User:Piton paul/British Services Antarctic Expedition 2012
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British Services Antarctic Expedition 2012
[edit]The British Services Antarctic Expedition 2012, also known as the 'Spirit of Scott Expedition', was a British military expedition composed of serving members of the Royal Navy, British Army and Royal Air Force. The expedition was part of the national celebration of the heroic death of Captain Robert Falcon Scott (Royal Navy) and his team; Dr Edward Wilson, Lt Henry Bowers (Royal Indian Marine), Capt Lawrence Oates (6th Inniskilling Dragoons) and Petty Officer Edgar Evans (Royal Navy) [1]. The expedition was led by Colonel Paul John Edwards MBE and took 24 servicemen and women to the Fallières Coast of Graham Land, in Antarctica in January and February 2012.
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The expedition, named after its supply ship, was a private venture financed by public contributions and a government grant. It had further backing from the Admiralty, which released experienced seamen to the expedition, and from the Royal Geographical Society (RGS). The expedition's team of scientists carried out a comprehensive scientific programme, while other parties explored Victoria Land and the Western Mountains. An attempted landing and exploration of King Edward VII Land was unsuccessful. A journey to Cape Crozier in June and July 1911 was the first extended sledging journey in the depths of the Antarctic winter.
Preparations
[edit]Background
[edit]After RRS Discovery's return from the Antarctic in 1904, Captain Robert Falcon Scott eventually resumed his naval career but continued to nurse ambitions of returning south, with the conquest of the South Pole as his specific target.[2] The Discovery Expedition had made a significant contribution to Antarctic scientific and geographical knowledge, but in terms of penetration southward had reached only 82° 17' and had not traversed the Great Ice Barrier.[3][a]
In 1909, Scott received news that Ernest Shackleton's Nimrod expedition had narrowly failed to reach the Pole. Starting from a base close to Scott's Discovery anchorage in McMurdo Sound, Shackleton had crossed the Great Ice Barrier, discovered the Beardmore Glacier route to the Polar Plateau, and had struck out for the Pole. He had been forced to turn for home at 88° 23' S, less than 100 geographical miles (112 miles (180 km)) from his objective.[4] Scott had claimed the McMurdo Sound area as his own "field of work",[5] and Shackleton's use of the area as a base was in breach of an undertaking he gave Scott.[6] This soured relations between the two explorers, and increased Scott's determination to surpass Shackleton's achievements.[7]
As he made his preparations for a further expedition, Scott was aware of other impending polar ventures. A Japanese expedition was being planned;[8] the Australasian Antarctic Expedition under Douglas Mawson was to leave in 1911, but would be working in a different sector of the continent;[9] and Roald Amundsen, a potential rival from Norway, had also announced plans for an Arctic voyage.[10][11]
Personnel
[edit]Sixty-five men (including replacements) formed the shore and ship's parties of the Terra Nova Expedition.[12] They were chosen from 8,000 applicants,[13] and included seven Discovery veterans together with five who had been with Shackleton on his 1907–1909 expedition.[b] Lieutenant Edward Evans, who had been the navigating officer on Morning, the Discovery Expedition's relief ship in 1904, was appointed Scott's second-in-command. Evans had abandoned plans to mount his own expedition and transferred his financial backing to Scott.[14]
Among the other serving Royal Navy personnel released by the Admiralty were Lieutenant Harry Pennell, who would serve as navigator and take command of Terra Nova once the shore parties had landed;[15] and two Surgeon-Lieutenants, George Murray Levick and Edward L. Atkinson.[15] Ex-Royal Navy officer Victor Campbell, known as "The Wicked Mate", was one of the few who had skills in skiing, and was chosen to lead the party that would explore King Edward VII Land.[16][17] Two non-Royal Navy officers were appointed: Henry Robertson Bowers ("Birdie"), who was a lieutenant in the Royal Indian Marine,[15] and Lawrence Oates ("Titus"), an Army captain from the 6th (Inniskilling) Dragoons. Oates, independently wealthy, volunteered £1,000 (equivalent to about £129,000 in 2023) and his services to the expedition.[18]
The Admiralty also provided a largely naval lower deck, including the Antarctic veterans Edgar Evans (no relation to Edward Evans), Tom Crean and William Lashly. Other seamen in the shore party included Patrick Keohane, Robert Forde, Thomas Clissold (cook) and Frederick Hooper (domestic steward). Dimitri Gerov (dog driver), a Russian, and Anton Omelchenko (groom), a Ukrainian, also landed.
