Roland Huntford is the grand old man among polar historians. After his classic Scott and Amundsen in 1979 (later editions were retitled, The last place on Earth), he wrote a series of books on Norwegian and British polar heroes as well as a thorough study of the history of skiing (2006). Huntford challenged the British admiration of Robert Falcon Scott’s scientific programme and great courage*and insisted that Roald Amundsen’s expedition was far better prepared and carried out. Huntford’s scathing criticism of Scott’s fatal choices and lack of competence dared to assault this cherished British polar icon in a manner that would be unthinkable for Norwegian authors.(Published: 7 June 2012)Citation: Polar Research 2012, 31, 18741, http://dx.do...
D. Walton and P. Clarkson present a history of the last 50 years of international collaborations sti...
This finely produced but maddeningly inconsistent work seeks to explore a segment of Svalbard’...
This paper describes the significant direct and indirect contributions to science made by the Norweg...
Roland Huntford is the grand old man among polar historians. After his classic Scott and Amundsen in...
Roland Huntford is the grand old man among polar historians. After his classic Scott and Amundsen in...
This book is mainly the result of a visit made to Antarctica in general and the historic huts on Ros...
In 1901, Commander Robert Falcon Scott lead a small group of men to the Antarctica in what is now kn...
Of all the polar heroes of the 19th century, Sir John Franklin might be regarded as the most tragic ...
successfully integrated reconnaissance using traditional sledging techniques with aerial photography...
The Norwegian polar explorer Roald Amundsen publisheda book after each of his five expeditions: abou...
With his Hollywood good looks, Commander’s stripes, boyish humility, overweening faith in the righte...
Research for this biography has taken the author from the United States to various parts of the Unit...
the men (and a few women) and machines behind the drift stations on either side of the geographic an...
The centenary of one of the lesser known of the ‘Heroic Era ’ Antarctic expeditions, Ernest Shacklet...
In 1911 the world was watching, waiting, hoping, attention focused on a desolate spot at the very en...
D. Walton and P. Clarkson present a history of the last 50 years of international collaborations sti...
This finely produced but maddeningly inconsistent work seeks to explore a segment of Svalbard’...
This paper describes the significant direct and indirect contributions to science made by the Norweg...
Roland Huntford is the grand old man among polar historians. After his classic Scott and Amundsen in...
Roland Huntford is the grand old man among polar historians. After his classic Scott and Amundsen in...
This book is mainly the result of a visit made to Antarctica in general and the historic huts on Ros...
In 1901, Commander Robert Falcon Scott lead a small group of men to the Antarctica in what is now kn...
Of all the polar heroes of the 19th century, Sir John Franklin might be regarded as the most tragic ...
successfully integrated reconnaissance using traditional sledging techniques with aerial photography...
The Norwegian polar explorer Roald Amundsen publisheda book after each of his five expeditions: abou...
With his Hollywood good looks, