices of the British Admiralty, were instigated by government. In the late 19th century, when this phase of science was drawing to a close, it became possible to earn a living as a professional scientist although photography was beginning to replace the illustrators. The exploratory sailing ship had gradually evolved into the modern research vessels. From now on maritime research in new European colonies in America, Africa, Australia, India and elsewhere, would be carried out by researchers within the occupied territories themselves.
Chronology of voyages
This compendium of voyages of scientific exploration provides an overview of maritime scientific research carried out at the time of the Enlightenment in Europe.Published journals and accounts are included with the individual voyages.
1735–1739: French Geodesic Mission
The French Geodesic Mission was an 18th-century expedition to what is now Ecuador carried out for the purpose of measuring the roundness of the Earth and measuring the length of a degree of latitude at the Equator. The mission was one of the first geodesic missions carried out under modern scientific principles, and the first major international scientific expedition.- * Ships: from Spain to Colombia, El Conquistador and Incendio; from France to Colombia, Portefaix; from Colombia to Ecuador, San Cristóbal; from Ecuador to Chile and return, Nuestra Señora de Belén and Rosa, and finally from Ecuador to France Liz, Nuestra Señora de la Deliberanza, Luis Erasmo, Marquesa de Antin.
- * French astronomers: Charles Marie de La Condamine, Pierre Bouguer and Louis Godin.
- * Spanish geographers: Jorge Juan y Santacilla and Antonio de Ulloa.
- * Assistants: Joseph de Jussieu and Jean Godin.
- * Ecuadoran geographer and topographer: Pedro Maldonado.
- * Publications: Relación histórica del viaje a la América meridional, Jorge Juan and Ulloa, 1748; Figure de la terre determine, Bouguer, 1749; Journal du voyage, La Condamine, 1751; Le procès des étoiles, 1735–1771,,.
1764–1766: HMS ''Dolphin''
- * Captain: John Byron.
- * Publications: J. Byron, A Voyage round the world., translated into French the same year under the title Journey around the world in 1764 and 1765, on the English warship "The Dolphin", commissioned by Vice-Admiral Byron....
1766–1768: HMS ''Dolphin'' and HMS ''Swallow''
- * Captains: Samuel Wallis , Philip Carteret .
- * Second Lieutenant: Tobias Furneaux.
1766: HMS ''Niger''
- * Captain: Thomas Adams
- * Also aboard: Joseph Banks and Constantine Phipps.
1766–1769: ''La Boudeuse'' and ''L'Étoile''
The purpose of the expedition is to discover new territories available for settlement, to open a new route to reach China, to found new outlets for the French East India Company and, finally, discover acclimatable spices for the Isle de France.
- * Captains: Louis Antoine de Bougainville Chief of expedition, Nicolas Pierre Duclos-Guyot, François Chenard de la Giraudais
- * Naturalists: Philibert Commerçon, Jeanne Baré
- * Astronomer: Pierre-Antoine Véron
- * Cartographer: Charles Routier de Romainville
- * Publication: Louis Antoine de Bougainville, Journey Around the World by the Commander of the La Boudeuse and L'Étoile, in 1766, 1767, 1768 and 1769"
1768–1771: HMS ''Endeavour''
- * Captain: James Cook
- * Naturalists: Sir Joseph Banks and Daniel Solander
- * Astronomer: Charles Green
- * Artist: Sydney Parkinson
- * Publications: "A Journal of a voyage round the world , in His Majesty's ship Endeavour, in the years 1768, 1769, 1770, and 1771… to which is added, a Concise vocabulary of the language of Otahitee". The identity of the authors of this report remains controversial because different authors attribute it to Cook, to Banks, Solander as well as various officers having shared in the voyage. It is translated into French under the title of "Journal of a voyage around the world, 1768, 1769, 1770, 1771; containing the various events of the voyage; with the relationship of the lands newly discovered in the méridional… hemisphere ".
