The Voyage of the 'Why Not?' in the Antarctic
The Journal of the Second French South Polar Expedition, 1908–1910
Jean Charcot author Philip Walsh translator
Format:Paperback
Publisher:Cambridge University Press
Published:1st Jan '15
Currently unavailable, and unfortunately no date known when it will be back
This well-illustrated 1911 publication, translated from the French, vividly describes the hardships involved in Antarctic exploration and scientific research.
This well-illustrated 1911 publication, translated from the French, vividly describes the hardships and satisfactions of Antarctic exploration and scientific research in the early twentieth century. The journal entries of expedition leader Jean-Baptiste Charcot (1867–1936) record daily life aboard ship and out on the ice.This 1911 publication, translated from the French, vividly describes the varied hardships and satisfactions of Antarctic exploration and scientific research in the early twentieth century. Son of the famed neurologist, Jean-Baptiste Charcot (1867–1936) commanded the Pourquoi-Pas? on its hazardous journey into the ice-bound regions south of Cape Horn. Illustrated with numerous photographs, his journal entries provide a rich account of daily life aboard the ship and out on the ice, including encounters with seals and penguins, and Christmases gathered around a cardboard tree. Building on the advances made by previous expeditions, including his own on the Français (1903–5), Charcot and his men, ranging in their expertise from astronomy to zoology, set out to further push back the boundaries of the unknown 'for the honour of French science'. The precise mapping of more than a thousand miles of Antarctic coastline ranked as one of the expedition's foremost achievements.
ISBN: 9781108076753
Dimensions: 244mm x 170mm x 21mm
Weight: 640g
402 pages