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Robert Falcon Scott was a British Royal Navy officer and explorer who led the ill-fated Terra Nova Expedition, 191013. One hundred years ago, on Jan. 17, 1912, the team reached the South Pole, only to nd that they had been beaten there by another group. On their return journey, the team perished from exhaustion, starvation and extreme cold.

Journey to the South Pole


SETTING SAIL
1910

IN MINUTES
SOUTH POLE

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News and events visually

THE RETURN
and suffering from injuries: Wilson was limping with a pulled leg; Scott fell and bruised his shoulder; Evans hand lost two ngernails. Feb 7 Reached the head of the Beardmore Glacier. Feb 8 Started their descent. Feb 11 Became disoriented after a wrong turn; were traveling around in a maze of ridges, growing weaker as their food rations dwindles, Feb 17 Evans dies. Mar 3 Arrived at the Southern Barrier depot. Temperature was down to -40 C. Oates was immense pain; his toes were black and gangrene was setting in. Mar 16/17 Conditions deteriorate; Temperature fell to -41 C, raging blizzard. Wilson was too weak to help make camp. Oates dies. Mar 20 They were only 17 km from One Ton Depot but the blizzard stopped them from continuing on. Have decided it shall be naturalwe shall march for the depot and die in our tracks", wrote Scott. Mar 29 They did not march again and on March 29 Scott made his last entry: It seems a pity, but I do not think that I can write more. R. Scott. For God's sake look after our people. Nov 12 A search party nds the bodies of Bowers, Wilson and Scott just 18 km from One Ton Depot. Also found were rolls of lm, a meteorological log and 16 kg of fossils.

F. Scott's ship, the Terra Nova, sets sail from Cardiff, England, with a crew of 65 men Terra Nova Nov 29 Terra Nova leaves New Zealand, where it picked up additional cargo including 34 dogs, 19 Siberian ponies and three motorized sledges. It is hit by a heavy storm and loses some of its cargo. Dec 10 The ship encounters packed ice barricading the way to Ross Sea and is halted for 20 days.

June 15 Robert

Jan. 19 The team heads home. Jan 23 The men were becoming very tired,

Last Depot

3 Degree Depot

1911

and two dog teams set out to lay depots for use on the polar journey which would begin the following spring Feb 17 The last depot (One Ton Depot) is laid 50 km short of its intended destination due to poor health of the ponies. Oct 24 The rst team sets out with two motor sledges but the sledges break down, so the men haul supplies. Nov 1 Scott and another team sets out with ponies and dogs.

Jan 4 Arrive at Ross Island. Jan 27 12 men, eight ponies

Beardmore Glacier MT Hope Blizzard

Evans Died

BARRIER

THE FINAL TEAM


Left to right: Dr. Edward Wilson, Capt. Robert Scott & Capt. Lawrence Oates (Titus) (Standing) - Lieut. Henry Bowers and Petty Officer Edgar Evans (Sitting).

Jan 3 Scott chooses four men to continue with him to the Pole and instructs the others to return. Jan 6 Cross the line of latitude where a previous explorer, Sir Ernest Henry Shackleton, turned back and were farther south, as they believed, than any man had been before. Jan 17 Scott and his team arrive at the pole, 33 days after Roald Amundsen's Norwegian expedition. Oates, Evans and Bowers all suffered from severe frostbite. Scott wrote, Great God! This is an awful place and terrible enough for us to have laboured to it without the reward of priority.

1912

Upper Barrier Depot Oates Died Tent One Ton Depot

A LETTER HOME
Knowing he was days from death on his trek, Scott wrote to his wife "We are in a very tight corner and I have doubts of pulling through." The explorer assured his wife that he faced his end without regret. "How much better it has been than lounging in comfort at home."

BAR R

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BLUFF
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Motor Corner Camp


ROSS ISLAND

ROSS SEA

Image source: Wikipedia

SUSAN BATSFORD, GRAPHICS EDITOR, TWITTER @SBATS1; INFOGRAPHIC BY LINDSAY OUELLETTE/QMI AGENCY

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