Kon Tiki under sail. |
On August 7, 1947 the sailing
raft Kon Tiki crashed into a barrier reef off of an uninhabited islet near Raroia Atoll in the Tuamotu
Group of French Polynesia. The
ship’s Norwegian crew led by explorer Thor Heyerdahl managed to drag the craft safely to the beach. After a few days of being stranded, they were rescued by Polynesian natives from a near-by
island who came to investigate the
source of unusual jetsam that
had washed up on their shore. It was the end of a grand adventure that Heyerdahl would chronicle in a world-wide bestselling
book and in a documentary film of the voyage.
Thor Heyerdahl--intrepid captain. |
Heyerdahl’s epic nearly 4,000 mile trip across the Pacific from Peru to Polynesia was meant to test his theory that the islands of the South Pacific could have been populated by people from the South American mainland, carried westward by the prevalent Humboldt Current.
Heyerdahl built his raft from local materials using only technology available in the pre-Columbian era and based on observations of native crafts described
by Peru’s early Spanish Conquistadores.
Heyerdahl named his craft after a variation on the name of the Incan sun god, Viracocha.
The raft was built with nine light
weight balsa tree trunks ranging up
to 45 feet long and 2 feet in diameter, lashed
together with heavy hemp ropes. Balsa cross-pieces 18 feet long and 1 foot in diameter were lashed across
the logs at 3 foot intervals to. The bow
was clad in hand hewn Pine boards about 1 inch thick and 2
feet wide. Similar boards were wedged between the balsa logs and used as centerboards—retractable keels.
The main mast was made of
lengths of mangrove wood lashed
together to form an A-frame 29 feet
high. The spars were a laminate of wood and reeds. The main sail was 15 by 18 feet on a yard arm of bamboo cane lashed
together with hemp. The raft also carried a small top sail and a mizzen-sail
mounted at the stern. With a partial deck of split bamboo, a cabin of plaited bamboo 14 feet long
and 8 feet wide and nearly 5 feet high was built and roofed with banana leaf
thatch. At the stern was a 19 feet long steering oar of mangrove
wood, with a blade of fir. No metal was used in the
construction.
Heyerdahl at the steering oar. |
Local provisions and storage techniques were used, although U.S. Army donated some canned
rations for emergencies. The Kon-Tiki
carried 250 liters of water in bamboo tubes, 200 coconuts, sweet potatoes,
bottle gourds and other assorted fruit and roots. For protein
the crew relied on—and was successful
in obtaining—abundant fish
caught along the way including flying
fish, dolphin (the fish, not the mammal), yellow fin, bonita, and shark.
The ship also carried radios, watches, metal knives,
and a sextant which Heyerdahl said did not compromise the integrity of
the experiment since they did not
affect the sailing ability of the ship or the sustainability of the crew.
On April 28 Heyerdahl and his crew of 5
were towed aboard the Kon Tiki by a Peruvian Navy tug from
the harbor at Callao to a point about 50 miles offshore. This was to prevent tidal forces from bashing
the raft back against the shore.
Heyerdahl maintained that a similar raft could have been towed beyond the danger by teams of canoes.
The voyage of Kon Tiki. |
Once set adrift, the raft caught the Humboldt and was on its way. On July 30 the
crew spotted their first land, the atoll of Puka-Puka, and on August
4 they met inhabitants of Angatau Island in their canoes but
could not land safely there. Three days later they struck the reef that ended the voyage after 3,770 nautical miles in 101 days, at an average speed of 1.5 knots.
The raft was salvaged and eventually brought
to Oslo where it is the centerpiece of the Kon-Tiki Museum, one of Norway’s
leading tourist attractions.
Heyerdahl, who died in 2002, is still celebrated as one of the nation’s great heroes.
A poster for the 1950 Academy Award winning documentary about the voyage. |
Ironically, although the voyage proved that the journey was possible, ethnologists have long since discounted Heyerdahl’s theory of a South American origin for the Polynesian people. Their origins are still wrapped in some mystery but the prevailing thought, based on DNA evidence and linguistics is that they originated on Taiwan and spread more or less slowly, depending of which conflicting theories are applied, through Micronesia, the Malay Peninsula, and the islands of Austronesia (including most of modern Indonesia and the Philippines) while mixing with even more ancient local populations in the area.
Scientists are still puzzled by how the Polynesians navigated regularly across wide expanses of
ocean in canoes—not rafts—with no
known navigational aids.
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