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  • Format: ePub

Who was first to the South Pole? Does the question seem banal? Far from it. Of his own accomplishment, Roald Amundsen stated unequivocally: "we were not standing on the absolute spot". Captain Robert Scott thought he had reached the Pole, but was misled by a Norwegian marker intended for another purpose. If it wasn't Amundsen or Scott, just who was first? This book introduces the candidates, examines their credentials, and reveals who can really claim primacy.
It is an absorbing journey, full of twists and turns. It runs from the creation of Antarctica 23 million years ago, takes in
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Produktbeschreibung
Who was first to the South Pole? Does the question seem banal? Far from it. Of his own accomplishment, Roald Amundsen stated unequivocally: "we were not standing on the absolute spot". Captain Robert Scott thought he had reached the Pole, but was misled by a Norwegian marker intended for another purpose. If it wasn't Amundsen or Scott, just who was first? This book introduces the candidates, examines their credentials, and reveals who can really claim primacy.

It is an absorbing journey, full of twists and turns. It runs from the creation of Antarctica 23 million years ago, takes in humanity's first imaginings of and encounters with the continent, and passes onwards through the first, tentative explorations to meet the originals who reached, then penetrated, its heart.

Unpicking Amundsen's and Scott's own words unravels their complex interactions with each other and their puzzling actions near the Pole. The fascination of the post-Scott era resides in the largely unknown and often absurd efforts to explore Antarctica and make territorial claims there. Across the years, over-ripe individual and national egos sought it as a stage. The culminating struggle to establish a permanent South Pole base in the 1950s is a classic of collective human endeavour overcoming enormous odds. Finally, there is the drama of the ultimate goal achieved.

And throughout, indifferent to humanity, is the austere beauty and ever life-threatening implacability of the Antarctic and the high plateau that guards its Pole.


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Autorenporträt
Mick Harney is a writer, photographer, and walker.

His books on fell and hill walking spring from over 35 years exploring the fells of the English Lake District and the mountains of Scotland. He previously completed two full rounds of the 214 hills in Cumbria famously catalogued by Alfred Wainwright. He has summited over 100 of the Scottish mountains above 3000 feet known as Munros.

Mick's passion for the wilder places, and fascination about our interactions with them, has also led him to investigate, and exclusively reveal, the true story of that most profound of human explorations, the quest for the South Pole.

His poetry has been published in the magazines Dragon, Knee-Deep, and TaC, and won awards in the Lancaster Lit Fest and Vers Poets competitions. He was short-listed for the 2010 Bridport prize. His selected poems are published as Stitches in Time.