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1 - Discovering the unknown continent

Published online by Cambridge University Press:  05 March 2013

David W. H. Walton
Affiliation:
British Antarctic Survey, Cambridge
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Summary

We had discovered a land of so extensive a coastline and attaining such an altitude as to justify the appellation of a Great New Southern Continent.

James Clark Ross, 1847

Finding the poles

There have always been those who have wanted to see over the horizon, to cross the lakes and seas, and climb the mountains. Explorers led the great migrations as humans spread across the globe, successively colonising all the continents except Antarctica, and slowly but steadily taming the wild places for their own uses. The lure of the unknown has persisted for millennia and continues to drive those today who search for new knowledge and new frontiers. Their stories have fascinated the public for centuries and no more so than those from the exploration of the polar regions.

As long ago as 1531 geographers had concluded that for the Earth to exist the two hemispheres of the globe must be balanced. If there was significant land in the north towards the pole there must be a similar mass in the south. It was but a small step then to imagine a large and populous southern continent, probably extending into temperate latitudes. Spain and Portugal had already found riches to plunder and native people to convert and subjugate in South America so perhaps, thought the geographers, Antarctica would yield a similar prize. The maps they produced in the late sixteenth century contained much cartographic speculation, which provided a stimulus for sailors from many European countries to set out across the world in search of fame and fortune. Finding Antarctica and beginning its scientific investigation would prove a lengthy business and one that would turn out to be truly international.

Type
Chapter
Information
Antarctica
Global Science from a Frozen Continent
, pp. 1 - 34
Publisher: Cambridge University Press
Print publication year: 2013

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