Inside Robert Scott’s Abandoned Hut On Antarctica
Thursday, July 21, 2011
Born on June 6th 1868 in England,
Robert Falcon Scott, a British Royal Naval Officer and an Antarctic
explorer was famous for his two expeditions
to the South Pole. He was the third child of his parents in Devon. His
family was traditionally in the armed services, and he carried the
legacy further.
He
had his education at Stubbington House School, Hampshire, and began
his naval career in 1881 as naval cadet, after the naval training ship
HMS Britannia at Dartmouth.
He had an impressive naval career later, with progressive flow from a cadet to a Sub-Lieutenant in 1888 at
Greenwich
from Royal Naval College, and promoted to the post of Lieutenant in
1889. He went through the 2-year torpedo training course in 1891 which
marked as a significant step in his career.
Originally called as the British National Antarctic Expedition, the Discovery Expedition
raised Scott to fame. It was a joint collaboration of the RGS and the
Royal Society, initiated by Markham (now Sir Clements and RGS
President). But Scott led the team and was promoted to the naval rank of Commander before the expedition took off for Antarctic on 31 July 1901.
The
first 2 years were challenging and the major objective was the long
march down south along with the quest for the Pole. Scott’s team had a
bad experience marching to a latitude of 82°17′S, to the Pole covering
460 nautical miles (850 km, 530 miles).
The second year saw a significant improvement
in the accomplishments, leading to the discovery of the Polar Plateau.
Scott became a popular hero after this, in 1904. He was honored with
the title of ‘Legion of Honor’, and promoted to the Royal Navy rank of
Captain. In 1906, he resumed his naval career. He got married to
Kathleen Bruce in 1907, and they had only child Peter Markham Scott.
Terra Nova Expedition’s
main objective was to reach the South Pole first. The RGS or the Royal
Society was not involved this time. Scott pioneered the routes and
laid down some complex strategies which included the use of dogs,
horses, motor sledges and even man-hauling.
Poor analysis of the resources,
time mismanagement, frostbite, snow-blindness, hunger and exhaustion,
somehow led to the demise of the team members gradually. Scott died on
29 March 1912, and the bodies of all were discovered in the tent later.
Via Fofonazos.
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