The Kon-Tiki.
Thor Heyerdahl used a raft or a sail boat dont kniw wanted to try i would not go with my answer not very smart
The famous Norwegian who sailed the raft Kon-Tiki was Thor Heyerdahl. Thor was an explorer and writer who sailed from South America to the Polynesian Islands in the Pacific Ocean in 1947.
Yes they did, they made many inventions! Including the wheel and raft, ect.
At the farewell party that the people who gave him the raft threw for him, he dances the tango instead of the mambo. Thus, they make lighthearted fun of him and name the raft Mambo Tango.
Thor Heyerdahl's raft, named Kon-Tiki, was made from balsa wood logs lashed together with hemp rope. The raft was primarily constructed using traditional Peruvian techniques to replicate the ancient vessels that were believed to have been used by pre-Columbian South American civilizations.
No. Heyerdahl sailed from Peru to Polynesia on the raft Kon-Tiki. Later he sailed from Egypt to the Caribbean on a raft called the Ra.
Kon-Tiki
The Kon-Tiki.
No, Jacob Roggeveen did not believe Thor Heyerdahl's theory of how Easter Island was settled. Roggeveen, who was the first European to visit the island in 1722, had his own beliefs about its settlement that differed from Heyerdahl's hypothesis.
On his voyage from South America to Polynesia, his raft was called the Kon-Tiki. On his voyage from Egypt, he used a raft called the Ra.
Thor Heyerdahl used a raft or a sail boat dont kniw wanted to try i would not go with my answer not very smart
The famous Norwegian who sailed the raft Kon-Tiki was Thor Heyerdahl. Thor was an explorer and writer who sailed from South America to the Polynesian Islands in the Pacific Ocean in 1947.
balsa tree trunks
Thor Heyerdahl's expedition, specifically the Kon-Tiki expedition, aimed to prove that pre-Columbian South Americans could have colonized Polynesia using only wooden rafts. The success of the expedition demonstrated that such a journey was technically possible, supporting Heyerdahl's theory of ancient transoceanic migration routes.
Thor
Thor Heyerdahl led the Kon-Tiki expedition. He and his crew set out in 1947 from Peru to sail across the Pacific Ocean on a balsa wood raft to prove that it was possible for ancient South Americans to reach Polynesia. The expedition was successful, and it provided evidence for Heyerdahl's theory.