To head his scientific programme, Scott appointed Edward Wilson as chief scientist.[19] Wilson was Scott's closest confidant among the party; on the Discovery Expedition he had accompanied Scott on the Farthest South march to 80°S.[20] As well as being a qualified medical doctor and a distinguished research zoologist, he was also a talented illustrator.[21] Wilson's scientific team – which Scott's biographer David Crane considered "as impressive a group of scientists as had ever been on a polar expedition"[15] — included some who would enjoy later careers of distinction: meteorologist George Simpson; Canadian physicist Charles Wright; and geologists Frank Debenham and Raymond Priestley.[22] Senior geologist T. Griffith Taylor, biologists Edward W. Nelson and Denis G. Lillie, and assistant zoologist Apsley Cherry-Garrard completed the team.
Cherry-Garrard had no scientific training, but was a protégé of Wilson's. He had, like Oates, contributed £1,000 to funds. After first being turned down by Scott, he allowed his contribution to stand, which impressed Scott sufficiently for him to reverse his decision.[22] Scott's biographer David Crane describes Cherry-Garrard as "the future interpreter, historian and conscience of the expedition."[23] Herbert Ponting was the expedition's photographer, whose pictures would leave a vivid visual record.[24] On the advice of explorer Fridtjof Nansen, Scott recruited a young Norwegian ski expert, Tryggve Gran.[25]
Transport
[edit]Scott had decided on a mixed transport strategy, relying on contributions from dogs, motor sledges and ponies.[26][27] He appointed Cecil Meares to take charge of the dog teams, and recruited Shackleton's former motor specialist, Bernard Day, to run the motor sledges.[28] Oates would be in charge of the ponies, but as he could not join the expedition until May 1910, Scott instructed Meares, who knew nothing of horses, to buy them—with unfortunate consequences for their quality and performance.[29]
A "polarised" motor car had been unsuccessfully tried in the Antarctic by Shackleton, on his 1907–1909 expedition, while his pioneering use of ponies had transported him as far as the foot of the Beardmore Glacier.[30][31] Scott believed that ponies had served Shackleton well, and he thought he could resolve the motor traction problem by developing a tracked snow "motor" (the forerunner of the Snowcat and of the tank). Scott always intended to rely on man-hauling for the Polar Plateau,[32] believing it impossible to ascend the Beardmore Glacier with motors or with animals. The motors and animals would be used to haul loads only across the Barrier, enabling the men to preserve their strength for the later Glacier and Plateau stages. In practice, the motor sledges proved only briefly useful, and the ponies' performance was affected by their age and poor condition.[33] As to dogs, while Scott's experiences on Discovery had made him dubious of their reliability,[34] his writings show that he recognised their effectiveness in the right hands.[35] As the expedition developed, he became increasingly impressed with their capabilities.[c]
Finance
[edit]Unlike the Discovery Expedition, where fundraising was handled jointly by the Royal Society and the Royal Geographical Society (RGS), the Terra Nova Expedition was organised as a private venture without significant institutional support. Scott estimated the total cost at £40,000,[36] half of which was eventually met by a government grant.[37] The balance was raised by public subscription and loans.[d] The expedition was further assisted by the free supply of a range of provisions and equipment from sympathetic commercial firms.[38] The fund-raising task was largely carried out by Scott, and was a considerable drain on his time and energy, continuing in South Africa, Australia, and New Zealand after Terra Nova had sailed from British waters.[39]
By far the largest single cost was the purchase of the ship Terra Nova, for £12,500.[37] Terra Nova had been in Antarctica before, as part of the second Discovery relief operation.[40] Scott wanted to sail her as a naval vessel under the White Ensign; to enable this, he obtained membership of the Royal Yacht Squadron for £100. He was thus able to impose naval discipline on the expedition, and as a registered yacht of the Squadron, Terra Nova became exempt from Board of Trade regulations which might otherwise have deemed her unfit to sail.[41]
Objectives