1771–72: ''Isle de France'' and ''Le Nécessaire''
Expedition to harvest spices for production on Mauritius, to prevent the monopoly of their trade by the Dutch.- * Captains: Chevalier de Coëtivi and Mr. Cordé
- * Naturalist: Pierre Sonnerat
- * Publication: P. Sonnerat, Trip to New Guinea, which is the description of places, the physical and moral observations, and details about the naturelle… history
1772: ''Sir Lawrence''
- * Captain: John Gore
- * Aboard: Joseph Banks
- * Aboard: Daniel Solander
1772–1775: HMS ''Resolution'' and HMS ''Adventure''
- * Captains: James Cook expedition leader, Charles Clerke and Tobias Furneaux
- * Surgeon-naturalist: William Anderson
- * Naturalists: Johann Reinhold Forster, Georg Forster and Anders Sparrman
- * Astronomers: William Wales, William Bayly
- * Aboard as crew member George Vancouver, also to become a famous Explorer
- * Publications: Cook's journals; also the two Forsters each released an account of this journey, Reinhold Observations Made during a Voyage round the World ).
1771–72: ''La Fortune'' and ''Le Gros-Ventre''
- * Captains: Yves-Joseph de Kerguelen-Trémarec, Louis Aleno de St Aloüarn
1773–74: ''Le Roland'' and ''L'Oiseau''
- * Captain: Yves-Joseph de Kerguelen-Trémarec
- * Naturalist: Jean Guillaume Bruguière
- * Astronomer: Joseph Lepaute Dagelet
1773–74: HMS ''Racehorse'' and HMS ''Carcass''
- * Captain: Constantine John Phipps
- * Surgeon-naturalist: Charles Irving, assisted by Olaudah Equiano
- * Astronomer: Israel Lyons
- * Publication: C.J. Phipps, A Voyage towards the north pole undertaken....
1776–1780: HMS ''Resolution'' and HMS ''Discovery''
- * Captains: James Cook and Charles Clerke
- * Surgeon-naturalists: William Anderson and William Ellis
- * Astronomer: William Bayly, assistant astronomer Joseph Billings
- * Illustrator: John Webber
- * Crew members: George Vancouver was to become a celebrated explorer himself and William Bligh who would later command HMS Bounty, James King was second lieutenant and shared astronomical duties with Cook on Resolution.
1785–1788: ''La Boussole'' and ''L'Astrolabe''
- * Captain: Jean-François de Galaup, comte de Lapérouse and Paul Antoine Fleuriot de Langle
- * Chief Engineer: Paul Mérault Monneron
- * Geologist: Robert de Lamanon
- * Artists: the uncle and nephew Prevost, Duché De Vancy
- * Naturalists: Jean-André Mongez
- * Interpreter of Russian: Barthélemy de Lesseps landed at Petropavlovsk, and in charge of bringing to France the log, maps and drawings of the trip.
1785–1788: HMS ''King George''
- * Captain: Woodcock
1785–1794: ''Slava Rossii''
- * Captain: Joseph Billings
- * Naturalists: Carl Heinrich Merck and Carl Krebs
- * Surgeons-naturalists: Michael Robeck and Peter Allegretti
- * Cartographer: Gavriil Sarytchev
- * Publications: J. Billings, An Account of a Geographical and Astronomical expedition to the Northern parts of Russia., translated into French the same year under the title of Voyage made by order of Empress Catherine II Russia, in the North of the Asian Russiain the icy sea, in the sea on the coasts of America, from 1785 until 1794, by commodore Billings and Anadyr ; Peter Simon Pallas, Zoographia Rosso – Asiatica, where he described the species discovered by this expedition.
1790–91: ''La Solide''
- * Captain: Étienne Marchand
1789–1794: ''Descubierta'' and ''Atrevida''
- * Captains: Alessandro Malaspina and José de Bustamante y Guerra
- * Naturalists: Antonio Pineda, Thaddäus Haenke, Luis Née and Tomas de Suria
- * Artist: José del Pozo and José Guío
- * Publication: Pedro de Novo y Colson, Viaje político-científico alrededor del mundo: por las corbetas Descubierta y Atrevida al mando los capitanes navío d. Alejandro Malaspina y Don José de Bustamante y Guerra, desde 1789 á 1794..
1791–1794: ''La Recherche'' and ''L'Espérance''
- * Captains: Antoine Bruni d'Entrecasteaux and Jean-Michel de Kermadec
- * Naturalists: Jacques-Julien de Labillardière, Claude Riche, Jean Blavier, the father Louis Ventenat and Louis Deschamps
- * Hydrographer: Charles-François Beautemps-Beaupré
- * Gardener: Félix Delahaye
- * Artist: Piron
- * Publication: J.H. La Billardière, Relation of the voyage for the Perugia, made by order of the constituent Assembly during the years 1791, 1792 and during the first and second years of the Republic Françoise ; Elizabeth Rossel, Voyage of Entrecasteaux, sent for Lapérouse, 2 vols, 1809.
1791–1793: HMS ''Providence''
- * Captain: William Bligh
- * Surgeon-naturalist: Thomas Dancer
1791–1795: HMS ''Discovery'' and HMS ''Chatham''
- * Captains: George Vancouver and William Robert Broughton
- * Naturalist: Archibald Menzies
- * Physician-naturalist: Alexander Cranstoun
1800–1804: ''Le Géographe'' and ''Naturaliste''
- * Commanders: Nicolas Baudin and Jacques Hamelin .
- * Physician, surgeon and biologist: Pierre François Keraudren .
- * Naturalists: Jean Baptiste Leschenault de la Tour, René Maugé Cely, Stanislas Levillain, François Péron, Jean-Baptiste Bory de Saint-Vincent , Désiré Dumont, André Michaux
- * Artist: Charles-Alexandre Lesueur assisted by Nicolas-Martin Petit
- * Astronomers: Pierre-François Bernier and Frédéric de Bissy
- * Cartographer: Charles-Pierre Boullanger
- * Geographer: Pierre Faure
- * Mineralogist: Louis Depuch, Joseph Charles Bailly
- * Publications: F. Péron, Voyage of discovery to the southern lands ; many species of birds are described by Louis Jean Pierre Vieillot in the New Dictionary of Natural History.
1801–1803: HMS ''Investigator''
- * Captain: Matthew Flinders.
- * Naturalist: Robert Brown
- * Physician-naturalist: Hugh Bell
- * Mineralogist: John Allen
- * Astronomer: John Crosley
- * Artists: Ferdinand Bauer and William Westall
- * Publication: M. Flinders, A Voyage to Terra Australis, undertaken for the purpose of completing the discovery of that vast country and prosecuted in the years 1801, 1802 and 1803....
1803–1806: ''Nadezhda'' and ''Neva''
Nadezhda and Neva explored the Aleutian Islands, Sakhalin and discovered the mouth of the Love River. They also visited the Marquesas Islands and Hawaii. Baron von Langsdorff left the expedition in 1805 to explore the Interior of Alaska and California. Thirteen cases of natural history specimens were shipped to the St. Petersburg Academy of Sciences.
- * Captains: Adam Johann von Krusenstern and Yuri Fyodorovich Lisianski
- * Naturalist: Georg Heinrich von Langsdorff
- * Physician-naturalist: Wilhelm Gottlieb Tilesius von Tilenau
- * Publication: G. H. von Langsdorff, Bemerkungen auf einer Reise um die Welt in den Jahren 1803 bis 1807, von G. h. von Langsdorff,....
1815–1818: ''Rurik''
- * Captain: Otto von Kotzebue
- * Naturalist: Adelbert von Chamisso
- * Physician-naturalist: Johann Friedrich von Eschscholtz
- * Publication: J.F. Eschscholtz, Entdeckungs – Reise in die Süd – See und nach der Berings – Strasse zur Erforschung einer nordöstlichen Durchfahrt, unternommen in den Jahren 1815, 1816, 1817 1818 und, auf Kosten… a… Grafen Rumanzoff, auf dem Schiffe ″Rurick″, unter dem Befehle of the Lieutenants… Otto von Kotzebue….
1817–1820: ''L'Uranie'' and ''La Physicienne''
- * Commander: Commander Louis Claude de Saulces Freycinet
- * Second: Louis Isidore Duperrey
- * Physician-naturalist: Joseph Paul Gaimard and Jean René Constant Quoy
- * Botanist: Charles Gaudichaud-Beaupré
- * Illustrator: Jacques Arago, Adrien Taunay the Younger
- * Publication: de Freycinet, L. Voyage autour du Monde...exécuté sur les corvettes de L. M. "L'Uranie" et "La Physicienne," pendant les années 1817, 1818, 1819 et 1820. Paris. pp. 192–401. J. Arago, Drive around the world during the years 1817, 1818, 1819 and 1820, on the corvettes of the King the Urania and physicist, commissioned by Mr. Freycinet, by Js. Arago, designer of the expedition.
1819–1821: ''Le Rhône'' and ''La Durance''
- * Captain: Pierre Henri Philibert
- * Botanist: George Samuel Perrottet
1822–1825: ''La Coquille''
- * Commander: lieutenant Louis Isidore Duperrey
- * Second: lieutenant Jules Dumont d'Urville botanist
- * Physician-naturalist: the surgeon, pharmacist and zoologist René Primevère Lesson and surgeon-major Prosper Garnot
- * Astronomer: sign of vessel Charles Hector Jacquinot
- * Illustrators: Jules Louis Lejeune, Jacques Arago
- * Hydrographer: Victor Charles Lottin
- * Publications: Lesson and Garnot, Voyage autour du monde exécuté par ordre du roi sur la corvette La Coquille / "Journey around the world on the corvette La Coquille".
1823–1826: ''Predpriyatiye''
- * Captain: Otto von Kotzebue
- * Physician-naturalist: Johann Friedrich von Eschscholtz and Dr. Lenz
- * Publication: O. von Kotzebue, Reise um die Welt in den Jahren 1823, 24, 25 und 26, von Otto von Kotzebue,....
1824–25: HMS ''Blonde''
He toured the islands and made observations. With the consent of Christian missionaries to the islands, he also removed wooden carvings and other artifacts of the chiefs of ancient Hawaii from the temple ruins of Puuhonua O Hōnaunau.
On his return journey in 1825, Lord Byron discovered and charted Malden Island, which he named after his surveying officer, Mauke; and Starbuck Island. Starbuck was named in honour of Captain Valentine Starbuck, an American whaler who had sighted the island while carrying the Hawaiian royal couple to England in 1823–1824, but which had probably been previously sighted by his cousin and fellow-whaler Captain Obed Starbuck in 1823.
- * Captain: George Anson Byron
- * Naturalists: Andrew Bloxam and James Macrae
- * Published by: G.A. Byron, Voyage of H.M.S. Blonde to the Sandwich Islands, in the years 1824–1825. The Right Hon. captain. Lord Byron order..
1824–1826: ''Le Thétis'' and ''L'Espérance''
- * Captains: Hyacinthe de Bougainville and Paul de Nourquer du Camper
- * Surgeon-naturalist: François Louis Busseuil
1825–1828: HMS ''Blossom''
- * Captain: Frederick William Beechey
- * Physician-naturalist: Alexander Collie
- * Naturalist: George Tradescant Lay
- * Publication: F.W. Beechey, Narrative of a Voyage to the Pacific and Behring's Strait", "The Zoology of Captain Beechey's voyage to the Pacific and Behring's Strait..
1825–1830: HMS ''Adventure'' and HMS ''Beagle''
In the desolate waters of Tierra del Fuego Stokes, the captain of, became depressed and shot himself on 2 August 1828 dying a few days later. Parker King replaced Stokes with Lieutenant W.G. Skyring as commander of the ship, and both ships sailed to Montevideo. After the ships arrived at Rio de Janeiro for repairs and provisioning, Rear Admiral Sir Robert Otway, the Commander-in-chief of the South American station, gave command of Beagle to his aide, Lieutenant Robert FitzRoy. Fuegians were taken back with them when the Beagle returned. During this survey, the Beagle Channel was identified and named after the ship.
- * Captain: Philip Parker King and Pringle Stokes
- * Naturalist: James Anderson
- * Publication: P.P. King, Narrative of the first surveying voyage of H. M. ships ″Adventure″ and ″Beagle″, between the years 1826 and 1836, describing their examination of the Southern shores of South-America and the ″Beagle's″ circumnavigation of the world... Vol. i.
