I was on that same boat 3 years ago, in the Canadian Artic! Wierd to see it sunk. It seemed solid enough at the time.
They're pretty cool trips, in these smallish boats. They bring along historians, geologists, etc, to give lectures. Some of the folks on the trip I was on had been on the same boat to Antartica before, and said the Drake Passage was pretty hairy.
As to whether tourism in the polar regions is irresponsible, that's a good question.
― pauls00, Friday, 23 November 2007 21:30 (5 years ago) Permalink
No drunken brawling or we're kicking you off the continent! Oh very well...
― Elvis Telecom, Monday, 31 December 2007 21:22 (5 years ago) Permalink
One of my favorite things in Powell's is the Arctic/Antarctic shelves, because all the spines are blue and it's a really odd visual effect.
I know someone who went to Antarctica and wrote a book on it, but I don't know him well, in that I didn't get a free copy of his book.
― Casuistry, Monday, 31 December 2007 21:39 (5 years ago) Permalink
They do particle physics down there these days. Here's the ongoing diary of one of the grad students working there, published on the Economist website this week:
http://www.economist.com/daily/diary/displaystory.cfm?story_id=10711348
Meanwhile, my PhD office in a 60s tower block in south east England has no windows.
― caek, Wednesday, 20 February 2008 00:10 (5 years ago) Permalink
i wonder if i will ever visit antarctica -- s1ocki, Thursday, March 22, 2007 6:11 PM (10 months ago) Bookmark Link
― gbx, Wednesday, 20 February 2008 00:18 (5 years ago) Permalink
i want to go skiing and/or climbing on the peninsula
― gbx, Wednesday, 20 February 2008 00:19 (5 years ago) Permalink
an acquaintance just went, but i haven't seen him since his return
― mookieproof, Wednesday, 20 February 2008 00:24 (5 years ago) Permalink
From Unusual facilities for employees
in antarctica they had all kinds of crazy shit set up--bars, music rooms, a coffee house--but that was more about us being stuck there than the jobs.
we have pilates classes at my work now. you still get paid but it costs $50 so it doesn't exactly even out.
-- jergïns, Tuesday, 19 February 2008 23:17 (Yesterday) Bookmark Link
jergins you lived in antarctica???? did you "over-winter?"
i just read some website about living in antarctica. it was pretty funny! sounds like there was a lot of shenanigans down there. most of the stories sounded like college and/or being a ski bum
-- gbx, Wednesday, 20 February 2008 00:00 (1 hour ago) Bookmark Link
just one summer. yeah, lots of shenanigans, but also 54 hour work weeks. people drank a LOT. and crossdressed a lot. that was a work perk: anything anyone brought down there got left there, so we had a fine choice of wigs and halloween costumes.
-- jergïns, Wednesday, 20 February 2008 00:02 (59 minutes ago) Bookmark Link
― caek, Wednesday, 20 February 2008 01:03 (5 years ago) Permalink
SYDNEY, Australia - Scientists investigating the icy waters of Antarctica said Tuesday they have collected mysterious creatures including giant sea spiders and huge worms in the murky depths.
Australian experts taking part in an international program to take a census of marine life in the ocean at the far south of the world collected specimens from up to 6,500 feet beneath the surface, and said many may never have been seen before.
Some of the animals far under the sea grow to unusually large sizes, a phenomenon called gigantism that scientists still do not fully understand.
"Gigantism is very common in Antarctic waters," Martin Riddle, the Australian Antarctic Division scientist who led the expedition, said in a statement. "We have collected huge worms, giant crustaceans and sea spiders the size of dinner plates."
The specimens were being sent to universities and museums around the world for identification, tissue sampling and DNA studies.
"Not all of the creatures that we found could be identified and it is very likely that some new species will be recorded as a result of these voyages," said Graham Hosie, head of the census project.
The expedition is part of an ambitious international effort to map life forms in the Antarctic Ocean, also known as the Southern Ocean, and to study the impact of forces such as climate change on the undersea environment.
Three ships - Aurora Australis from Australia, France's L'Astrolabe and Japan's Umitaka Maru - returned recently from two months in the region as part of the Collaborative East Antarctic Marine Census. The work is part of a larger project to map the biodiversity of the world's oceans.
