Pole before Scott heard of his arrival.
"I am fully alive to the complication in the situation arising out of Amundsen's presence in the Antarctic," wrote the English explorer, "but as any attempt at a race might have been fatal to our chance of getting to the Pole at all, I decided to do exactly as I should have done had not Amundsen been here. If he gets to the Pole he will be bound to do it rapidly with dogs, and one foresees that success will justify him."
Although the Norwegian explorer left his winter quarters on 8th September for his dash to the Pole, he started too early; three of his party had their feet frostbitten, and the dogs suffered severely, so he turned back, and it was not till 20th October, just a week before Scott's start, that he began in real earnest his historic journey. He was well off for food, for whales were plentiful on the shores of the Bay, and seals, penguins, and gulls abounded. The expedition was well equipped, with eight explorers, four sledges, and thirteen dogs attached to each.
"Amundsen is a splendid leader, supreme in organisation, and the essential in Antarctic travel is to think out the difficulties before they arise." So said those who worked with him on his most successful journey.
Through dense fog and blinding blizzards the Norwegians now made their way south, their Norwegian skis and sledges proving a substantial help. The crevasses in the ice were very bad; one dog dropped in and had to be abandoned; another day the dogs got across, but the sledge fell in, and it was necessary to climb down the crevasse, unpack the sledge, and pull up piece by piece till it was possible to raise the empty sledge. So intense was the cold that the very brandy froze in the bottle and was served out in lumps.
"It did not taste much like brandy then," said the men, "but it burnt our throats as we sucked it."
The dogs travelled well. Each man was responsible for his own team; he fed them and made them fond of him. Thus all through November the Norwegians travelled south, till they reached the vast plateau described by Shackleton. One tremendous peak, fifteen thousand feet high, they named "Frithjof Nansen."
On 14th December they reached their goal; the weather was beautiful, the ground perfect for sledging.
"At 3 p.m. we made halt," says Amundsen. "According to our reckoning, we had reached our destination. All of us gathered round the colours—a beautiful silken flag; all hands took hold of it, and, planting it on the spot, we gave the vast plateau on which the Pole is situate the name of 'The King Haakon VII.' It was a vast plain, alike in all directions, mile after mile."
Here in brilliant sunshine the little party camped, taking observations till 17th December, when, fastening to the ground a little tent with the Norwegian flag and the Fram pennant, they gave it the name "Polheim" and started for home.
CAPTAIN ROALD AMUNDSEN TAKING SIGHTS AT THE SOUTH POLE
CAPTAIN ROALD AMUNDSEN TAKING SIGHTS AT THE SOUTH POLE.
From a photograph, by permission of Mr. John Murray and the
Illustrated London News.
So the North and South Poles yielded up their well-hoarded secrets after centuries of waiting, within two and a half years of one another.
They had claimed more lives than any exploration had done before, or is ever likely to do again.
And so ends the last of these great earth-stories—stories which have made the world what it is to-day—and we may well say with one of the most successful explorers of our times, "The future may give us thrilling stories of the conquest of the air, but the spirit of man has mastered the earth."
DATES OF CHIEF EVENTS
PAGE
DATE
4
The oldest known Ships
B.C. 6000-5000
7
Expedition to Punt
B.C. 1600
11
Phoenician Expeditions
B.C. 700
19
Neco's Fleet built
B.C. 613
23
Anaximander, the Greek, invents Maps
B.C. 580
25
Hecatæus writes the First Geography
B.C. 500
27
Herodotus describes Egypt
B.C. 446
30
Hanno sails down West Coast of Africa
B.C. 450
32
Xenophon crosses Asia Minor
B.C. 401
38
Alexander the Great finds India
B.C. 327
41
Nearchus navigates the Indian Ocean
B.C. 326
45
The Geography of Eratosthenes
B.C. 240-196
48
Pytheas discovers the British Isles and Thule
B.C. 333
55
Julius Cæsar explores France, Britain, Germany
B.C. 60-54
61
Strabo's Geography
A.D. 18
68
Agricola discovers the Highlands
A.D. 83
71
Pliny's Geography
A.D. 170
74
Ptolemy's Geography and Maps
A.D. 159
78
The First Guide for Travellers
Fourth century
83
St. Patrick explores Ireland
432-93
85
St. Columba reaches the Orkney Isles
563
85
St. Brandon crosses the Atlantic
Sixth century
90
Willibald travels from Britain to Jerusalem
721
92
The Christian Topography of Cosmas
Sixth century
94
Naddod the Viking discovers Iceland
861
95
Erik the Red discovers Greenland
985
95
Lief discovers Newfoundland and North American Coast
1000
97
Othere navigates the Baltic Sea
890
99
Mohammedan Travellers to China
831
103
Edrisi's Geography