1826–1829: ''L'Astrolabe''
- * Captain: Jules Dumont d'Urville
- * Physician-naturalist: Joseph Paul Gaimard and Jean René Constant Quoy
- * Pharmacy-botanist: René Primevère Lesson
- * Publications: J. Dumont d'Urville, Voyage of the Astrolabe..
1826–1829: ''Senyavin'' and ''Moller''
- * Captain: Fyodor Litke
- * Botanist-naturalist: Karl Heinrich Mertens
- * Naturalist: Heinrich von Kittlitz
- * Mineralogist: Alexander Philipov Postels
- * Published by: F. Litke, Trip around the world.
1827–28: ''La Chevrette''
- * Captain: Theodore Fabré
- * Surgeon-naturalist: Auguste Adolphe Marc Reynaud
1828: Ms. Korvet ''Triton''
- The corvette Triton
- The brig Iris
- * Expedition leader: Dr. H.C. Macklot
- * Captain of Triton: J.J. Steenboom
1829: ''La Cybèle''
- * Captain: Marie Antoine Chevalier de Robillard
- * Zoologists: Gaspard Auguste Brullé and Sextius Delaunay
- * Botanist: Jean-Marie Despréaux
- * Geologist: Pierre Théodore Virlet D'Aoust of
- * Artist: Prosper Baccuet
1829–1832: ''La Favorite''
- * Captain: Cyrille Pierre Théodore Laplace
- * Naturalist: Joseph Fortuné Théodore Eydoux
- * Publication: C.P.T. Laplace, Journey around the world by the India and China seas, running on the corvette of the State the Favorite during the 1830s, 1831 and 1832 under the command of Mr Laplace captain of frégatte. Published by order of Mr. Vice-Admiral comte Rigny Minister of marine and colonies..
1831–1836: HMS ''Beagle''
- * Captain: Robert FitzRoy
- * Physician-naturalist: Robert McCormick until April 1832, followed by Benjamin Bynoe
- * Artist: Augustus Earle, replaced by Conrad Martens
- * Naturalist : Charles Darwin
- * Publications: C. Darwin, Zoology of the Voyage of H.M.S. Beagle.,
C. Darwin, The Geology of the Voyage of The Beagle, Geological Observations on the Volcanic Islands, Geological Observations on South America
1835 and 1836: ''La Recherche''
Two expeditions to the coasts of Iceland and Greenland in an attempt to trace the Bordelaise commanded by Jules de Blosseville which had been missing since 1833.- * Captain François Thomas Tréhouart
- * Physician-naturalist: Joseph Paul Gaimard assisted by Elie Jean-François Le Guillou and by Charles René Augustin Léclancher , Louis Eugène Robert
1836–1839: ''Vénus''
- * Captain: Abel Aubert Du Petit-Thouars
- * Engineer hydrographer: Urbain Dortet de Tessan
- * Physician-naturalist: Adolphe Simon Neboux
- * Surgeon: Charles René Augustin Léclancher
- * Publication: A.A. Petit-Thouars, Travel around the world on the fragate Venus..
1836–37: ''La Bonite''
- * Captain: Auguste-Nicolas Vaillant
- * Physician-naturalist: Joseph Fortuné Théodore Eydoux and Louis François Auguste Souleyet
- * Hydrographer: Benoît Darondeau
- * Pharmacy-botanist: Charles Gaudichaud-Beaupré
- * Publication: A. N. Vaillant, Trip around the world executed during the years 1836 and 1837 on the corvette Bonito....
1836–1842: HMS ''Sulphur''
- * Captain: Edward Belcher
- * Physician-naturalist: Richard Brinsley Hinds
- * Publications: E. Belcher, Narrative of a Voyage Round the World in HMS Sulphur. ; R.B. Hinds, "The Zoology of the Voyage of HMS Sulphur".
