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Advances in archaeological study have strengthened claims by many scholars that various seafaring peoples of the Mediterranean ventured into the open Atlantic before 600 bce and engaged in some transatlantic voyages perhaps as early as 545ce. Nevertheless, substantial debate continues over the extent and scope of pre-Viking explorations of the Atlantic. Widely accepted are the seafaring contributions of the Egyptians, Celts, Phoenicians, and Romans, whose trading and fishing forays led them certainly to the coastlines of western Africa and Greenland and possibly as far as the Caribbean and the Gulf of Mexico. The combined influence of gradual climatic change and ...(100 of 10227 words)