[edit]Scott defined the objects of the expedition in his initial public appeal: "The main objective of this expedition is to reach the South Pole, and to secure for The British Empire the honour of this achievement."[36] There were other objectives, both scientific and geographical; the scientific work was considered by Wilson as the main work of the expedition: "No one can say that it will have only been a Pole-hunt ... We want the scientific work to make the bagging of the Pole merely an item in the results."[42] He hoped to continue investigations, begun during the Discovery Expedition, of the emperor penguin colony at Cape Crozier[43] and to fulfil a programme of geological, magnetic and meteorology studies on an "unprecedented" scale.[36] There were further plans to explore King Edward VII Land, a venture described by Campbell, who was to lead it, as "the thing of the whole expedition",[44] and Victoria Land.[36]
First season, 1910–1911
[edit]Voyage out
[edit]Terra Nova sailed from Cardiff on 15 June 1910.[45] Scott, detained by expedition business, sailed later on a faster passenger liner and joined the ship in South Africa.[46] In Melbourne he left Terra Nova to continue fund-raising while the ship proceeded to New Zealand.[47] Waiting for Scott in Melbourne was a telegram from Amundsen, informing Scott that the Norwegian was "proceeding south";[e] the telegram was the first indication to Scott that he was in a race. When asked by the press for a reaction, Scott replied that his plans would not change and that he would not sacrifice the expedition's scientific goals to win the race to the Pole.[47] In his diary he wrote that Amundsen had a fair chance of success, and perhaps deserved his luck if he got through.[48]
Scott rejoined Terra Nova in New Zealand, where additional supplies were taken aboard, including thirty-four dogs, nineteen Siberian ponies and three motorised sledges.[47] The ship, heavily overladen, finally left Port Chalmers on 29 November.[47] During the first days of December the ship was struck by a heavy storm; at one point, with the ship taking heavy seas and the pumps having failed, the crew had to bail her out with buckets.[49] The storm resulted in the loss of two ponies, a dog, 10 long tons (10,000 kg) of coal and 65 imperial gallons (300 L) of petrol.[50] On 10 December, Terra Nova met the southern pack ice and was halted, remaining for twenty days before breaking clear and continuing southward. The delay, which Scott attributed to "sheer bad luck", had consumed 6.1 long tons (6,200 kg) of coal.[51]
Main expedition journeys, 1911–1912
[edit]Northern Party
[edit]After reporting Amundsen's arrival to Scott at Cape Evans, Campbell's Eastern party (Victor Campbell, Raymond Priestley, George Levick, George P. Abbott, Harry Dickason) and Frank V. Browning became the "Northern Party". On 9 February 1911 they sailed northwards, arriving at Robertson Bay, near Cape Adare on 17 February, where they built a hut close to Norwegian explorer Carstens Borchgrevink's old quarters.[52]
The Northern Party spent the 1911 winter in their hut. Their exploration plans for the summer of 1911–1912 could not be fully carried out, partly because of the condition of the sea ice and also because they were unable to discover a route into the interior. Terra Nova returned from New Zealand on 4 January 1912, and transferred the party to the vicinity of Evans Cove, a location approximately 250 miles (400 km) south of Cape Adare and 200 miles (320 km) northwest of Cape Evans. They were to be picked up on 18 February after the completion of further geological work,[53] but due to heavy pack ice, the ship was unable to reach them.[54] The group, with meagre rations which they had to supplement by fish and seal meat, were forced to spend the winter months of 1912 in a snow cave which they excavated on Inexpressible Island.[55] Here they suffered severe privations—frostbite, dysentery and hunger, with extreme winds and low temperatures, and the discomfort of a blubber stove in confined quarters.[56]
On 17 April 1912 a party under Edward Atkinson, in command at Cape Evans during the absence of the polar party, went to relieve Campbell's party, but were beaten back by the weather.[57] The Northern Party survived the winter in their icy chamber, and set out for the base camp on 30 September 1912. Despite their physical weakness, the whole party managed to reach Cape Evans on 7 November, after a perilous journey which included a crossing of the difficult Drygalski Ice Tongue.[58] Geological and other specimens collected by the Northern Party were retrieved from Cape Adare and Evans Cove by Terra Nova in January 1913.[59]
Western geological parties
[edit]First geological expedition, January–March 1911