1837–1840: ''L'Astrolabe'' and ''La Zélée''
- * Captains: Jules Dumont d'Urville , Charles Hector Jacquinot
- * Physician-naturalist: on "The Astrolabe", Jacques Bernard Hombron surgeon-major of 2nd class and Louis Le Breton surgeon 3rd class and "La Zélée" Honoré Jacquinot 3rd class surgeon, Elie Jean François Le Guillou surgeon, 3rd class
- * Preparer-naturalist: Pierre Marie Alexandre Dumoutier
- * Illustrator: Ernest Goupil
- * Hydrographer-cartographer:
- * Publications: J. Dumont d'Urville then, assisted Desgraz Secretary of L'Astrolabe "Histoire du voyage" from Tome 4 to 10 tome 1, tome 2, tome 3, tome 4, tome 5, volume 6, tome 7, tome 8, tome 9, tome 10.
1837–1843: HMS ''Beagle''
The mission was the hydrographic survey of the coasts of Australia. In 1839 Lieutenant Stokes sighted a natural harbour which Wickham named Port Darwin, the later settlement nearby eventually became the city of Darwin, Northern Territory. In 1841 Wickham fell ill, and Stokes took command.- * Captain: John Clements Wickham, succeeded by John Lort Stokes
- * Physician-naturalist: Benjamin Bynoe
- * Publication: J. L. Stokes, Discoveries in Australia, With an Account of the Coasts and Rivers Explored and Surveyed During The Voyage of H.M.S. Beagle, in the Years 1837-38-39-40-41-42-43. By Command of the Lords Commissioners of the Admiralty. Also a Narrative of Captain Owen Stanley's Visits to the Islands in the Arafura Sea. Vol. 1 and Vol. 2
1838–1842: USS ''Vincennes'' and USS ''Peacock''
Departing Hampton Roads on 18 August 18, 1838, the expedition stopped at Madeira and Rio de Janeiro, Argentina; visited Tierra del Fuego, Chile, Peru, the Tuamotu Archipelago, Samoa, and New South Wales. From Sydney, the fleet sailed into the Antarctic Ocean in December 1839 and reported the discovery "of an Antarctic continent west of the Balleny Islands" of which it sighted the coast on 25 January 1840. Next, the expedition visited Fiji and the Hawaiian Islands in 1840. In July 1840, two sailors, one of whom was Wilkes' nephew, Midshipman Wilkes Henry, were killed while bartering for food on Malolo, in Fiji. Wilkes retribution was swift and severe. According to an old man of Malolo Island, nearly 80 Fijians were killed in the incident.
From December 1840 to March 1841, his men with native Hawaiian porters hauled a pendulum to the summit of Mauna Loa to measure gravity. He explored the west coast of North America, including the Strait of Juan de Fuca, Puget Sound, the Columbia River, San Francisco Bay and the Sacramento River, in 1841.
The expedition returned by way of the Philippines, the Sulu Archipelago, Borneo, Singapore, Polynesia and the Cape of Good Hope, reaching New York City on 10 June 1842. This was the first circumnavigation of the world funded by the Government of the United States and the last by a sailing vessel. The expedition was poorly prepared and of five vessels which left, only two returned to port. The natural history collections were very rich with 50,000 plant specimens and 4,000 specimens of animals.
- * Captains: Charles Wilkes and William Levereth Hudson
- * Doctor-tries: J.L. Fox
- * Naturalists: Charles Pickering, Titian Ramsay Peale, James Dwight Dana, William Dunlop Brackenridge
- * Publication: V. Wilkes, Narrative of the United States exploring Expedition.
1839–1843: HMS ''Erebus'' and HMS ''Terror''
- * Captains: Sir James Clark Ross and Francis Crozier
- * Physician-naturalist: Robert McCormick, Joseph Hooker, John Robertson, David Lyall
- * Publications: J.C. Ross, A Voyage of Discovery and Research in the Southern and Antarctic Regions., J.E. Gray and John Richardson, The zoology of the Voyage of HM Ships Erebus and Terror. J.D. Hooker, The botany of the Antarctic voyage of HM discovery ships Erebus and Terror in the years 1839–1843 under the command of Captain Sir James Clark Ross. Three volumes: I. Flora Antarctica, II. Flora Novae Zelandiae, III. Flora Tasmaniae.
