Explorers and Navigators

Science teacher Jonathan Heiles sent a link to all of us about the international public campaign to name the surface features of Pluto and Charon.

NASA’s New Horizons spacecraft will fly past Pluto in July and that far off world and its moons for the first time.  Together with the International Astronomical Union (IAU), the New Horizons team will assign names to the features on the maps of Pluto and its large moon Charon. The public is encouraged to suggest names – and ideas for names – and vote for favorites.

The ballot closes on April 24, 2015.

Voters are encouraged to choose between three categories:

History of Exploration

Literature of Exploration

Mythology of the Underworld

All three lists are extensive and broken further into categories each one of which is a goldmine of ideas, references and things to learn about.  You can join the discussion, suggest nominations and voters are encouraged to do their own exploring before making a decision.

For example:  Here’s a list of historic explorers who pioneered the exploration of the land, sea and sky.

How many of these explorers of are you familiar with?

Alexandra David-Néel | David Livingstone | Ahmad Ibn Rustah | Muhammad al-Idrisi | Salomon August Andrée | Jeanne Baré | Ibn Battuta | William Beebe & Otis Barton| Vitus Bering | Isabella Bird | Michał Boym | Jacques-Yves Cousteau | Marcelino de Sautuola | Dezhnev & Popov | Juan Sebastián Elcano | Enrique of Malacca | Evliya Çelebi |Henri Giffard | Hannu | Henry the Navigator | Thor Heyerdahl | Hillary & Norgay | Hyecho| Ingólfr Arnarson & Hallveig | Kurbat Ivanov | Kupe | Leif Erikson | Lewis/Clark/York |Édouard-Alfred Martel | Auguste Piccard | Pilâtre de Rozier & d’Arlandes | Piri Reis | Demid Pyanda | Sacagawea | Tanaka Shōsuke | Alexandrine Tinné | Wilbur & Orville Wright |Xuanzang | Zheng He

Among other pleasures is looking over the Tally on the Kids Ballot page.  In the above category Leif Erikson was number one.

In the Fictional Travellers catagory Star Trek folks are in the lead. But Gilgamesh, Alice (in Wonderland), Ahab, Don Quijote and TinTin are in the top ten.

So much to learn!

Josie Holford

View Comments

Recent Posts

The Affair of the Chocolate Teapot

Midge Hazelbrow, the indomitable co-head of Wayward St. Etheldreda's Academy, took herself for a brisk…

1 month ago

Best Practices, Reading Wars, and Eruption at Wayward

Before the eruption, it was a typical senior leadership meeting at Wayward. Head of School,…

2 months ago

Words Matter

When I taught fourth and fifth grade at a school that didn't assign grades, the…

2 months ago

The Culinary Capers and Comic Catastrophes of Gerald Samper

It was the Gert Loveday review of Rancid Pansies (it’s an anagram) that set me…

2 months ago

Working and Not Working

A post on LinkedIn caught my attention this week.  It's had over 11,000 views so…

2 months ago

Gall, Nerve, Courage, and The Party of Women

 Women's rights campaigner Kellie-Jay Keen of Let Women Speak had a big announcement last week.…

3 months ago