T.H.
Baughman - Before the heroes came. Antarctica in the 1890s
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Uitgever: University of Nebraska
Press,
Lincoln-London
Verschijningsdatum: 1994
Aantal blz.: 160
ISBN: 0 8032 1228 3
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De achterflap:
Although the Antarctic ice pack and some offshore islands
had been sighted and even landed upon briefly as early as
the 1820s, it was not until an eccentric Anglo-Norwegian
explorer, Carsten E. Borchgrevink, went ashore in 1895 that
a human set foot on the Antarctic continent. Borchgrevink,
snubbed by the British establishment, had stolen a march
on several planned competing expeditions from Germany and
Scandinavia.
Borchgrevink returned to Antarctica in 1899 with a party
that was the first to winter over on the continent. Regrettably,
bad weather and unscalable mountains limited their forays
inland. Borchgrevink's survival was proof that with adequate
supplies, the Antarctic winter was survivable, and that
with a better geographic position, the enormous unknown
of the continent could be investigated.
Borchgrevink galvanized the British geographical authorities,
who had come to consider polar exploration, their exclusive
province. Led by Sir Clements Markham of the Royal Geographic
Society, the British keenly felt this blow to their national
pride delivered by an explorer they regarded as an arrogant
upstart. The RGS pushed forward with its plans, and a tragic
competition to be the first to reach the South Pole was
set in motion between the British and the Scandinavians.
This work is an account of the first tentative human gropings
in Antarctica, and concentrates on the coalescing of official
and popular attitudes that later resulted in the polar races
of Robert Falcon Scott and Roald Amundsen, which dominate
the story of the "Heroic Era" of Antarctic exploration,
from 1901 to 1922.
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