1841–1844: ''La Favorite''
- * Captain: Théogène François Page
- * Surgeon-naturalist: Charles René Augustin Léclancher
1842–1846: HMS ''Fly''
- * Captain: Francis Price Blackwood
- * Physician-naturalist: Benjamin Bynoe
- * Naturalists: Joseph Beete Jukes and John MacGillivray
- * Publication: J.B. Jukes, "Narrative of the surveying voyage of H. M. S. ″Fly″, commanded by captain F. P. Blackwood,... in Torres Strait, New Guinea and other islands of the Eastern Archipelago, during the years 1842–1846, together with an excursion into the interior of the Eastern part of Java".
1845–1847: HDMS ''Galathea''
- * Captain: Steen Andersen Bille
- * Physician-naturalist: Didrik Ferdinand Didrichsen
- * Naturalists: Bernhard Casper Kamphǿvener, Carl Emil Kiellerup, Hinrich Johannes Rink, Wilhelm Friedrich Georg Behn and Johannes Theodor Reinhardt.
- * Artists: Johan Christian Thornam and Poul August Plum.
- * Publication: Steen Bille, Beretning om Corvetten Galathea's Reise omkring Jorden i 1845, 46 og 47, Universitetsboghandler C. U. Reitzels Forlag, Kjøbenhavn 1853
1846–1850: HMS ''Rattlesnake'' and HMS ''Bramble''
- * Captain: Owen Stanley and Charles Bampfield Yule
- * Surgeon: John Thomson
- * Physician-naturalist: Thomas Henry Huxley
- * Naturalists: John MacGillivray and James Fowler Wilcox
- * Artist: Oswald Brierly
- * Publication: J. MacGillivray, Narrative of the Voyage of HMS Rattlesnake.. Goodman, J. The Rattlesnake: A Voyage of Discovery to the Coral Sea. London: Faber & Faber, . Goodman, J. Losing it in New Guinea: the voyage of HMS Rattlesnake. Endeavour 29 : 60–65,, . J. Huxley, T.H. Huxley's diary of the voyage of HMS Rattlesnake. London: Chatto & Windus.
1851–1854: ''Capricieuse''
- * Commander: Commander Gaston de Rocquemaurel
- * Second: Navy lieutenant Jules Duroch
- * Publication: The narrative of the voyage remained unpublished.
1851–1853: ''Eugenie''
- * Captain: .
- * Physician-naturalist: Johan Gustaf Hjalmar Kinberg
- * Naturalist: Nils Johan Andersson
- * Publication: N.J. Andersson, Fregatten "Eugenies" resa omkring jorden åren 1851–1853, under befäl af utgifven af, v. a. Virgin v. Skogman....
1852–1863: HMS ''Herald''
- * Captain: Henry Mangles Denham
- * Naturalists: John MacGillivray, William Milne and Denis Macdonald as Assistant Surgeon-zoologist.
- * Publication: Edward Forbes, The zoology of the voyage of H.M.S. Herald under the command of Captain Henry Kellett,... during the years 1845–51..
1853–1855: USS ''Vincennes'' and USS ''Porpoise''
- * Captain: John Rodgers
- * Naturalists: William Stimpson and Charles Wright
- * Publication: due to the outbreak of civil war, there is no record of this voyage, scientific discoveries have been published separately from scientific journals.
1857–1860: SMS ''Novara''
- * Captain: Bernhard von Wüllerstorf-Urbair
- * Naturalists: Ferdinand von Hochstetter, Georg von Frauenfeld and Johann Zelebor.
- * Publication: Reise der österreichischen Fregatte Novara um die Erde in den Jahren 1857, 1858, 1859 unter den Befehlen Commodore b. von Wüllerstorf-Urbair.
1860: HMS ''Bulldog''
- * Captain: Francis Leopold McClintock
- * Naturalist: George Charles Wallich
- * Publication: The North Atlantic Sea – Bed; comprising a diary of the voyage on board H. M. S. Bulldog, in 1860, and observations on the presence of animal life, and the formation and nature of organic deposits, at great depths in the ocean..
