thumb|upright=1.2|The Landing of Columbus, by Dióscoro Puebla
In anthropology, first contact is the first meeting of two communities previously without contact with one another. Notable examples of first contact are those between the Norse and Native North Americans circa 1000 CE, the Spanish Empire and the Arawak in 1492; and the Aboriginal Australians with Europeans in 1788 when the First Fleet arrived in Sydney.
Such contact is sometimes described as a "discovery", such as the British and United States did by creating the legal theory of the "Doctrine of Discovery". It is generally the more technologically complex society that is able to travel to new geographic regions to make contact with those more isolated, less technologically complex societies. However, some object to the application of such a word to human beings, which is why "first contact" is generally preferred. The use of the term "discovery" tends to occur more in reference to geography than cultures; for an example of a common discovery debate, see Discoverer of the Americas.
The fascination with first contact has gone through many transformations since the Age of Discovery, one of the earliest narratives being about contacting the Ten Lost Tribes and Prester John, and continues today as a trope in science fiction about extraterrestrial first contact, as well as being manifest in contemporary space exploration (for example the Pioneer plaque).
Establishing contact with uncontacted peoples is still attempted, despite the negative effects, history and opposition by indigenous peoples, advocacy groups and specialized institutions like FUNAI.
Consequences
The historical record has repeatedly demonstrated that when one culture is significantly more technologically advanced than the other, this side is usually favored by the disruptive nature of conflict, often with dire consequences for the other society, though the transmission of diseases between cultures also plays a critical role in the process. More isolated peoples who lived across broader territories at lower population densities have generally succumbed to the illnesses brought from the comparatively higher densities of Eurasian peoples. Indigenous populations simply did not have time to develop immunity to the foreign diseases, all introduced at once, to which the more urbanised European populations had had many generations to develop some partial immunity. The relative sizes of the contact populations can influence the process of inter-cultural development, as seen in Viking Greenland or in the Roanoke Colony.
Possible outcomes of contact for the groups involved may include:
- social integration
- colonization
- elimination (genocide)
History
Long before contemporary uncontacted peoples, there were many more cases of communities and states being isolated from each other, sometimes only having poor knowledge of each other and poor contact. One such case is the poor formal contact between Europe and China in the course of the long history of the Silk Road trade and later contact with the Mongol Empire. Frustration with the lack of contact gave rise to the characterization of China as isolationist, and after being identified with Greater India and Prester John, the European powers, such as the Portuguese Prince Henry the Navigator, attempted to reach the isolated Greater India by travelling westward. The European colonial powers thereby mistakenly identified the Americas as the West Indies - a part of Greater India - and named the indigenous peoples of the Americas incorrectly as "Indians". This contacting has been called one-sided "discovery" as is the case with discovery doctrine, and has been reinvented contemporarily by narratives of first contact beyond Earth finding its way into actual space exploration (for example the Pioneer plaque).
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|12 October 1492
|Taíno, Galibi and Ciboney etc.
|Christopher Columbus's first voyage
|Spanish Empire
|Guanahani (modern Bahamas); Cuba; Hispaniola
|Violent, led to numerous deaths and enslavement of many indigenous inhabitants of the West Indies and their subjugation to extreme violence and brutality.
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|30 July 1502
|Maya
|Christopher Columbus's fourth voyage
|Spanish Empire
|Bonacca, Bay Islands<!--use historical toponym?--> (modern Honduras)
|Columbus came upon and forced a barter with a local merchant on a Mesoamerican trading canoe, laden with ceramic wares, dyed cotton textiles, flint-edged swords, copper hatchets, and other goods. As the trader is thought to have hailed from a nearby Maya Lowland port, the meeting is often deemed a first contact for the Spanish (with the Maya) and for the Maya (with a people from the Old World) too.
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|17 June 1579
|Coast Miwok
|Francis Drake's circumnavigation
|English
|Drake's Bay, Northern California
|Drake and his crew remained at Drake’s Bay for about one month to repair their ship during which time relations with the Miwok remained peaceful. Ceremoniously, Drake claimed the land for England as Nova Albion but after he sailed away from the area, contact was lost for the next two centuries.
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|21 July 1595
|Polynesians
|Álvaro de Mendaña de Neira
|Spanish Empire
|Marquesas Islands, French Polynesia
|Initially friendly, but turning violent in the first encounter and leading to 200 local deaths in the first two weeks.
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|19 December 1642
|Ngāti Tūmatakōkiri
|Abel Tasman's first voyage
|Dutch
|Tasman District, New Zealand
|Four Dutch killed, one Māori wounded, no other communication.
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|19 January 1788
|Native Hawaiians
|James Cook's third voyage
||British Empire
|Kauai, Hawaii
|General friendly trade; one Indigenous Hawaiian killed.
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|21 January 1788
|Cadigal and Bidjigal etc.
|First Fleet
||British Empire
|Sydney, Australia
|Friendly, reserved, one Aboriginal Australian likely beaten.
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|29 November 1791
|Moriori
|William R. Broughton
||British Empire
|Chatham Island, New Zealand
|Shows of aggression by Moriori followed quickly by peaceful relations. Then a fight leading to the death of one Moriori.
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|1930
|Papuan people
|Mick Leahy
|Australian
|New Guinea Highlands, Papua New Guinea
|Friendly, some Highland people thought they were ancestors and attempted to rub off their white skins.
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