[edit]The objective of this journey was geological exploration of the coastal area west of McMurdo Sound, in a region between the McMurdo Dry Valleys and the Koettlitz Glacier.[60] This work was undertaken by a party consisting of Griffith Taylor, Debenham, Wright and Edgar Evans. They landed from Terra Nova on 26 January at Butter Point,[f] opposite Cape Evans on the Victoria Land shore. On 30 January, the party established its main depot in the Ferrar Glacier region, and then conducted explorations and survey work in the Dry Valley and Taylor Glacier areas before moving southwards to the Koettlitz Glacier. After further work there, they started homewards on 2 March, taking a southerly route to Hut Point, where they arrived on 14 March.[61]
Second geological expedition, November 1911 – February 1912
[edit]This was a continuation of the work carried out in the earlier journey, this time concentrating on Granite Harbour region approximately 50 miles (80 km) north of Butter Point.[62] Taylor's companions this time were Debenham, Gran and Forde. The main journey began on 14 November, and involved difficult travel over sea ice to Granite Harbour, which was reached on 26 November. Headquarters were established at a site christened Geology Point, and a stone hut was built. During the following weeks, exploration and surveying work took place on the Mackay Glacier, and a range of features to the north of the glacier were identified and named.
The party was due to be picked up by Terra Nova on 15 January 1912, but the ship could not reach them. The party waited until 5 February before trekking southward, and were rescued from the ice when they were finally spotted from the ship on 18 February. Geological specimens from both Western Mountains expeditions were retrieved by Terra Nova in January 1913.[63]
Winter journey to Cape Crozier
[edit]This journey was conceived by Wilson. He had suggested the need for it in the Zoology section of the Discovery Expedition's Scientific Reports, and was anxious to follow up this earlier research. The journey's scientific purpose was to secure emperor penguin eggs from the rookery near Cape Crozier at an early embryo stage, so that "particular points in the development of the bird could be worked out".[64] This required a trip in the depths of winter to obtain eggs in an appropriately early stage of incubation. A secondary purpose was to experiment with food rations and equipment in advance of the coming summer's polar journey.[65] Scott approved, and a party consisting of Wilson, Bowers and Cherry-Garrard set out on 27 June 1911.[66]
Travelling during the Antarctic winter had not been previously tried; Scott wrote that it was "a bold venture, but the right men have gone to attempt it."[66] Cherry-Garrard later described the horrors of the 19 days it took to travel the 60 miles (97 km) to Cape Crozier. Gear, clothes, and sleeping bags were constantly iced up; on 5 July, the temperature fell below −77 °F (−61 °C)—"109 degrees of frost—as cold as anyone would want to endure in darkness and iced up clothes", wrote Cherry-Garrard. Often the daily distance travelled was little more than a single mile.[67]
After reaching Cape Crozier on 15 July, the party built an igloo from snow blocks, stone, and a sheet of wood they had brought for the roof.[68] They were then able to visit the penguin colony and collect several emperor penguin eggs.[69] Subsequently, their igloo shelter was almost destroyed in a blizzard with winds of force 11 on the Beaufort scale. The storm also carried away the tent upon which their survival would depend during their return journey, but fortunately this was recovered, half a mile away.[70] The group set out on the return journey to Cape Evans, arriving there on 1 August.[71] The three eggs that survived the journey went first to the Natural History Museum in South Kensington, and thereafter were the subject of a report from Cossar Stewart at the University of Edinburgh.[72] The eggs failed to support Wilson's theories.[73]
Cherry-Garrard afterwards described this as the "worst journey in the world",[74] and used this as the title of the book that he wrote about the expedition. Scott called the Winter Journey "a very wonderful performance",[71] and was highly satisfied with the experiments in rations and equipment: "We are as near perfection as experience can direct."[71]
South polar journey
[edit]The last march
