ANTARCTICA: Our Future and the Seventh Continent (Expedition #76)
Dec
27
to Jan 9

ANTARCTICA: Our Future and the Seventh Continent (Expedition #76)

Start the new year off standing among thousands of penguins and seals on the ice continent!

Few people have the opportunity to visit the seventh continent. It is not easy to reach and yet the voyage is absolutely beyond words. Like our Greenland expedition on the other far side of the world, this is the kind of expedition that brings to light the realities of climate change and the critical importance of the Ice Continent and the surrounding Southern Ocean. This is the expedition to be up close and personal with thousands of various penguins and seals. And this is one of those rare opportunities to do a polar plunge on New Years Day where few people have. But most importantly, it is an opportunity to learn from the most unforgiving place on Earth about the dream of the earth and the future role of humanity that we all will carry with us far into our elder years. 6 CORE Credits (THEO 332 & PHIL 200 or PHIL 250 are offered for all undergraduate majors. Limit 14. Registration Deadline: October 1, 2025.

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NAVAJOLAND / GRAND CANYON: House of Dawn- Navajo Wellness (Expedition #77)
Mar
14

NAVAJOLAND / GRAND CANYON: House of Dawn- Navajo Wellness (Expedition #77)

Learn how land, song, and story impact Navajo perspectives of health. Glimpse into the relations between ceremony and wellness. Walk in sacred places with a Navajo guide. And hike in the Grand Canyon.

This program is specifically offered to Xavier’s College of Nursing students and to non-Xavier nursing students. If you want to learn a different perspective on human wellness within an incredibly majestic, ancient setting, then this expedition is right for you! We emphasize naturopathic perspectives on wellness from a Navajo context, which is quite different than how we may be formally taught about wellness.

During this experience we will learn the connection between landscape, story, ceremony and human health. And what better way to learn this than from Dine’ (The People, the Navajo)? While we respectfully will not learn detailed medicinal practices, as these practices have long been safeguarded by the Navajo people for essential reasons, we will be introduced to alternative perspectives to medicine which can impact our own clinical approach. And we will do this on the incredibly spirit-filled Navajo landscape—from Monument Valley to Canyon de Chelly—and we will listen and learn from those who live here, whose identities are here, whose stories are here. Naturally, we will include stops along the Southwest for hikes down into the Grand Canyon and we will have Navajo guides lead us on hikes into sacred lands. At the end of this expedition, our perspectives on human wellness will broaden. This expedition offers 3 CORE Credits (THEO 332) and 1 Course for Healthcare/Nursing Majors (NURS 444). Limit 14. Registration Deadline: October 1, 2025.

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NAMIBIA: Endangered Species and the Kalahari People (Expedition #78)
May
27

NAMIBIA: Endangered Species and the Kalahari People (Expedition #78)

Experience authentic wildlife safaris and bush camping with Kalahari and Damaraland peoples! Learn how local communities live along among elephants, lions, rhinos, and hippos. Immerse yourself within the African bush and get up close to some of the most iconic wild animals in our world!

A surreal African safari immersion experience. Namibia is home to the oldest hunter-gather culture in the world and to the largest elephants in the world. Namibia is also a refuge for remaining black rhinos, white rhinos, pangolin, desert elephant, desert lion and cheetah. This expedition includes visits to Damaraland and the Namib Desert, the oldest desert in the world. We also visit traditional bushmen land, the Erongo Mountains, and Etosha National Park, the flagship park of Namibia. Our adventure includes intimate encounters with lions feeding and visits with orphaned rhinos to learn about their stories and challenges that Namibians face in protecting them. We will have soccer matches with local communities in the Kalahari, Damaraland and Erongo Region. Additionally, we also get the rare experience of tracking Damaraland’s rare desert elephants (only about 70 left in the world). We will participate in EHRA’s (Elephant and Human Relations Aid) community-based initiatives to protect both local peoples and endangered elephants, both of which share the same primary sources of water and vegetation. Finally, we do game drive safaris to see wild hippo, rhinos, and matriarchal herds of elephants as well as cheetah, oryx, kudu, wildebeest, zebra, impala, springbok, baboon, jackal, giraffe, and lion prides. It is undoubtedly a memorable, “bucket-list” experience! You will also receive 6 CORE CREDITS towards your undergraduate degree. Students can choose any 2 of 3 course offerings: ART 111 (Creative Perspectives, Photography); PHIL 200 or 250; and/or THEO 332. Limit: 13 Students. Registration Deadline: February 1, 2026.

