Skip to main content
Smithsonian Institution
Language Search Smithsonian Ocean
Follow us on Facebook Follow us on Twitter Follow us on Flickr Follow us on Tumbr
Donate

Smithsonian Ocean

Main Menu

  • Ocean Life
    • Marine Mammals
    • Sharks & Rays
    • Reptiles
    • Seabirds
    • Fish
    • Invertebrates
    • Plankton
    • Plants & Algae
    • Microbes
  • Ecosystems
    • Coral Reefs
    • Deep Sea
    • Coasts & Shallow Water
    • Poles
    • Census of Marine Life
  • Planet Ocean
    • Tides & Currents
    • Waves, Storms & Tsunamis
    • The Seafloor
    • Temperature & Chemistry
  • Through Time
    • Ancient Seas
    • Extinctions
    • Evolution
    • The Anthropocene
  • Conservation
    • Fishing
    • Pollution
    • Habitat Destruction
    • Invasive Species
    • Acidification
    • Climate Change
    • Gulf Oil Spill
    • Solutions & Success Stories
    • Get Involved
  • Human Connections
    • Books, Film & The Arts
    • Recreation
    • Seafood
    • Exploration
    • History & Cultures
    • Careers
  • At The Museum
  • Educators
Menu
Search

Search

Showing results for "All"
Filter

Content type

  • Photo (12)
  • Article (7)
  • Slideshow (1)

Article Type

  • Article (1)
  • Personal Perspectives (1)

Topics

  • Animal Behavior (1)
  • At The Museum (12)
  • Beaches (1)
  • Books, Film & The Arts (5)
  • Careers (2)
  • Climate Change (4)
  • Coasts & Shallow Water (22)
  • Conservation (1)
  • Coral Reefs (12)
  • Deep Sea (6)
  • Exploration (8)
  • Fish (9)
  • Fishing (12)
  • Food Web (3)
  • Habitat Destruction (4)
  • Human Connections (3)
  • Invasive Species (3)
  • Invertebrates (11)
  • Mangroves (27)
  • Marine Mammals (5)
  • Microbes (3)
  • Ocean Life (2)
  • Plants & Algae (15)
  • Poles (1)
  • Pollution (12)
  • Reptiles (3)
  • Seabirds (5)
  • Seafood (2)
  • Sharks & Rays (3)
  • Shifting Baselines (1)
  • Solutions & Success Stories (40)
  • Technology (4)
  • Temperature & Chemistry (1)
  • The Anthropocene (1)
  • The Seafloor (4)
  • Tides & Currents (2)
  • Vents & Volcanoes (2)
  • Waves, Storms & Tsunamis (1)
  • (-) Census of Marine Life (2)
  • (-) History & Cultures (18)

Tags

  • Adaptations (4)
  • Algae (2)
  • Antarctic (6)
  • Arctic (21)
  • Art (13)
  • Behind-the-scenes (4)
  • Biodiversity (13)
  • Bioluminescence (4)
  • Citizens of the Sea (3)
  • Corals (6)
  • Darwin (4)
  • Education (7)
  • Feeding (2)
  • Fisheries (9)
  • Fossils (2)
  • Geology (3)
  • Glaciers (2)
  • Ice (3)
  • Jellyfish, Anemones & Relatives (6)
  • Maps (14)
  • Maritime history (71)
  • Mussels, Oysters & Relatives (3)
  • National Museum of Natural History (5)
  • Native people (42)
  • New discoveries (8)
  • NOAA (13)
  • Oceanography (2)
  • Predation (2)
  • Protecting Spaces (2)
  • Reproduction (6)
  • Research vessels (4)
  • ROVs (2)
  • Salmon (2)
  • Scientific illustrations (12)
  • Scientists at work (5)
  • Scuba diving (3)
  • Shipwrecks (7)
  • Smithsonian collections (7)
  • Smithsonian exhibits (15)
  • Smithsonian scientists (11)
  • Squids & Octopuses (3)
  • Tagging (2)
  • Technology (3)
  • Whales (17)
  • Whaling (19)
  • Women in Science (3)
  • Zooplankton (7)
  • (-) Naturalist (17)
  • (-) Worms (2)
  • Sort By Relevance
  • A-Z
  • Z-A
  • Newest
  • Oldest
Map of South America highlighting Juan Fernandez Island off of the west coast, near Chile
Photo