[edit]After confirming their position and planting their flag, Scott's party turned homewards. During the next three weeks they made good progress, Scott's diary recording several "excellent marches".[75] Nevertheless, Scott began to worry about the physical condition of his party, particularly of Edgar Evans who was suffering from severe frostbite and was, Scott records, "a good deal run down."[76] The condition of Oates's feet became an increasing anxiety, as the group approached the summit of the Beardmore Glacier and prepared for the descent to the Barrier.[75] On 7 February, they began their descent and had serious difficulty locating a depot. In a brief spell of good weather, Scott ordered a half-day's rest, allowing Wilson to "geologise"; 30 pounds (14 kg) of fossil-bearing samples were added to the sledges. These plant fossils were later used to support the theory of continental drift.[76] Edgar Evans's health was deteriorating; a hand injury was failing to heal, he was badly frostbitten, and is thought to have injured his head after several falls on the ice. "He is absolutely changed from his normal self-reliant self", wrote Scott.[76] Near the bottom of the glacier he collapsed, and died on 17 February.[76]
On the Barrier stage of the homeward march, Scott reached the 82° 30' S meeting point for the dog teams, three days ahead of schedule, noting in his diary for 27 February 1912: "We are naturally always discussing possibility of meeting dogs, where and when, etc. It is a critical position. We may find ourselves in safety at the next depot, but there is a horrid element of doubt."[77] The party then met with three, ultimately critical, difficulties: the non-appearance of the dog teams, an unexpected large drop in temperature,[78] and a shortage of fuel in the depots.[79] The low temperatures caused poor surfaces which Scott likened to "pulling over desert sand";[80] he described the surface as "coated with a thin layer of woolly crystals, formed by radiation no doubt. These are too firmly fixed to be removed by the wind and cause impossible friction on the [sledge] runners."[81] The low temperatures were accompanied by an absence of wind, something Scott had expected to assist them on their northern journey.
The party were further slowed down by the frostbite in Oates' left foot.[79] Daily marches were now down to less than five miles (8 km), which was insufficient given the lack of oil.[82] By March 10, it became evident the dog teams were not coming: "The dogs which would have been our salvation have evidently failed. Meares [the dog-driver] had a bad trip home I suppose."[83] In a farewell letter to Sir Edgar Speyer, dated March 16, Scott wondered whether he had overshot the meeting point and fought the growing suspicion that he had in fact been abandoned by the dog teams: "We very nearly came through, and it's a pity to have missed it, but lately I have felt that we have overshot our mark. No-one is to blame and I hope no attempt will be made to suggest that we had lacked support."[84] On the same day, Oates, who "now with hands as well as feet pretty well useless", voluntarily left the tent and walked to his death. Scott wrote that Oates' last words were "I am just going outside and may be some time".[85]
Eleven miles
[edit]Oates' sacrifice increased the team's speed but it was too late to save them, especially since Scott's right toes were now becoming frostbitten. Scott, Wilson and Bowers struggled on to a point 11 miles (18 km) south of One Ton Depot, but were halted on 20 March, by a fierce blizzard. Although each day they attempted to advance, they were unable to do so.[86] Scott's last diary entry, dated 29 March 1912, the presumed date of their deaths, ends with these words:
Every day we have been ready to start for our depot 11 miles away, but outside the door of the tent it remains a scene of whirling drift. I do not think we can hope for any better things now. We shall stick it out to the end, but we are getting weaker, of course, and the end cannot be far. It seems a pity but I do not think I can write more. R. Scott. Last entry. For God's sake look after our people.[87]
Attempts to relieve the polar party, 1912
[edit]Aftermath
[edit]As Campbell was now the senior naval officer of the expedition, he assumed command for its final weeks, until the arrival of Terra Nova on 18 January 1913. Before the final departure a large wooden cross was erected on the slopes of Observation Hill, overlooking Hut Point, inscribed with the five names of the dead and a quotation from Tennyson's Ulysses: "To strive, to seek, to find, and not to yield".[88]
The loss of Scott and his party overshadowed all else in the British public's mind, including Amundsen's feat in being first at the Pole.[89] For many years the image of Scott as a tragic hero, beyond reproach, remained almost unchallenged, for although there were rifts among some who were close to the expedition, including relatives of those who died, this disharmony was not public. There was no real change in public perceptions until the 1970s, by which time nearly all those directly concerned with the expedition were dead.[90]
