7-minute read
keywords: history of science, marine biology, oceanography
The Challenger expedition has come to be remembered as the birth of oceanography. This Victorian scientific expedition saw six naturalists and over 250 crew on a 3½-year circumnavigation of the globe from late 1872 to 1876. En route, they collected sediment samples, basic measurements on the ocean such as temperature and flow rate, and dredged and trawled up large numbers of animals, many of which were new to science. The Wake of HMS Challenger is the third recent popular book on this expedition that I review here, and I admit that I went in slightly concerned. After two excellent earlier books, is there anything new left to tell?
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