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Sto caricando le informazioni... Emperors of the Ice: A True Story of Disaster and Survival in the Antarctic, 1910-13di Richard Farr
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Iscriviti per consentire a LibraryThing di scoprire se ti piacerà questo libro. Attualmente non vi sono conversazioni su questo libro. The year is 1910, and Robert Falcon Scott is setting out to explore Antarctica. On the expedition is Apsley Cherry-Garrard, a twenty-three-year-old Englishman with no reasons to be included. Having always dreamed of being an explorer, “Cherry” gets to tag along only because Captain Scott likes him. Emperors of the Ice, by Richard Farr, is Cherry’s story. The journey to South Africa is fairly uneventful. From there, the expedition heads to New Zealand to begin the trip to Antarctica. On the way out of New Zealand, the first bit of excitement happens: a storm at sea. In the midst of stopping their ship from sinking, Cherry meets “Birdie” Bowers, an unusually optimistic man. The storm turns out to be nothing, and the expedition arrives in Antarctica as planned. Upon arrival in Antarctica, camp is set up, and various scientific expeditions set out. In June 1911, Cherry, Birdie, and Bill Wilson (a rather mad scientist) set off into the Antarctic winter in search of penguins. The plan is to collect and preserve eggs for scientific study- “The plan was simple. Mad, but simple. Bill, Birdie, and I would go for a little walk. We would haul two enormous sledges behind us on this walk and...” (73). But disaster after disaster befalls the group. Can they make it through all the obstacles put in their way by nature and survive? Told in first person, Emperors of the Ice is a quite accurate account of the exploration of Antarctica and how it changed lives. The writing is very detailed and uses good imagery. Recommended for anyone liking historical adventures or penguins, Emperors of the Ice by Richard Farr is a fast paced story of adventure and survival. nessuna recensione | aggiungi una recensione
Premi e riconoscimentiElenchi di rilievo
Apsley "Cherry" Cherry-Garrard shares his adventures as the youngest member of Robert Scott's expedition to Antarctica in the early twentieth century, during which he and Edward Wilson try to learn the evolutionary history of emperor penguins. Includes historical notes. Non sono state trovate descrizioni di biblioteche |
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Google Books — Sto caricando le informazioni... GeneriNessun genere Sistema Decimale Melvil (DDC)919.804History and Geography Geography and Travel Geography of and travel in Australasia, Pacific Ocean islands, Atlantic Ocean islands, Arctic islands, Antarctica and on extraterrestrial worlds Polar regionsClassificazione LCVotoMedia:
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In 1909, Ernest Shackleton famously came within 100 miles of the Pole. In June 1910, Roald Amundsen led a Norwegian group to Antarctica. At about the same time, Robert Falcon Scott led a British expedition. This book tells the story of Scott’s expedition, which had numerous scientific goals (marine biology, geology, glaciation, the atmosphere, the magnetic field, parasitology, and bird evolution) in addition to reaching the Pole.
Amundsen reached the Pole and returned to become an internationally renowned hero. Scott probably reached the Pole, but died returning to his base camp, frozen in the Antarctic wastes. Most of his men survived, but none of the survivors had been with the group of five men that made the fearsome trek from the base camp across the Antarctic continent to the Pole.]
Apsley Cherry-Garrard (called “Cherry”) was a young Englishman of a noble family who joined Scott’s expedition. His only qualifications for the trip were that he was rich, well-connected, and very hardy. Cherry survived the trip and went on to write The Worst Journey in the World, a book that Richard Farr (the author) calls “the best volume of exploration literature ever written.” In fact, The Emperors of the Ice is really not much more than Farr’s retelling of Cherry-Garrard’s story. But what a story it is!
Except for the introduction, Farr’s book reads as if it were written by Cherry; it is “narrated” in Cherry’s voice. Farr explains, “’My’ Cherry writes what I believe he would have written had he been able to put certain obsessions aside . . . and consider all evidence and all sources from the viewpoint of our own time.” The result is very readable.
The “Emperors” of the title are penguins, emperor penguins to be precise, the largest and in many ways the most exotic of the penguins. They were of special interest to biologists because they were thought to be prime candidates for the “missing link” between dinosaurs and birds, but the link could not be proven without being able to examine live penguin eggs to see how the embryos developed. The problem was that the emperors all lay their eggs at the same time and incubated them during the Antarctic winter in a remote valley safe from predators. The incubation area is far enough south that the sun does not shine there for four months, the wind blows fiercely, and the temperature (not wind chill) can reach -70°F.
Cherry’s Worst Journey was one of the scientific side trips, this one to find live emperor penguin eggs. The little 135-mile jaunt took him and two other men five weeks in the dark of winter pulling heavy sledges through abrasive snow. Between +15° and -25°, snow actually melts under the runners of sleds, allowing them to slide easily. At colder temperatures, snow forms hard grains that do not melt under the runners, making it have a consistency like sand.
The temperature on their trip reached -77°F one night. The wind ripped their tent to tatters, and the men slept in their sleeping bags under the snow because it was warmer than the air. It was still cold enough that Cherry’s sleeping bag trapped about 30 pounds of frozen breath! Against all odds, Cherry and his two companions survived and returned with the precious eggs. The ultimate irony was that the eggs did not add much to the world’s knowledge of penguin embryology, nor did they supply the “missing link.”
The book contains many tidbits of Antarctic lore: One reason Amundsen survived was that he relied entirely on dogs rather than ponies to pull his sledges. Scott tried to use ponies, but they just ended up as meals for the explorers. Scott also tried to use motorized sledges, but they broke down in the cold weather. The roundtrip walk to the pole from the edge of the continent is more than 1800 miles. Moreover, the explorers had to climb the 10,000-foot Polar Plateau. It’s no wonder they didn’t survive.
Evaluation: This is a rip-roaring good story, especially for those who like to read about how people survive (or don’t) in extreme conditions.
Note: In addition to good writing, the book contains quite a few photographs, drawings, and helpful maps. You can also see more images and learn more about the expedition from the University of Cambridge's Scott Polar Research Institute website, here. ( )