1154
108
Benjamin of Tudela visits India and China
1160
110
Carpini visits the Great Khan
1246
112
William de Rubruquis also visits the Great Khan
1255
115
Maffio and Niccolo Polo reach China
1260-71
117
Marco Polo's Travels
1271-95
126
Ibn Batuta's Travels through Asia
1324-48
126
Sir John Mandeville's Travels published
1372
134
Hereford Mappa Mundi appeared
1280
137
Anglo-Saxon Map of the World
990
138
Prince Henry of Portugal encourages Exploration
1418
140
Zarco and Vaz reach Porto Santo
1419
140
Zarco discovers Madeira
1420
142
Nuno Tristam discovers Cape Blanco
1441
143
Gonsalves discovers Cape Verde Islands
1442
144
Cadamosto reaches the Senegal River and Cape Verde
1455
145
Diego Gomez reaches the Gambia River
1458
148
Death of Prince Henry
1460
149
Fra Mauro's Map
1457
150
Diego Cam discovers the Congo
1484
152
Bartholomew Diaz rounds the Cape of Good Hope
1486
153
Martin Behaim makes his Globe
1492
160
Christopher Columbus discovers West Indies
1492
166
Columbus finds Jamaica and other Islands
1493
167
Columbus finds Trinidad
1498
169
Death of Columbus
1504
170
Amerigo Vespucci finds Trinidad and Venezuela
1499
175
First Map of the New World by Juan de la Cosa
1500
177
Vasco da Gama reaches India by the Cape
1497
181
Pedro Cabral discovers Brazil
1500
188
Francisco Serrano reaches the Spice Islands
1511
192
Balboa sees the Pacific Ocean
1513
203
The First Circumnavigation of the World
1519-22
206
Cordova discovers Yucatan
1517
206
Juan Grijalva discovers Mexico
1518
209
Cortes conquers Mexico
1519
217
Pizarro conquers Peru
1531
221
Orellana discovers the Amazon
1541
225
Cabot sails to Newfoundland
1497
228
Jacques Cartier discovers the Gulf of St. Lawrence
1534
236
Sir Hugh Willoughby finds Nova Zembla
1553
238
Richard Chancellor reaches Moscow
via Archangel
1554
240
Anthony Jenkinson crosses Russia to Bokhara
1558
244
Pinto claims the discovery of Japan
1542
245
Martin Frobisher discovers his Bay
1576
249
Drake sails round the World
1577-80
260
Davis finds his Strait
1586
269
Barents discovers Spitzbergen
1596
275
Hudson sails into his Bay
1610
281
Baffin discovers his Bay
1616
285
Sir Walter Raleigh explores Guiana
1595
290
Champlain discovers Lake Ontario
1615
298
Torres sails through his Strait
1605
299
Le Maire rounds Cape Horn
1617
302
Tasman finds Tasmania
1642
306
Dampier discovers his Strait
1698
312
Behring finds his Strait
1741
322
Cook discovers New Zealand
1769
326
Cook anchors in Botany Bay, Australia
1770
333
Cook discovers the Sandwich Islands
1777
338
La Perouse makes discoveries in China Seas
1785-8
347
Bruce discovers the source of the Blue Nile
1770
353
Mungo Park reaches the Niger
1796
359
Vancouver explores his Island
1792
362
Mackenzie discovers his River and British Columbia
1789-93
366
Ross discovers Melville Bay
1818
368
Parry discovers Lancaster Sound
1819
372
Franklin reaches the Polar Sea by Land
1819-22
378
Parry's discoveries on North American Coast
1822
382
Franklin names the Mackenzie River
1825
386
Beechey doubles Icy Cape
1826
388
Parry attempts the North Pole by Spitzbergen
1827
392
Denham and Clapperton discover Lake Tchad
1822
396
Clapperton reaches the Niger
1826
397
Réné Caillé enters Timbuktu
1829
402
Richard and John Lander find the Mouth of the Niger
1830
404
Ross discovers Boothia Felix
1829
405
James Ross finds the North Magnetic Pole
1830
411
Bass discovers his Strait
1797
413
Flinders and Bass sail round Tasmania
1798
416
Flinders surveys South Coast of Australia
1801-4
421
Sturt traces the Darling and Murray Rivers
1828-31
424
Burke and Wills cross Australia
1861
429
Ross discovers Victoria Land in the Antarctic
1840
432
Franklin discovers the North-West Passage
1847
440
Livingstone crosses Africa from West to East
1849-56
452
Burton and Speke discover Lake Tanganyika
1857
454
Speke sees Victoria Nyanza
1858
457
Livingstone finds Lakes Shirwa and Nyassa
1858-64
461
Speke and Grant enter Uganda
1861
468
Baker meets Speke and Grant at Gondokoro
1861
470
Baker discovers Albert Nyanza
1864
477
Livingstone finds Lakes Meoro and Bangweolo
1868
482
Stanley finds Livingstone
1871
484
Livingstone dies at Ilala
1873
499
Stanley finds the Mouth of the Congo
1877
509
Nordenskiöld solves the North-East Passage
1879
519
Younghusband enters Lhasa
1904
524
Nansen reaches Farthest North
1895
534
Peary reaches the North Pole
1909
544
Amundsen reaches the South Pole
1911
INDEX
Abram, 4.
Abyssinia, 344-7.
Afghanistan, 36.
Africa, 20-2, 72, 103, 127, 339.
Africa, Central, 349-56, 391-402, 442-500.
Africa, South, 152, 173-6, 440.
Africa, West Coast, 22, 30, 139, 143-51, 349.
Agricola, 68.
Alaska, 317, 334, 338.
Albert Nyanza, 470.
Albuquerque, Alphonso d', 184-8.
Alexander the Great, 35-43.
Alexandria, 45, 74.
Alfred the Great, 96.
Almagro, Diego de, 220.
Almeida, Francisco, 184-6.
Almeida, Lorenzo, 185-6.
Alvarado, Pedro de, 206, 208.
Amazon,
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