Controversy was ignited with the publication of Roland Huntford's book Scott and Amundsen (1979, re-published and televised in 1985 as The Last Place on Earth). Huntford was critical of Scott's supposedly authoritarian leadership style and of his poor judgment of men, and blamed him for a series of organisational failures that led to the death of everyone in the polar party.[91] Scott's personal standing suffered from these attacks; efforts to restore his reputation have included the account by Ranulph Fiennes (a direct rebuttal of Huntford's version), Susan Solomon's scientific analysis of the weather conditions that ultimately defeated Scott, David Cranes's 2005 biography of Scott, and Karen May's new analysis of Scott's disobeyed orders specifying that the dog teams transport his returning party swiftly back to the base camp.[84]
In comparing the achievements of Scott and Amundsen, most polar historians generally accept that Amundsen's skills with ski and dogs, his general familiarity with ice conditions, and his clear focus on a non-scientific expedition[92] gave him considerable advantages in the race for the Pole.[93][94] Scott's verdict on the disaster that overtook his party, written when he was close to death, lists the initial loss of pony transport, weather conditions, "a shortage of fuel in our depots for which I cannot account", and the sickening of Evans and Oates, but ultimately Scott concludes that "our wreck is certainly due to this sudden advent of severe weather [...] on the Barrier [...] −30 °F (−34 °C) in the day, −47 °F (−44 °C) at night". Presumably with regard to the failed rendezvous with the dog teams requested for 1 March 1912, Scott furthermore wrote "No-one is to blame and I hope no attempt will be made to suggest that we have lacked support".[84] Cherry-Garrard, whom Atkinson placed in charge of the dog teams which started late, failed to meet Scott and turned for home, observes that "the whole business simply bristles with 'ifs'"; an accumulation of decisions and circumstances that might have fallen differently ultimately led to catastrophe. But "we were as wise as anyone can be before the event."[95]
Thirty-one years later, after suffering irreversible damage while carrying supplies to base stations in Greenland, the Terra Nova was set on fire and later sunk by gunfire off the southern coast of Greenland on 13 September 1943, at 60°15′15″N 45°55′45″W / 60.25417°N 45.92917°W Its submerged remains were found in 2012.[96]
Scientific legacy
[edit]The scientific contributions of the expedition were long overshadowed by the deaths of Scott and his party. The 12 scientists who participated—the largest Antarctic scientific team of its time— made important discoveries in zoology, botany, geology, glaciology, and meteorology.[97] The Terra Nova returned to England with over 2,100 plants, animals, and fossils, over 400 of which were new to science. Discoveries of the fossil plant Glossopteris – also found in Australia, New Zealand, Africa, and India – supported the ideas that the climate of Antarctica was formerly warm enough to support trees, and that Antarctica was once united to the other landmasses.[98][99] Before the expedition, glaciers had only been studied in Europe.[99] The meteorological data collected was the longest unbroken weather record in the early twentieth century, providing baselines for current assessments of climate change.[97] In 1920, former Terra Nova geographer Frank Debenham and geologist Raymond Priestley founded the Scott Polar Research Institute at the University of Cambridge, which houses the greatest library of polar research.[99]
See also
[edit]- Comparison of the Amundsen and Scott Expeditions
- Heroic Age of Antarctic Exploration
- List of Antarctic expeditions
References
[edit]Notes
[edit]- ^ The latitude of 82° 17' was accepted at the time. Modern maps and a re-examination of photographs and drawings have indicated that the final position was probably about 82° 11'. (Crane 2005, pp. 214–215).
- ^ The Discovery veterans were Scott, Wilson, Edgar Evans, Lashly, Crean, Heald and Wiliamson. The Nimrod veterans were Priestley, Day, Cheetham, Paton and Williams (list of Nimrod personnel in Shackleton 1911, pp. 17–18).
- ^ During the early, depot-laying stages of the expedition, Scott expresses loss of faith in the dogs (Huxley 1913a, p. 205). In his later diary entries covering the Southern Journey their performance is described as "splendid" (Huxley 1913a, p. 486).
- ^ The total cost of the expedition was not published. One of Scott's last letters was to Sir Edgar Speyer, the expedition's treasurer; in it, Scott apologises for leaving the finances in "a muddle". (Huxley 1913a, p. 600).
