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European Exploration in North America

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Title: European Exploration in North America


1
European Exploration in North America
2
Georgia Performance Standards
  • SS4H2 The student will describe European
    exploration in North America.
  • a. Describe the reasons for, obstacles to,
    and accomplishments of the Spanish, French, and
    English explorations of John Cabot, Vasco Nunez
    Balboa, Juan Ponce de Leon, Christopher Columbus,
    Henry Hudson, and Jacques Cartier.
  • b. Describe examples of cooperation and
    conflict between Europeans and Native Americans.
  • SS4G2 The student will describe how physical
    systems affect human systems.
  • b. Describe how the early explorers
    adapted, or failed to adapt, to the various
    physical environments in which they traveled.

3
Essential Questions
  • Why were Europeans interested in world
    exploration?
  • What were some of the opportunity costs involved
    in European exploration?
  • What influence did the Europeans and Native
    Americans have on each other?
  • What are the strengths and weaknesses of the
    relationships between Native Americans and
    Europeans?

4
Europeans arrive in the Americas
  • In 1420, the oceans of the world were a mystery
    to most Europeans.
  • In 1492, Christopher Columbus asked King
    Ferdinand and Queen Isabella of Spain to pay for
    a westward voyage to Asia. They agreed to pay for
    the voyage because they hoped that Columbus would
    find gold and spices in Asia.

5
Christopher Columbus meeting with King Ferdinand
and Queen Isabella
6
Christopher Columbus
  • Columbus set sail from Spain on August 3, 1492.
  • He carried enough supplies to last for a year and
    close to 90 men traveled in three ships named the
    Nina, the Pinta, and the Santa Maria.
  • On October 12, 1492, the ships arrived at an
    island in the Caribbean Sea that Columbus named
    San Salvador which today is part of the Bahamas.
  • Columbus thought that he had reached land off the
    coast of Asia, near India so he named the islands
    the West Indies and the people living on them
    Indians.

7
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8
  • Columbus and his men were the first Europeans to
    meet the people of the Caribbean who called
    themselves the Taino (TY noh) which means good.
  • Columbus returned to Spain and made three more
    voyages to the Caribbean.
  • King Ferdinand and Queen Isabella wanted Columbus
    to start settlements (a small community of people
    living in a new place) and to search for gold.
    Columbus sailed a fleet of 17 ships back to the
    islands and began claiming more land for Spain.

9
  • Columbus and the settlers had to adapt to their
    new physical environment.
  • They brought crops such as wheat, barley, and
    sugar cane and found ways to grow them in the new
    land.
  • They also brought animals such as horses, pigs,
    and cows, which had not previously lived in the
    Americas.

10
  • The Europeans adapted to their environment, but
    they hurt the Taino environment.
  • The Europeans cut down rain forests and built
    sugar plantations. Many of the American plants
    and animals were destroyed by the Europeans.
  • The Europeans also brought diseases to the Taino
    that they never had before. Within 50 years of
    Columbus arrival, almost no Taino people were
    left.

11
  • Columbus returned to Spain with plants, such as
    corn, peanuts, potatoes, tomatoes, chocolate,
    peppers, beans, and squash. No one in Europe had
    ever seen these plants.
  • The movement of plants, animals, and people
    between the Eastern and Western Hemispheres is
    known as the Columbian Exchange.

12
John Cabot
  • An Italian explorer
  • The king of England paid for his voyage across
    the Atlantic Ocean where he reached present-day
    Canada, which he thought was Asia.
  • He did not find people, silks, or spices, but he
    did find a rich fishing area off the coast of
    Canada.
  • People began sailing to these waters.

13
John Cabot thought that he could reach Asia by
sailing across the Atlantic Ocean. Once people
knew that the land that he found was not Asia,
explorers continued to search fora water passage
through the North American continent.
14
Jacques Cartier
  • In 1534, he continued Frances search for a water
    route to Asia.
  • He sailed far up the St. Lawrence River in
    Canada.

15
  • He faced many obstacles, especially the cold
    climate and short growing season.
  • Over time, people began to come to the region to
    trade for furs.

16
Vasco Nunez de Balboa(VAS coh NOON yez deh bal
BOH ah)
  • Balboa was a Spanish explorer who traveled to
    present-day Panama in Central America.
  • In 1513, he crossed the mountains and jungles of
    Panama and reached the Pacific Ocean.

17
Balboas Travels
18
Juan Ponce de Leon (pon seh deh leh OHN)
  • Juan Ponce De Leon was a conquistador (Spanish
    for conqueror).
  • He was the first conquistador to reach what is
    now the United States.
  • In 1513, he led an expedition to present-day
    Florida where he claimed the area for Spain.

19
  • As the conquistadors traveled the land in search
    of gold, they found many American Indians.
  • The conquistadors fought and enslaved the
    American Indians. Many of the Spanish died in the
    battles as well.
  • The conquistadors also faced many obstacles,
    including long distances, bad weather, and
    starvation as they explored the continent.

20
Henry Hudson
  • The Dutch wanted to search for a Northwest
    Passage too, so a Dutch trading company hired
    Henry Hudson, an English captain, to search for
    the passage.
  • The Dutch are the people of the Netherlands.

21
  • Hudson sailed up the Hudson River in present-day
    New York and made claims for the Dutch.
  • In 1610, he made a voyage for England where he
    found the bay known as Hudson Bay in present-day
    Canada.
  • One obstacle Hudson faced was the cold climate,
    which he failed to adapt to.

22
  • He stayed too long in the bay and ice trapped the
    ship for an entire winter.
  • His unhappy crew later set him adrift in a small
    boat where he was never seen again.
  • Even though his voyage was unsuccessful in
    finding a Northwest Passage, it did lead to
    England claiming the land around Hudson Bay.
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