Map of Juan Fernandez Island

Dampier rescued Alexander Selkirk from Juan Fernandez island around 1708. Selkirk's...
Three hundred year old pen and ink drawing of a "strange and large" bat.
Photo

New Guinea Bat

In 1699, accompanied by a shipboard artist, William Dampier conducted the first...
The arrows show the direction of ocean currents recorded by William Dampier while crossing “La Grande Mer du Sud”—the Pacific Ocean.
Photo

Pacific Ocean Currents

The arrows show the direction of ocean currents recorded by William Dampier while...
After leaving Australia, Dampier and his men reached the western coast of New Guinea on New Year’s Day 1700. There Dampier observed birds that he had never seen before, like the “stately land-fowl” shown here.
Photo

New Guinea Birds

After leaving Australia, Dampier and his men reached the western coast of New...
As Dampier studied the plants he encountered in Australia, he wrote that they were “for the most part unlike any I had seen elsewhere.” In fact, nearly all the plants Dampier observed were entirely unknown to botanists at that time.
Photo

More Australian Plants

As Dampier studied the plants he encountered in Australia, he wrote that they were...
As soon as Dampier set foot in Australia, he began making observations and collecting specimens of plants, which he carefully pressed between the pages of books to be studied by the “ingenious” and “curious” upon his return to England. As Dampier conducted his investigations, his artist made detailed sketches like these.
Photo

Australian Plants

As soon as Dampier set foot in Australia, he began making observations and...
Captain William Kidd
Photo

Captain Kidd on His Ship

In 1697, aboard his ship Adventure Galley, Kidd captured his largest prize ever—a...
Captain William Kidd at Gardiner's Island
Photo

Captain William Kidd

Captain Kidd had a license from Lord Bellomont, the governor of New England and New...
This is the cover of the book Dampier wrote about his first trip around the world.
Photo

Book Cover for Dampier's Account of his First Trip Around the World

This is the cover of the book William Dampier -- pirate and naturalist -- wrote...
This map shows the route of Dampier’s first voyage around the world.
Photo

Dampier’s First World Voyage

This map shows the route of pirate and naturalist William Dampier’s first voyage...
This portrait of William Dampier hangs in London’s National Gallery in recognition of his contribution to natural history.
Article

William Dampier - The Pirate Who Collected Plants

Today you can just hop on a plane and be on another continent within a day's time....
December 2017
A manatee swims in Crystal River, Florida.

From Mermaids to Manatees: the Myth and the Reality

In centuries past, the ocean was thought to be full of krakens, sea serpents, sea...
March 2014

Pagination

  • Page 1
  • Page 2
  • Next page Next
  • Last page Last

Smithsonian Institution

Smithsonian Ocean
Follow us on Facebook Follow us on Twitter Follow us on Flickr Follow us on Tumbr
Contact Us

Explore

  • Ocean Life
  • Ecosystems
  • Planet Ocean
  • Through Time
  • Conservation
  • Human Connections
  • At The Museum
  • About
  • Media Archive
  • Terms of Use
  • Privacy

Smithsonian National Museum of Natural History

Donate
  • Ocean Life
    • Marine Mammals
    • Sharks & Rays
    • Reptiles
    • Seabirds
    • Fish
    • Invertebrates
    • Plankton
    • Plants & Algae
    • Microbes
  • Ecosystems
    • Coral Reefs
    • Deep Sea
    • Coasts & Shallow Water
    • Poles
    • Census of Marine Life
  • Planet Ocean
    • Tides & Currents
    • Waves, Storms & Tsunamis
    • The Seafloor
    • Temperature & Chemistry
  • Through Time
    • Ancient Seas
    • Extinctions
    • Evolution
    • The Anthropocene
  • Conservation
    • Fishing
    • Pollution
    • Habitat Destruction
    • Invasive Species
    • Acidification
    • Climate Change
    • Gulf Oil Spill
    • Solutions & Success Stories
    • Get Involved
  • Human Connections
    • Books, Film & The Arts
    • Recreation
    • Seafood
    • Exploration
    • History & Cultures
    • Careers
  • At The Museum
  • Educators

Search Smithsonian Ocean