- ^ The telegram's exact wording is uncertain. Cherry-Garrard 1970, p. 82, Crane 2005, p. 423, and Preston 1999, p. 127, all report it as a simple, "Am going south". Solomon 2001, p. 64, gives a longer version: "Beg leave to inform you Fram proceeding Antarctica"; Fiennes and Huntford both use this form.
- ^ Butter Point was named after a depot containing butter was left there during the Discovery Expedition. (Huxley 1913b, p. 183).
Cite error: A list-defined reference named "Eastern Party" is not used in the content (see the help page).
Footnotes
[edit]- ^ http://www.webarchive.org.uk/wayback/archive/20120330224410/http://www.bsae2012.co.uk/
- ^ Crane 2005, pp. 332, 335–343.
- ^ Huntford 1985, pp. 176–177.
- ^ Preston 1999, pp. 100–101.
- ^ Crane 2005, pp. 335–336.
- ^ Riffenburgh 2005, pp. 110–116.
- ^ Huxley 1977, p. 179.
- ^ Crane 2005, p. 430.
- ^ Huxley 1977, pp. 186–187.
- ^ Fiennes 2003, p. 157.
- ^ Crane 2005, p. 425.
- ^ Huxley 1913a, pp. xxi–xxii.
- ^ Huxley 1913b, p. 498.
- ^ Crane 2005, pp. 401–403.
- ^ a b c d Crane 2005, pp. 413–416.
- ^ Huntford 1985, p. 267.
- ^ Preston 1999, p. 111.
- ^ Limb & Cordingley 1982, p. 94.
- ^ Crane 2005, p. 375.
- ^ Solomon 2001, p. 27–29.
- ^ Savours 2011.
- ^ a b Preston 1999, p. 112.
- ^ Crane 2005, p. 417.
- ^ Preston 1999, p. 114.
- ^ Huntford 1985, pp. 262–264.
- ^ Crane 2005, p. 432.
- ^ Preston 1999, p. 101.
- ^ Preston 1999, pp. 112–113.
- ^ Preston 1999, pp. 113, 217.
- ^ Huntford 1985, p. 255.
- ^ Preston 1999, p. 89.
- ^ Solomon 2001, p. 22.
- ^ Crane 2005, pp. 462–464.
- ^ Preston 1999, p. 50.
- ^ Huxley 1913a, p. 432.
- ^ a b c d Crane 2005, p. 397.
- ^ a b Crane 2005, p. 401.
- ^ Huxley 1913b, pp. 488–489.
- ^ Huxley 1977, pp. 183, 192–193.
- ^ Crane 2005, p. 277.
- ^ Crane 2005, p. 406.
- ^ Crane 2005, p. 398.
- ^ Seaver 1933, pp. 127–134.
- ^ Crane 2005, p. 474.
- ^ Crane 2005, p. 409.
- ^ Crane 2005, p. 411.
- ^ a b c d Preston 1999, pp. 128–131.
- ^ Crane 2005, p. 424.
- ^ Huxley 1913a, pp. 13–14.
- ^ Huxley 1913a, p. 16.
- ^ Preston 1999, p. 137.
- ^ Huxley 1913b, pp. 87–90.
- ^ Huxley 1913b, p. 112.
- ^ Huxley 1913b, p. 126.
- ^ Huxley 1913b, p. 130.
- ^ Huxley 1913b, pp. 134–135.
- ^ Huxley 1913b, pp. 312–316.
- ^ Huxley 1913b, pp. 155–179.
- ^ Huxley 1913b, pp. 401–402.
- ^ Huxley 1913b, pp. 184–185.
- ^ Huxley 1913b, pp. 186–221.
- ^ Huxley 1913b, pp. 222–223.
- ^ Huxley 1913b, pp. 224–290.
- ^ Huxley 1913b, p. 1.
- ^ Cherry-Garrard 1970, pp. 305–307.
- ^ a b Huxley 1913a, pp. 333–334.
- ^ Cherry-Garrard 1970, pp. 295–309.
- ^ Cherry-Garrard 1970, pp. 310–312.
- ^ Cherry-Garrard 1970, pp. 316–322.
- ^ Cherry-Garrard 1970, pp. 323–335.
- ^ a b c Huxley 1913a, pp. 361–369.
- ^ Cherry-Garrard 1970, pp. 351–353.
