Kon-Tiki Museum
Museum
About Kon-Tiki Museum
The Kon-Tiki Museum houses the actual balsa wood raft that Thor Heyerdahl and five companions sailed 4,300 miles across the Pacific in 1947, proving ancient South Americans could have reached Polynesia. You'll see the weathered logs, rope bindings, and bamboo cabin exactly as they looked when they washed ashore in French Polynesia after 101 days at sea. The museum also displays the Ra II papyrus boat from Heyerdahl's Atlantic crossing, Easter Island statues, and artifacts from his archaeological expeditions.
The museum feels intimate and focused, built around these two remarkable vessels that dominate the main hall. You can walk completely around both boats, studying the ingenious construction and imagining months of ocean swells. The lighting is dramatic, and information panels explain Heyerdahl's theories about ancient migration patterns. The Easter Island section upstairs showcases genuine moai statues and Polynesian artifacts that support his controversial ideas about cultural connections across oceans.
This isn't a massive museum, you'll cover everything in about an hour. Adult tickets cost 120 NOK, but the three-museum pass for 220 NOK includes the Fram and Maritime museums next door, which is decent value. Skip the gift shop unless you're obsessed with maritime adventure stories. The museum works perfectly as part of a Bygdøy museum crawl, though honestly, seeing that tiny raft that crossed an ocean is worth the trip alone.
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