The Kantuta expeditions were two separate Pacific Ocean expeditions on balsa rafts led by the Czech explorer and adventurer Eduard Ingris in 1955 and 1959, inspired by Thor Heyerdahl's Kon-Tiki expedition,[1] The goal of Ingris's Kantuta expeditions was to repeat the success of the Kon-Tiki and confirm Heyerdahl's theory about the migration of early South Americans to Polynesia.[1]

The first voyage which Ingris and his crew attempted on the raft La Kantuta, sailed from Talara, Peru on 4 December 1955.[1] It ended in failure 90 days later.[1] Straying too far north, the raft entered the equatorial doldrums and became stuck going round and round in a 600-mile-wide gyre.[1] For six weeks, the crew weathered starvation and resentment, until they were finally rescued by a United States naval vessel returning from Antarctica.[1][2]

Ingris spent the next three years building La Kantuta II.[1] On 12 April 1959, the raft was towed from Callao, Peru, to the Humboldt Current.[1] Four months later, Ingris and Joaquin Guerrero completed the expedition successfully, despite two of the new crewmembers having abandoned ship, taking the water supply with them.[2] Having sailed a distance of 6,000 miles, La Kantuta II finally smashed onto the reef at Mataiva, an atoll north of Tahiti, the last island in the ocean current's path.[1][2]

See also

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References

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  1. ^ a b c d e f g h i McIntyre, Loren (September–October 2000). "Rafting fever". Americas. Retrieved 2024-06-21 – via ProQuest.
  2. ^ a b c ""From High C's to High Seas" – the life of Eduard Ingriš". Radio Prague International. 20 June 2011. Retrieved 2024-06-21.
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