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List_of_circumnavigations


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Contents

Global maritime

Nonglobal maritime

Record maritime

  • Bruno Peyron (French), January–March 2005, fastest circumnavigation 50 days 16 hours 20 minutes 4 seconds.
  • Jean Luc van den Heede (French), 2004, fastest westward single-handed circumnavigation, 122 days 14 hours 3 minutes 49 seconds.
  • Adrienne Cahalan (Australian), February-March 2004, fastest woman to complete a circumnavigation (crew of "Cheyenne") 58 days 9 hours 32 minutes 45 seconds
  • Francis Joyon (French), Nov 2007–Jan 2008, fastest single-handed 57 days, 13 hours, 34 minutes, 6 seconds.
  • Jon Sanders holds the world record for completing a single-handed triple circumnavigation.
  • The RMS Queen Mary 2, at 148,528 gross tons, became the world\'s largest passenger ship to circumnavigate the globe during her 2007 world cruise.

Aviation

Mixed transportation

  • Thomas Stevens was the first person to circle the globe by bicycle. The feat was accomplished between 1884 and 1886. While impressive at the time, a good portion of the trip was by steamer due to technical and political reasons.
  • George Matthew Schilling is reputed to have walked around the world between 1897 and 1904, though this feat was unverified.
  • David Kunst was the first verified person to walk around the world between June 20, 1970 and October 10, 1974.
  • Arthur Blessit has been walking around the world carrying a wooden cross since the 1960s.
  • Heinz Stucke has been cycling around the world since 1965.
  • Sir Ranulph Fiennes, Charles Burton and their team circumnavigated \'vertically\' via the two poles on the Transglobe Expedition.
  • Robert Garside achieved the first fully-authenticated run around the world between 1997-2003, taking 2,062 days to cover 30,000 miles across 29 countries and 6 continentsAround-World Runner Honoured from the New York Post

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  • Colin Angus circumnavigated the northern hemisphere solely by human power in 2006 but did not qualify under the Guinness guidelines as a human powered circumnavigation. His attempt however was recognized by Naitonal Geographic however as the first human powered circumnavigationHuman-Powered Circumnavigation.
  • Jason Lewis completed a human powered circumnavigation in 2007 which reached antipodal points. However it still failed to meet Guinness rules for a human powered circumnavigationOutside Magazine, October 2007.
  • Mark Beaumont breaks record for cycling around globeScot Smashes World Cycle Record.

Fictional

The most famous circumnavigation never happened. This is the story told in Jules Verne\'s 1872 adventure novel, Around the World in Eighty Days. Upper class Englishman Phileas Fogg and his servant Passepartout use a variety of transportation means and ingenuity to accomplish the adventurous feat. The book is a tribute to the new transportation possibilities of the early Industrial Revolution, with the coming of steamships, railways, etc. As this circumnavigation did not cross the Equator or reach antipodal points, it would not have been recognized by Guinness Records as an official circumnavigation (if such a thing had existed at that time).

This article is licensed under the GNU Free Documentation License. It uses material from Wikipedia


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