The two vessels are by July 1729…
July 1729 CE
The two vessels are by July 1729 back at Okhotsk, where they are moored alongside the Vostok; the party, no longer needing to carry shipbuilding materials makes good time on the return journey from Okhotsk, and by February 28, 1730, Bering will be back in the Russian capital.
He will be awarded 1000 rubles in December 1731 and promoted to captain-commander, his first noble rank (Shpangberg and Chirikov will be similarly promoted to captain).
The long and expensive expedition has cost fifteen men and soured relations between Russia and her native peoples, but it has provided useful new (though not perfect) insights into the geography of Eastern Siberia, and presented useful evidence that Asia and North America are separated by sea.
Bering had not, however, proved the separation beyond doubt.