Journeying back from the South Pole in the year 1912, Captain Robert Falcon Scott met his untimely end. Famished, he and his colleagues succumbed to the cold.In the wake of his agonizing loss in the race to the South Pole, and his enhanced standing as a hero of the country, Captain Scott showed unwaivering strength as he confronted his death.
In our modern times we now fully understand the extreme conditions that exist in the Antarctica wilderness.During the winter the temperature can become as low as -90? celsius with the wind becoming as fiece as 67 hm an hour.Scott most likely faced these conditions but he was not educated in the extent of the dangers.antarctica cruises
As a scientist in the Polar Regions, Scott expressed his overwhelming feeling of isolation to his wife in letters he wrote to her.Even today, with all our current communication technology, researchers working in this area can still relate to a deep sense of feeling all alone.Captain Scott’s wife was left a widow, and his young son without a father, at the time of Scott’s death.
It was several months after his death that more letters were found on his body.Scott’s body was found 11 miles from his camp.It wasn’t until Scott’s wife was in New Zealand waiting for his return that she was notified of his death.
The letters that Scott left behind gave historians a great deal of information about his expedition. Towards the beginning of his journey, he wrote about being in excellent physical health, and spoke of how he found enjoyment in having a good meal.There was little talk of the low temperatures in his letters, saying only that the hot food he enjoyed negated the frigid temperatures.trips to antarctica
The mood of the letters changed, though, as the journey progressed and the food supply started to dwindle.He talks about the cold weather worsening, and temperatures not slacking off.He spoke about how he and his fellow explorers survived with only one hot meal and two days of cold food, in order to travel a distance of 11 miles.
Scott was an icon of the great age of exploration, but his journey was twice cursed.First, the race to the South Pole was lost to a Norwegian named Roald Amundsmen. Scott made his appearance on January 18, 1912, while Amundsen had already been there on December 21, 1911.
Scott had already be hailed a hero for his expedition to the Antarctic wilderness in 1902 through 1904.Lieutenant Henry Bowers and Dr Edward Wilson were two on the team who survived this journey.Unfortunately, two other men, Petty Officer Edgar Evans and Captain Lawrence Oats perished before they could make it.
Food supplies for the journey were reserved when they were a mere 20 miles from a shelter.The small group was down to the last of their food and fuel.Already fearing the worst, Scott’s letter to his wife details the bitter cold of seventy degrees below zero with nothing but a tent for shelter and stating that she may remarry if he should die.
Even in the last letters to his wife, he never expresses any regret in his expedition. Even in his most desperate hour, he expressed that his current position was preferred to relaxing around the house.Many British youngsters have learned a lot and have been inspired by the story of Scott’s journey.
Roald Amundsmen beat Scott’s team to the South Pole by a few weeks.Captain Scott passed on 29 March 1912. His journal of the final doomed expedition was published in 1913 as “Scott’s Last Expedition”.
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