- ^ Fiennes 2003, p. 260.
- ^ Cherry-Garrard 1970, p. 350.
- ^ a b Huxley 1913a, pp. 547–562.
- ^ a b c d Crane 2005, pp. 547–552.
- ^ Huxley 1913a, p. 581.
- ^ Solomon 2001, pp. 292–294.
- ^ a b Huxley 1913a, p. 583.
- ^ Huxley 1913a, p. 575.
- ^ Huxley 1913a, p. 584.
- ^ Huxley 1913a, pp. 574–580.
- ^ Huxley 1913a, p. 589.
- ^ a b c May 2013, pp. 72–90.
- ^ Huxley 1913a, pp. 590–592.
- ^ Crane 2005, p. 560–561.
- ^ Huxley 1913a, pp. 583–595.
- ^ Preston 1999, p. 229.
- ^ Huntford 1985, p. 526.
- ^ Fiennes 2003, pp. 410–422.
- ^ Barczewski 2007, pp. 252–260.
- ^ Cherry-Garrard 1970, pp. 564.
- ^ Crane 2005, p. 426.
- ^ Preston 1999, p. 221.
- ^ Cherry-Garrard 1970, pp. 609–610.
- ^ Rincon, Paul (16 August 2012). "Scott's wrecked ship Terra Nova found off Greenland". BBC News. Retrieved 16 August 2012.
- ^ a b Martin, Colin (19 January 2012). "Antarctica: Scientists to the end". Nature. 481 (7381): 264. doi:10.1038/481264a.
- ^ Ghosh, Pallab (17 January 2012). "Researchers praise Scott's legacy". BBC News.
- ^ a b c Robson, David (21 June 2011). "The Scott expedition: how science gained the pole position". The Telegraph.
Sources
[edit]- Barczewski, S. (2007). Antarctic Destinies: Scott, Shackleton and the changing face of heroism. London: Hambledon Continuum. ISBN 9781847251923.
- Cherry-Garrard, A. (1970) [1922]. The Worst Journey in the World. London: Penguin Books. ISBN 9780140095012.
- Crane, D. (2005). Scott of the Antarctic: A Life of Courage, and Tragedy in the Extreme South. London: HarperCollins. ISBN 9780007150687.
- Evans, E. (1949). South with Scott. London: Collins.
- Fiennes, R. (2003). Captain Scott. Hodder & Stoughton Ltd. ISBN 9780340826973.
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- Huxley, E. (1977). Scott of the Antarctic. London: Weidenfeld & Nicolson. ISBN 9780297774334.
- Huxley, L., ed. (1913a). Scott's Last Expedition. Vol. 1. London: Smith, Elder & Co. OCLC 1522514.
- Huxley, L., ed. (1913b). Scott's Last Expedition. Vol. 2. London: Smith, Elder & Co. OCLC 1522514.
- Limb, S.; Cordingley, P. (1982). Captain Oates, Soldier and Explorer. London: B. T. Batsford. ISBN 9780713426939.
- May, K. (January 2013). "Could Captain Scott have been saved? Revisiting Scott's last expedition". Polar Record. 49 (1): 72–90. doi:10.1017/S0032247411000751.
- Preston, D. (1999). A First Rate Tragedy: Captain Scott's Antarctic Expeditions. London: Constable. ISBN 9780094795303.
- Riffenburgh, B. (2005). Nimrod. London: Bloomsbury Publishing. ISBN 9780747572534.
- Seaver, G. (1933). Edward Wilson of the Antarctic. London: John Murray.
- Savours, A. (2011). "Wilson, Edward Adrian". Oxford Dictionary of National Biography. Oxford University Press. Retrieved 8 May 2015.
- Shackleton, E. (1911). The Heart of the Antarctic. London: William Heinemann.
- Solomon, S. (2001). The Coldest March: Scott's Fatal Antarctic Expedition. New Haven: Yale University Press. ISBN 9780300099218.
External links
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Category:1910 in Antarctica Category:1911 in Antarctica Category:1912 in Antarctica Category:1913 in Antarctica Category:Expeditions from the United Kingdom Category:Heroic Age of Antarctic Exploration Category:Robert Falcon Scott Category:United Kingdom and the Antarctic Category:South Pole