1865–1868: ''Magenta''
- * Captain: Vittorio Arminjon
- * Naturalists: Filippo de Filippi and Enrico Hillyer Giglioli
- * Publications: E.H. Giglioli, Note intorno alla distribuzione della Fauna Vertebrata nell oceano prese durante un viaggio intorno al Blobo. and Viaggio intorno al globo della r. pirocorvetta italiana ″Magenta″ negli anni 1865-66-67-68, sotto it comando del capitano di fregata V. f. Arminjon. Relazione descrittiva e scientifica pubblicata sotto gli auspici del ministero di Agricoltura, industria e commercio dal dottore Enrico Hillyer Giglioli… Con una introduzione etnologica di Paolo Mantegazza..
1865: HMS ''Curacoa''
- * Captain: Sir William Wiseman, 8th Baronet
- * Naturalist: Julius Lucius Brenchley
- * Publication: J.L. Brenchley, Jottings during the cruise of H.M.S. Curoçoa among the south sea islands in 1865.. Collections by Brenchley are handled by various specialists as George Robert Gray for Albert Günther birds to fish and reptiles.
1868 and 1869–1870: HMS ''Lightning'' and HMS ''Porcupine''
- * Captains: Captain May, Killwick Calver .
- * Naturalists: Sir Charles Wyville Thomson and Philip Herbert Carpenter
- * Publication: The Depths of the Sea: An Account of the General Results of the Dredging Cruises of H.M.SS. Porcupine and Lightning during the summers of 1868, 1869, and 1870, Under the Scientific Direction of Dr. Carpenter, J. Gwyn Jeffreys, and Dr. Wyville Thomson.
1873–1876: HMS ''Challenger''
- * Captains: George Nares and Frank Tourle Thomson
- * Naturalists: Charles Wyville Thomson, Henry Nottidge Moseley and Rudolf von Willemoes-Suhm
- * Oceanographers: John Young Buchanan and John Murray
- * Publications: C.W. Thomson, Report on the scientific results of the voyage of HMS Challenger during the years 1873–76… prepared under the superintendence of the late Sir C. Wyville Thomson,... and now of John Murray,.... H.N. Moseley, Notes by a naturalist on the Challenger. W.J.J. Spry, The cruise of the Challenger.
1875–76: HMS ''Alert'' and HMS ''Discovery''
- * Captain: George Strong Nares
- * Physician-naturalist: Richard William Coppinger and Edward Lawton Moss
- * Naturalists: Henry Chichester Hart and Henry Fielden
- * Publication: G. Nares, Narrative of a voyage to the Polar Sea during 1875–6 in the ships HMS Alert and HMS Discovery. ; translated into French.
1881: USRC ''Thomas Corwin''
- * Captain: Calvin Leighton Hooper
- * Naturalist: Edward William Nelson
- * Explorer: John Muir
- * Publication: Muir, J. The Cruise of the Corwin.
1882–83: ''La Romanche''
- * Captain: Ferdinand Martial
- * Officers/photographers: Payen, Doze
- * Botanists: Émile Bescherelle, Paul Auguste Hariot, Adrien René Franchet, Paul Petit
- * Doctor/geologist/ anthropologist: Paul Hyades
- * Ornithologist: Emile Oustalet
1882–1885: ''Vettor Pisani''
1886–1896: USS ''Albatross''
belonged to the Committee on Fisheries of the United States and it carried out numerous scientific expeditions under the direction of Alexander Emanuel Agassiz. The primary goal was an inventory of the Pacific fishery reserves but many other observations are carried out by Townsend and other scientists.- * Captain: Zera Tanner
- * Naturalist: Charles Haskins Townsend
1897–98: ''Lila and Mattie''
- * Naturalist: Rollo Beck
- * Organizer: Frank Blake Webster
- * Organizer: Charles Miller Harris
1897–98: ''Belgica''
- * Captain: Adrien de Gerlache
- * Naturalist: Emil Racovita
1898–99: ''Valdivia">Valdivia Expedition">Valdivia''
- * Captain: Adalbert Krech
- * Naturalist: Carl Chun.
- * Publication: C. Chun, "Aus den Tiefen des Weltmeeres".