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Monday, December 3, 2012

Explorers to retrace Shackleton's Antarctic voyage

British-Australian team ready to re-create epic 800-mile journey in glorified rowboat


Image: Shackleton's hut

Reuters
The hut that was used by Ernest Shackleton's British Antarctic (Nimrod) Expedition of 1907-09 has been restored at Cape Royds.
By
updated 12/2/2012 11:46:08 PM ET
Explorers are readying themselves for the first-ever re-creation of the epic voyage made by Britain's Ernest Shackleton on his ill-fated attempt to reach the South Pole in 1914, on an exact copy of Shackleton's lifeboat.
Shackleton's boat, the Endurance, became trapped in the Antarctic ice and was eventually crushed and sank. His attempt to raise the alarm is considered by many to be one of the greatest journeys ever made.
Shackleton took a small party from his crew and rowed 800 miles (1,287 kilometers) on the lifeboat James Caird from Elephant Island to South Georgia, where they knew they could get help from a whaling station. Their journey took from 1914 to 1916.

The modern-day British and Australian team, led by Australian explorer and environmentalist Tim Jarvis, will row the same route and then cross the mountainous, glacial interior of South Georgia to reach the north coast. They will use no equipment that was not available in Shackleton's time.

The Shackleton Epic team will depart from South America in early January, rowing an identical copy of Shackleton's 22.5-foot (6.85-meter) lifeboat before climbing the mountains.

Dangerous voyage 

The journey will not be without danger. The replica boat, named the Alexandra Shackleton after the British explorer's granddaughter, has no keel and capsizes very easily.

 
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TODAY’s Ann Curry reports on why British explorer Ernest Shackleton’s journey in the early 1900s has become part of today's explorations.

"You know, we ran the numbers and said what can we do with an exact replica of Shackleton's boat, without cheating, to try and make this ... less susceptible to capsize than what he had," Jarvis said.

Team members have practiced capsizing the vessel and trying to right it again — and have attempted to use their supplies, equipment and rocks as ballast, instead of just rocks as Shackleton did.

"We ran all the numbers, we fiddled around with rocks and our camera batteries because we are filming this ... and you know what? We came up with exactly the same configuration of how the ballast was loaded as what Shackleton did with rule of thumb," Jarvis said.

"It's amazing to think that (after) a hundred years, with all of our modern thinking, we've ended up with exactly what Shackleton had. But yeah, it's still a very tippy, very unsafe boat," he said.

Toasted with whisky in tin mugs 

Jarvis was toasted at a presentation in Sydney at the weekend with an identical whisky to that carried on board the original Endurance, served in tin mugs for added authenticity.
Jarvis, an environmental scientist and an experienced explorer, said he was inspired by Shackleton's leadership style and his ability to turn disaster into success.
He also said Shackleton's story was an ideal platform to promote his environmental message.
"Well, Shackleton was trying to save his men from the Antarctic, and we're now trying to save Antarctica from man," Jarvis said.
More about Antarctic odysseys:

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