The History of Antarctica, Skriuwer Com, Auke de Haan (9783565084210) — Readings Books

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The History of Antarctica
Paperback

The History of Antarctica

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This title is printed to order. This book may have been self-published. If so, we cannot guarantee the quality of the content. In the main most books will have gone through the editing process however some may not. We therefore suggest that you be aware of this before ordering this book. If in doubt check either the author or publisher’s details as we are unable to accept any returns unless they are faulty. Please contact us if you have any questions.

Antarctica didn't beckon with maps-it lurked as a smudge on southern charts, Bellingshausen's 1820 sails brushing ice cliffs that hid a landmass bigger than Europe, where sealskin-clad hunters from Maori canoes whispered of ghost shores. Cook's circumnavigations teased the edges without a landing, but the 19th century's iron hulls hooked whales and egos alike-Charcot's Francais crunching through pack ice, while Scott's Terra Nova unloaded ponies that panicked on the floes. It was a frontier forged from fog and failure, where explorers bartered biscuits for Eskimo lore and dreamed of poles that proved as slippery as the bergs.

Heroics heated the haze: Amundsen's 1911 ski trek nailing the geographic south with Norwegian thrift, Scott's Union Jack frozen in a blizzard tent 11 miles shy, their diaries thawing into legends of stiff upper lips cracking under crevasse weight. Shackleton's '14 odyssey turned the Endurance into an icebound splinter, his Yelcho yacht plucking 28 souls from Elephant Island's rocks after a 800-mile boss's-eye row. Whalers followed the blood trail-factory ships like the Sir James Clark Ross gutting blues for corset stays, their try-pots boiling the Southern Ocean red till the '60s quotas choked the chase.

Postwar, the treaty's '59 ink turned the waste into a wildlife ward, bases like McMurdo burrowing under ozone holes while ice cores drill back 800,000 years to whisper of CO2 spikes. Penguins parade oblivious, but krill swarms shrink and shelves calve like thunder, turning the white desert into a warning. Antarctica's no blank slate-it's a saga of sled dogs and sovereignty, proving a frozen thumb can thumb the world's nose with its unyielding chill.

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Format
Paperback
Publisher
de Fryske Wrald
Date
12 November 2025
Pages
226
ISBN
9783565084210

This title is printed to order. This book may have been self-published. If so, we cannot guarantee the quality of the content. In the main most books will have gone through the editing process however some may not. We therefore suggest that you be aware of this before ordering this book. If in doubt check either the author or publisher’s details as we are unable to accept any returns unless they are faulty. Please contact us if you have any questions.

Antarctica didn't beckon with maps-it lurked as a smudge on southern charts, Bellingshausen's 1820 sails brushing ice cliffs that hid a landmass bigger than Europe, where sealskin-clad hunters from Maori canoes whispered of ghost shores. Cook's circumnavigations teased the edges without a landing, but the 19th century's iron hulls hooked whales and egos alike-Charcot's Francais crunching through pack ice, while Scott's Terra Nova unloaded ponies that panicked on the floes. It was a frontier forged from fog and failure, where explorers bartered biscuits for Eskimo lore and dreamed of poles that proved as slippery as the bergs.

Heroics heated the haze: Amundsen's 1911 ski trek nailing the geographic south with Norwegian thrift, Scott's Union Jack frozen in a blizzard tent 11 miles shy, their diaries thawing into legends of stiff upper lips cracking under crevasse weight. Shackleton's '14 odyssey turned the Endurance into an icebound splinter, his Yelcho yacht plucking 28 souls from Elephant Island's rocks after a 800-mile boss's-eye row. Whalers followed the blood trail-factory ships like the Sir James Clark Ross gutting blues for corset stays, their try-pots boiling the Southern Ocean red till the '60s quotas choked the chase.

Postwar, the treaty's '59 ink turned the waste into a wildlife ward, bases like McMurdo burrowing under ozone holes while ice cores drill back 800,000 years to whisper of CO2 spikes. Penguins parade oblivious, but krill swarms shrink and shelves calve like thunder, turning the white desert into a warning. Antarctica's no blank slate-it's a saga of sled dogs and sovereignty, proving a frozen thumb can thumb the world's nose with its unyielding chill.

Read More
Format
Paperback
Publisher
de Fryske Wrald
Date
12 November 2025
Pages
226
ISBN
9783565084210