Scientific
Voyages to the Canary Islands in the Eighteenth and Nineteenth Centuries
Throughout
the eighteenth and nineteenth centuries the Canary Archipelago became
a focus of study for the European expeditions that sailed to America,
Africa, the Pacific and Indian Oceans, and for those that traveled
exclusively to the Islands. The main purposes were to draw up maps,
to fix the longitude at the Meridian of El Hierro, to catalogue
plants and animals, and to study the volcanic geological origins,
the climate, the geography, and the history of the Islands.
Most
of these travelers left their traces in the form of written texts,
engravings or drawings, which are conserved in libraries and scientific
institutions throughout Europe. Today, when the future of the Canaries
is closely related to Europe, this documentation constitutes an
essential legacy preserving this relation. The aim of the Historical
Heritage of the Autonomous Community of the Canary Islands is to
recover this legacy as it represents a great part of the historical
relation between Europe and the Islands.