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(This page needs major trimming and the ship used in Cook's 3rd Voyage seems to be missing) |
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Though Vancouver hoped that his survey would "remove every doubt, and set aside every opinion of a north-west passage, or any water communication navigable for shipping, existing between the North Pacific, and the interior of the American continent within the limits of our researches," the search continued. The expedition gave names to scores of places, many of which are in use today. (The city of Vancouver, British Columbia, was not so named until 1886.) Moreover, in the course of the five-year voyage, only five of the Discovery's crew died—only one from disease—and none of Chatham's. Converted to a bomb in 1799, Discovery was made a convict ship in 1818 and broken up in 1834 at Deptford. | Though Vancouver hoped that his survey would "remove every doubt, and set aside every opinion of a north-west passage, or any water communication navigable for shipping, existing between the North Pacific, and the interior of the American continent within the limits of our researches," the search continued. The expedition gave names to scores of places, many of which are in use today. (The city of Vancouver, British Columbia, was not so named until 1886.) Moreover, in the course of the five-year voyage, only five of the Discovery's crew died—only one from disease—and none of Chatham's. Converted to a bomb in 1799, Discovery was made a convict ship in 1818 and broken up in 1834 at Deptford. | ||
==Discovery== | ==[[wp:RRS_Discovery|Discovery]]== | ||
* Bark (3m). L/B/D: 171 × 33.8 × 15.8 52.1m × 10.3m × 4.8m) | * Bark (3m). L/B/D: 171 × 33.8 × 15.8 52.1m × 10.3m × 4.8m) | ||
* Tons: 1,570 disp. | * Tons: 1,570 disp. |
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