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Rare map of New Zealand’s North Island, Cook’s Strait and part of the South Island, showing the tracks of Dumont’s D’Urville’s ship, l’Astrolabe in 1827. D’Urville had sailed from Port Jackson on 19.12.26 and sighted the south coast of New … Read Full Description
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Rare map of New Zealand’s North Island, Cook’s Strait and part of the South Island, showing the tracks of Dumont’s D’Urville’s ship, l’Astrolabe in 1827.
D’Urville had sailed from Port Jackson on 19.12.26 and sighted the south coast of New Zealand on 10th January 1827 near the site of present day Greymouth. Although his instructions were to carry out a little charting in Cook Strait, D’Urville’s plan was much more ambitious – he was to chart at least half of the coast of New Zealand, thereby providing a clear challenge to the supposition that Cook’s survey had placed the islands firmly in the British Domain. He charted the islands during January to March of 1827 from just south of Cape Foulwind (west coast of the South Island), past Farewell Spit, into Golden and Tasman Bays, through Cook Strait, and up the east coast of the North Island of New Zealand, from its southernmost to its northernmost point.
From, Dumont D’Urville’s, , “Atlas hydrographique” volume to”Voyage au Pole sud et dans l’Oceanie execute par ordre du roi sur le Corvettes L’Astrolabe et la Zelee pendant les annees 1837-1838-1839-1840 sous le commandement de M.J. Dumont-D’Urville
Jules Sébastien César Dumont d'Urville (1790 - 1842)
Jules Sébastien César Dumont d'Urville (1790-1842) was a French explorer and naval officer. Dumont d’Urville sailed from Toulon on 22 April 1826, towards the Pacific Ocean in his first voyage in the Astrolabe, for a circumnavigation of the world that was to lasted nearly three years. The expedition returned to Marseille on 25 March 1829. The Astrolabe was originally named Coquille and used for Louis Isidore Duperrey's circumnavigation of the earth (1822–1825). She was renamed after the navigational instrument, the astrolabe, a precursor to the sextant. In his second voyage in the Astrolabe and the Zélée he sailed from Toulon on 7 September 1837 with the aim to reach the most southerly point possible at this time in the Weddell Sea; to pass through the Strait of Magellan; to travel up the coast of Chile in order to head for Oceania with the objective of inspecting the new British colonies in Western Australia; to sail to Hobart; and to sail to New Zealand to find opportunities for French whalers and to examine places where a penal colony might be established. After passing through the East Indies, the mission would have to round the Cape of Good Hope and returning on 6 November 1840.
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