The History of Polar Exploration
Publication Date: 20/08/2002
To the Ends of the Earth provides an insight into the early history of the Polar regions, and tells the stories of Man's first exploration of the Arctic and Antarctic, and subsequent expeditions. The history of individual Polar expeditions has been told many times, but usually only as personal accounts of individual adventures. This misses the overall context of polar exploration - why the British depended on ponies - plant-eating animals - on the only continent where plants don't grow, why Franklin's men perished when the local Eskimos were eking out an existence around them (and finally reporting Franklin's demise), and why the Scandinavians were always better than anybody else. The first map of Antarctica was produced in 1556 - the Vikings visited the Arctic 1,000 years before. In 2001, the US Base at the South Pole is manned 365 days a year. To the Ends of the Earth tells the whole story of how the two last wildernesses, at either end of the world, were discovered, conquered and tamed. Introduction 1. Before the Heroes Came 2. Passages to Cathay 3. Explorers in the North 4. Whalers in the South 5. Striving for the Poles 6. After the Poles 7. The Poles Today
- ISBN:
- 9780007142248
- 9780007142248
- Category:
- Geographical discovery & exploration
- Publication Date:
- 20-08-2002
- Publisher:
- HarperCollins Publishers
- Country of origin:
- United Kingdom
- Pages:
- 224
- Dimensions (mm):
- 280x220mm
- Weight:
- 0.93kg
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