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BOTSWANA: Endangered Species and the Okavango Delta People (Expedition #79)
May
27
to Jun 12

BOTSWANA: Endangered Species and the Okavango Delta People (Expedition #79)

Explore the famous Okavango Delta the way Sir David Attenborough and wildlife documentarians from the BBC, Nat Geo and PBS Nature have done! This is the ultimate African Safari experience. The Delta—a pristine inland delta is the ending point of the Okavango River that drains into the Kalahari (instead of the ocean)—is a sanctuary for some of the most iconic wildlife—mammals and birds—in the world!

An unforgettable african wildlife safari experience. Botswana is home to the largest population of elephants in the world as well as the oldest hunter-gather culture in the world. The Okavango Delta is a haven for endemic birds (birds that exist here and not elsewhere) as well as lions, leopards, hyenna, hippo, crocodile, giraffe, zebra, rhino, painted dog, pangolin and cheetah. Like Namibia, this is one of the least human-populated areas in Africa and our 8 day mobile-tented camping safari experience is beyond what most universities are capable of offering. It includes game drives and boat safaris to see crocodiles and hippos on the banks as well as canoe-based bird-watching, game-trekking on foot and nights by a fire under the stars. And we conclude with a night at one of the most famous waterfalls in the world: Victoria Falls in Zambia! Get your passport stamps from South Africa, Botswana and Zambia! It is undoubtedly an irreplaceable experience which offers 6 CORE CREDITS (THEO 388 and BIOL 108/109 or BIOL 280). LIMIT: 14 Students. Registration Deadline: February 1, 2026.

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GREENLAND / ICELAND: Our Future and the Polar Iceshelf (Expedition #80)
Jul
23
to Jul 24

GREENLAND / ICELAND: Our Future and the Polar Iceshelf (Expedition #80)

Experience the Arctic Summer where few have been: Greenland’s Polar Icecap! Learn how the Inuit, with their knowledge and use of dogs, have survived on this icy, unforgiving landscape for centuries. Be among the few Xavier students (since the university’s founding in 1831) to step foot upon the Ice Shelf. Walk in the tracks of the explorers and discover what they left behind on their expeditions.

As the ice continues to recede, this really may be a once-in-a-lifetime Polar Icecap experience! Greenland is the largest island in the world and now made famous because of the Greenland Iceshelf and the impacts of climate change. Like our Antarctica expedition on the other far side of the world, this is an expedition to learn about the history of climate change through periods of glacial advance and retreat and to discover how local people have adapted to these changes. It is an opportunity to witness climate change and to be inspired about creative solutions. But, first, we visit Iceland.

Icelandic and Greenlandic peoples both have innovative solutions from which we have much to learn! This is the opportunity to sail via icebreaker ship around massive icebergs, to see Humpback and Greenlandic whales and Ringed seals. It is a chance to learn from local people, to get up close to the most active and the most productive glaciers in the world, to feel like you are standing on the “Ice at the End of the World!” Most importantly, it is an awakening moment while understanding the historical context and scientific basics of how the ice shelf relates to atmosphere and ocean at the very moment you are standing upon such famous ice! And you will also receive 6 CORE CREDITS: ENGL 205 or ENGL 140 and MATH 127/127 (counts as MATH or SCIENCE Perspectives). LIMIT: 12 Students. Registration Deadline: February 1, 2026.

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GATES OF THE ARCTIC: Journey to the Midnight Sun (Expedition #81)
Aug
3
to Aug 14

GATES OF THE ARCTIC: Journey to the Midnight Sun (Expedition #81)

Experience Alaskan life on a remote lake located 250 miles north the the Arctic Circle. This lake is visited only by Xavier Expeditions and, therefore, remains unnamed! The views from the float plane over the edgy, volcanic ridge lines of the Brooks Range on the way to our basecamp location is stunningly and purely wild! Our camp along the lake affords us the opportunity to see and hear wolves, migrating caribou, and grizzly bears that appear to have little or no experience with humans! It is the remotest of remote that America has!

This is the remote experience is about community and wellbeing! Imagine flying by floatplane into Gates of the Arctic National Preserve, the least visited of all the National Parks because access is limited to floatplane only. Imagine setting up a basecamp on a lakeshore far north of the Arctic Circle! Imagine not seeing any humans other than our group and our pilot for the entire week! Imagine that your home is also shared by caribou, grizzly bears, wolves, porcupine, wolverine, eagle, Dahl’s sheep and a host of migrating birds. The opportunity to learn communal survival techniques are lessons that you will take with you for a lifetime. Experiences of drinking from a lake so clean that the water need not be filtered. Imagine your first experience of fly fishing or gathering foods (like berries) done in such a majestic, vast, quiet space where the sun rarely sets. 6 CORE CREDITS (THEO 388 and PHIL 200 or 250) for all undergraduate degrees. LIMIT 12 Students. Registration Deadline: February 1, 2026.

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