On this day in history, August 7, 1947, Thor Heyerdahl and the Kon-Tiki raft make it to Polynesia

Thor Heyerdahl and his crew aboard the Kon-Tiki raft made it across the Pacific Ocean to Polynesia on this day in history, August 7, 1947, after setting sail 101 days earlier from Peru.

Norwegian explorer Thor Heyerdahl and his crew arrived in Polynesia after 101 days at sea aboard the Kon-Tiki raft on this day in history, August 7, 1947. 

Hyderdahl, along with five crewmen (and one parrot), left Callao, Peru, aboard the Kon-Tiki, a balsawood raft, on April 28, 1947. 

Heyerdahl was attempting to prove that it was possible the Polynesian islands were settled in part by people indigenous to South America, said the Kon-Tiki Museum's website. 

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Inspired partly by the story of "Kon-Tiki Viracocha," an Incan creation myth claiming that the deity Viracocha had left Peru on a raft, heading west, Heyerdahl was ridiculed when he presented his ideas to other anthropologists in 1946.

"They gave him the cold shoulder," the Kon-Tiki Museum SAID. Herbert Spinden, an anthropologist, even said, "Sure, see how far you get yourself sailing from Peru to the South Pacific on a balsa raft!"

Up for the challenge and confident in his theory, Heyerdahl began assembling a crew — and a raft.

Despite the risks inherent with crossing the Pacific Ocean in a raft constructed out of balsa wood, finding a qualified crew was "relatively easy," said the museum. 

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Heyerdahl was joined on the expedition by fellow Norwegians Knut Haugland, Erik Hesselberg, Torstein Raaby and Herman Watzinger, and Swede Bengt Danielsson. 

"Thor’s criteria in choosing crew members were that they all possess[ed] unwavering courage as well as one unique qualification, indispensable for the expedition," said the museum. 

Only Hesselberg, a childhood friend of Heyerdahl's who served as the Kon-Tiki's navigator, had any maritime experience. 

The crew traveled together to Ecuador to get wood to build the raft, then to Peru to actually build it. 

While any ancient indigenous Peruvian who would have made the journey to Polynesia would have done so without supplies such as sunscreen, radios and sleeping bags, the Kon-Tiki was well-equipped for its voyage. 

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Using his personal contacts with the American military, Heyerdahl "was able to obtain everything from sleeping bags, field rations, suntan lotion and canned goods, to navigational instruments and radio equipment," said the museum.

Despite naysayers who said the attempt to float across the ocean in a primitive raft would be "pure suicide," Heyerdahl and his crew forged on with their plan to see if his theory were possible. 

Although the crew made it to Polynesia, the journey was not all smooth sailing. 

Heyerdahl and the Kon-Tiki experienced "rogue waves" during the voyage — and the parrot did not survive the trip. 

The raft, along with objects from Heyerdahl's various other expeditions, can now be viewed today at the Kon-Tiki Museum in Oslo, Norway. 

Heyerdahl documented his voyage in the best-selling book "Kon-Tiki" and in the 1950 documentary film of the same name. 

That film won an Academy Award for Best Documentary Feature for 1951.

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In 2012, "Kon-Tiki," a dramatized retelling of the Kon-Tiki expedition starring Pål Sverre Hagen as Heyerdahl, was released in theaters. 

The film was a commercial success in Norway and was nominated for the Academy Award for Best Foreign Language Film, said IMDB. 

Heyerdahl died in 2002 at age 87. 

In 2016, an attempt to recreate the Kon-Tiki expedition had to be prematurely aborted and the crew rescued after unfavorable weather conditions. 

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