Celebrating People

All About Thor Heyerdahl, The Man Who Crossed Oceans On A Raft

In 1947, Thor Heyerdahl set sail on a handmade balsa raft to prove ancient South Americans could have reached Polynesia by sea. The 4,300-mile Kon-Tiki voyage reshaped ideas about early human migration

A portrait of Thor Heyerdahl Photo: Wikimedia Commons
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It was a day in April of 1947 that a Norwegian explorer and ethnographer, Thor Heyerdahl, brought a tale so often told in seafaring lore and circles to life. First, he launched an experiment that would captivate the world: could people from pre-Columbian South America have crossed the Pacific Ocean on a primitive raft and reached Polynesia? Then, with no advanced navigation systems and using only the same materials available to ancient mariners, Heyerdahl and his crew built a balsa-wood raft named Kon‑Tiki and set sail from Peru. What followed then was a tale in no lack of thrill and wonderment—one that an ancient mariner could grip you and narrate even as you are at the threshold of a wedding: a 101-day, 4,300-mile odyssey that challenged and toppled conventional theories of human migration and turned into a landmark in experimental archaeology. Here’s an in-depth look at the man, the voyage, and its enduring legacy.

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