Yeah, but Cook mapped it accurately. He learned from other explorers before him.
Captain James Cook was the first known European to actually land on New Zealand, although the islands had been discovered by Abel Tasman in 1642.
The first Dutch explorer to arrive in New Zealand was Abel Tasman. He arrived in 1642.
Abel Janszoon Tasman was the Dutch explorer who first discovered New Zealand but he did not set foot on land there.
Captain Cook did not settle in New Zealand. He made three voyages to the Pacific and visited New Zealand on four separate occasions. He led the first British expedition to discover New Zealand and the first to set foot on new Zealand. Abel Tasman was the first European to sight New Zealand but did not land there. Captain James Cook was the first to circumnavigate and map New Zealand.
Captain Cook did not discover New Zealand. He circumnavigated New Zealand in 1769-1770. New Zealand was discovered by Dutch explorer Abel Tasman in 1642.James Cook's expedition was the second European expedition to reach New Zealand, doing so in August 1769. Cook managed to circumnavigate and chart New Zealand, before going on to chart the eastern coast of Australia.
The first European captain to land on New Zealand soil was Dutch explorer Abel Tasman in 1642. He landed in what is now known as Golden Bay on the South Island.
The first European to explore New Zealand, circumnavigating the islands between October 1769 and February 1770, was Captain James Cook. He did not discover New Zealand, as that was done by Abel Tasman in 1642.
No, the dutchmen Abel Tasman & Dirk Hartog, and an English pirate, William Dampier, got there first.
James Cook did not discover any countries. He first arrived in New Zealand, but Abel Tasman had discovered the islands in 1642.
Polynesians first discovered New Zealand. - to find essentially all the islands in the NZ - Hawaii - Rapanui triangle was no mean feat. Abel J. Tasman was the first European to sight the Islands of Aotearoa New Zealand.
James Cook (not yet a captain) was the first European to sight the east coast of New Zealand in 1769. Abel Tasman had only sailed south of New Zealand in 1642.
Abel Tasman was the Dutch explorer who first sighted and named New Zealand in 1642, prior to James Cook's circumnavigation of the islands in 1769.