The first 'Europeans' to enter the Pacific Ocean from the east were Magellan and the other members of his expedition, by way of The Straits of Magellan which separate South America from Cape Horn. Other Europeans undoubtedly saw the Pacific earlier, after traveling from the west, including overland through China.
From the western shores of Europe, it took months to travel the Atlantic Ocean back to North America. If coming from central Europe, land travel also took months. Asians could have gone through Europe first and across the Atlantic Ocean from European ports, or they could have gone across the Pacific Ocean directly from Asian ports.
He oh so has didn't you hear he is in a mental asylum after just living in the middle of the pacific ocean on a small rock.
You would arrive in the Pacific Ocean, off the coast from Eureka, CA, after having gone round the planet once.
No non-fiction person has ever gone into a black hole.
She is said to have gone down in the Pacific Ocean. None of her belongings or parts of her plane were revived. They think that she went down in the Pacific because she had sent a distress signal. The signal was barely heard by a nearby ship, but they had already sunk by then.
Early humans would have first gone to Europe. Australia is a island and early humans would have probably walked to europe far before they rode the ocean to Australia.
a steel head is a trout when it has gone out to the ocean.
The farthest a man has gone in the ocean is around 400,000 yards deep.
The deepest humans have gone in the ocean is about 36,000 feet (10,972 meters) in the Mariana Trench, specifically the Challenger Deep. This was achieved by filmmaker and explorer James Cameron in 2012.
She HAS just been to the loo - present perfect tense, third person - he, she, it I HAVE gone to the loo - present perfect tense, first person - I, we, they, you :D
No one has ever orbited Mercury, actually no human has ever gone farther than the Moon.
It means the person you addressed your letter to ("the addressee" ) is no longer at the address you sent it to: he or she has gone away.