Roald Amundsen, a Norwegian explorer who in 1898 was part of the first expedition to enter in Antarctica, and in 1903 became the first man to sail through the Northwest Passage, had been planning an expedition to the North Pole in September 1910, but he lost interest when he heard that Americans Robert Peary and Frederick Cook had each achieved to that point in April 1909.
Amundsen secretly began planning to travel to the South Pole instead. In October, he sent a telegram notifying British explorer Robert Falcon Scott, who was a preparing a South Pole exploration, of his intentions. The telegram said: “Beg leave inform you proceeding Antarctic. Amundsen,”. Amundsen would later be critized because of his silence, critics at the ones he would respond: "I knew I should be able to inform Captain Scott...''
It was then when the race to the South Pole began. Each ''team'' arrived in Antarctica in January 1911; Scott established base camp at McMurdo Sound, while Amundsen set up his camp, called Framheim, at the Bay of Whales on the Ross Ice Shelf, located 60 miles closer to the pole.
The two parties prepared for the journey to the pole by making expeditions south and establishing supply depots along their intended paths. The Amundsen party, which relied on sled dogs and skies, reached farther south than the Scott party, whose Siberian ponies, sled dogs and technical equippement, were less efficiant for the conditions.
Amundsen set off for the pole with seven men in September (the start of the Antarctic spring). But just aphew days into their trip, the weather turned cold and many of the members of the party suffered frosbite, so they retreated back to Framheim. Hjalmer Johansen criticized Amundsen’s leadership and was expelled from the traveling party; the humiliated Johansen would later commit suicide upon his return to Norway.
Amundsen secretly began planning to travel to the South Pole instead. In October, he sent a telegram notifying British explorer Robert Falcon Scott, who was a preparing a South Pole exploration, of his intentions. The telegram said: “Beg leave inform you proceeding Antarctic. Amundsen,”. Amundsen would later be critized because of his silence, critics at the ones he would respond: "I knew I should be able to inform Captain Scott...''
It was then when the race to the South Pole began. Each ''team'' arrived in Antarctica in January 1911; Scott established base camp at McMurdo Sound, while Amundsen set up his camp, called Framheim, at the Bay of Whales on the Ross Ice Shelf, located 60 miles closer to the pole.
The two parties prepared for the journey to the pole by making expeditions south and establishing supply depots along their intended paths. The Amundsen party, which relied on sled dogs and skies, reached farther south than the Scott party, whose Siberian ponies, sled dogs and technical equippement, were less efficiant for the conditions.
Amundsen set off for the pole with seven men in September (the start of the Antarctic spring). But just aphew days into their trip, the weather turned cold and many of the members of the party suffered frosbite, so they retreated back to Framheim. Hjalmer Johansen criticized Amundsen’s leadership and was expelled from the traveling party; the humiliated Johansen would later commit suicide upon his return to Norway.
Amundsen began his second push for the pole on Oct. 20 of the same year, accompanied by four men (Olav Bjaaland, Helmer Hanssen, Sverre Hansel y Oscar Wisting) and more than 50 dogs. Scott and his 13 men set off from their camp on Nov. 1 with dogs, ponies and motor sledges.
The Scott party was slowed by many setbacks: the motor sledges did not work reliably in the cold and the ponies could not manage the journey. The explorers had to abandon the sledges and they eventually killed all the ponies for food.
Traveling much lighter, the Amundsen team had few difficulties. On the afternoon of Dec. 14, the five explorers—Amundsen, Helmer Hanssen, Olav Bjaaland, Sverre Hassel and Oscar Wisting—became the first men to ever reach the South Pole.
Amundsen later wrote: “After we had halted we collected and congratulated each other. (…) After this we proceeded to the greatest and most solemn act of the whole journey—the planting of our flag. (…) I had determined that the act of planting it—the historic event—should be equally divided among us all. It was not for one man to do this; it was for all who had staked their lives in the struggle, and held together through thick and thin.”
Bjaaland took pictures of his four fellow explorers as they posed near the flag. Before the group left the pole on Dec. 16, Amundsen left Scott supplies and a note asking him to tell Norwegian King Haakon VII of his accomplishment. The group arrived safely back at Framheim on Jan. 25, 99 days and 1,860 miles after their departure. Despite this, amundsens journey was not a wonderfull one either, his party had to sacrifice about 24 dogs in orther to get supplies.
Scott, meanwhile, did not reach the South Pole until Jan. 17, 33 days after Amundsen. He and the four other men chosen to make the final push— Edward Wilson, Henry Bowers, Lawrence Oates and Edgar Evans—were suffering from malnourishment, frostbite, hypothermia and likely scurvy. They were disheartened to find the Norwegian flag waiting for them.
Scott wrote in his diary, “The Pole. Yes, but under very different circumstances from those expected. We have had a horrible day—add to our disappointment a head wind 4 to 5, with a temperature -22 degrees, and companions labouring on with cold feet and hands. … Great God! This is an awful place and terrible enough for us to have laboured to it without the reward of priority.”
On the return trip, Evans fell in a crevasse and suffered a head injury, contributing to his death 15 days later. Captain Oates decided to end his life; as he walked out of his tent to certain death, he told his comrades, “I am just going outside and may be some time.” The remaining three men died only a few days later. All this is pretty well explained in one of the links above.
From that moment, about 40 missions to the Pole have been made. And between them I have to emphasize the ones made by Mikel Zabalza and Ignacio Oficialdegui, both Spanish from Navarra.
More information here, here, HERE or either here.
The publication in Spanish may be found here
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