The French and Japanese ships sought specimens from the mid- and upper-level environment, while the Australian ship plumbed deeper waters with remote-controlled cameras.
"In some places every inch of the sea floor is covered in life," Riddle said. "In other places we can see deep scars and gouges where icebergs scour the sea floor as they pass by."
Among the bizarre-looking creatures the scientists spotted were tunicates, plankton-eating animals that resemble slender glass structures up to a yard tall "standing in fields like poppies," Riddle said.
Other animals were equally baffling.
"They had fins in various places, they had funny dangly bits around their mouths," Riddle told reporters. "They were all bottom dwellers so they were all evolved in different ways to live down on the sea bed in the dark. So many of them had very large eyes - very strange looking fish."
Scientists are planning a follow-up expedition in 10 to 15 years to examine the effects of climate changes on the region's environment.
― scott seward, Wednesday, 20 February 2008 05:43 (5 years ago) Permalink
JPGs of giant sea spiders?
― caek, Wednesday, 20 February 2008 14:54 (5 years ago) Permalink
OK, ugh
― caek, Wednesday, 20 February 2008 14:56 (5 years ago) Permalink
i just saw werner herzog's new movie about antarctica. it's called encounters at the end of the world. some cool stuff in there.
-- s1ocki, Wednesday, 12 September 2007 06:17 (6 months ago) Bookmark Link
Opens june 11.
― caek, Thursday, 13 March 2008 18:59 (5 years ago) Permalink
The galley at the South Pole, 1975
― caek, Tuesday, 22 April 2008 02:04 (5 years ago) Permalink
1979
― caek, Tuesday, 22 April 2008 02:05 (5 years ago) Permalink
first picture looks like something out of LOST
― jergïns, Tuesday, 22 April 2008 02:10 (5 years ago) Permalink
More amazing photos: http://www.southpolestation.com/trivia/trivia.html
― caek, Tuesday, 22 April 2008 02:14 (5 years ago) Permalink
sounds great fun:
http://www.thehousenextdooronline.com/2008/06/great-ecstasy-of-icecarver-werner.html
― caek, Thursday, 12 June 2008 22:33 (4 years ago) Permalink
this is one of my favorite threads ever.
― Maria, Thursday, 12 June 2008 22:38 (4 years ago) Permalink
― El Tomboto, Thursday, 12 June 2008 22:43 (4 years ago) Permalink
http://www.apple.com/trailers/thinkfilm/encountersattheendoftheworld/trailer/
― caek, Tuesday, 1 July 2008 11:09 (4 years ago) Permalink
anyone interested?
http://minneapolis.craigslist.org/fbh/928514274.html
― clotpoll, Saturday, 22 November 2008 01:17 (4 years ago) Permalink
I have my suspicious on that. All the US Antarctic hiring is done through Raytheon:http://rpsc.raytheon.com/Employment/
― Chris Barrus (Elvis Telecom), Saturday, 22 November 2008 01:38 (4 years ago) Permalink
suspicions
I think it's legit. The contact e-mail is from the usap.gov site.
― clotpoll, Saturday, 22 November 2008 01:41 (4 years ago) Permalink
it doesn't make sense because they don't need to advertise. they get hundreds, if not thousands, of applications. and i'm talking just for dishwashing.
― that special someone (jergins), Saturday, 22 November 2008 01:47 (4 years ago) Permalink
Apparently hiring is done through the NANA company that posting mentions as well as Raytheon...but the USAP and NANA sites say applications go to a general NANA HR email, not the specific name on that ad. So I'm also suspicious.
― Maria, Saturday, 22 November 2008 02:22 (4 years ago) Permalink
RIP Jerri Nielsen
BOSTON (AP) -- Dr. Jerri Nielsen FitzGerald, who diagnosed and treated her own breast cancer before a dramatic rescue from the South Pole, has died. She was 57. Her husband, Thomas FitzGerald, said she died Tuesday at their home in Southwick, Mass. Her cancer had been in remission until it returned in August 2005, he said Wednesday.
― Elvis Telecom, Wednesday, 24 June 2009 23:36 (3 years ago) Permalink
dude on the left is frightening me
― congratulations (n/a), Monday, 14 February 2011 21:47 (2 years ago) Permalink
Shackleton is an all-time bad ass.
― gtfopocalypse (dan m), Monday, 14 February 2011 22:10 (2 years ago) Permalink
Got that right.
― Ned Raggett, Monday, 14 February 2011 22:32 (2 years ago) Permalink
apparently bad-ass enough to allow a zombie with no pupils on his expedition team
― congratulations (n/a), Monday, 14 February 2011 22:33 (2 years ago) Permalink
and the dog on the far left is a shapeshifter!
― uncle twikkelingssteurnissen (unregistered), Monday, 14 February 2011 23:05 (2 years ago) Permalink
has anyone seen this?
http://www.bfi.org.uk/lff/node/461
― caek, Monday, 14 February 2011 23:07 (2 years ago) Permalink
apparently it's been screening on discovery in the UK
― caek, Monday, 14 February 2011 23:08 (2 years ago) Permalink
Robert Scott's abandoned hut is just astonishingly beautiful and terrifying (you can see some high-res photos of it here and here: best viewed in full size). some of the furnishings came from the Shackleton Expedition, which reused the hut years after Scott met his doom.
that video looks interesting, caek. I hope it shows up on Discovery in the US at some point.
― uncle twikkelingssteurnissen (unregistered), Monday, 14 February 2011 23:21 (2 years ago) Permalink
i read the worst journey in the world last year and posted this:
Will finish The Worst Journey In The World this weekend. Incredible book. Surprisingly funny. Not Jeeves and Wooster, but occasionally laugh out loud good. And obviously what happened is incredible and it can't help but be thrilling. It's a bit "one crevasse after another" (lol sounds like my friday night) for the first 300 pages or so, but from the winter journey to the penguin rookery onwards (obv. including the polar journey) it's just wonderful. And I really enjoyed the unusual structure of the last couple of hundred pages, which is assembled from diaries of multiple people in multiple parties and ends up jumping backwards and forwards revealing what happened in a rather crafty way (although obviously you know the basic story).
― caek, Monday, 14 February 2011 23:24 (2 years ago) Permalink
tl;dr version: read if u like antarctica
― caek, Monday, 14 February 2011 23:25 (2 years ago) Permalink
― caek, Tuesday, 15 February 2011 00:43 (2 years ago) Permalink
south pole bar, winter 1977
― caek, Tuesday, 15 February 2011 00:44 (2 years ago) Permalink
first sunrise after winter, 21 september 1977 just before flights start arriving againand this is what they sang http://www.southpolestation.com/spring/c130.mp3
― caek, Tuesday, 15 February 2011 00:53 (2 years ago) Permalink
― caek, Saturday, 5 March 2011 01:05 (2 years ago) Permalink
― caek, Saturday, 5 March 2011 01:06 (2 years ago) Permalink
via http://www.theatlantic.com/infocus/2011/03/recent-scenes-from-antarctica/100019/
this appeals to me on so many levels, make me sad that I've not seen places like this for myself.
― not_goodwin, Saturday, 5 March 2011 01:27 (2 years ago) Permalink
they are adapting big dead place!
http://www.deadline.com/2011/09/james-gandolfini-to-produce-possibly-star-in-hbo-antarctica-comedic-drama/
― caek, Friday, 7 October 2011 15:30 (1 year ago) Permalink
Cool!
― TracerHandVEVO (Tracer Hand), Friday, 7 October 2011 15:35 (1 year ago) Permalink
(the zombie guy is frank wild)
― mark s, Friday, 7 October 2011 15:47 (1 year ago) Permalink
Great stuff (and a link to the original piece if you'd like to go all in).
― Ned Raggett, Wednesday, 16 November 2011 23:19 (1 year ago) Permalink
nature had a seriously good week this week, with these mountains and ionian water
― caek, Wednesday, 16 November 2011 23:28 (1 year ago) Permalink
Yeesh. Heavy stuff. Rip.
― caek, Thursday, 6 December 2012 10:32 (5 months ago) Permalink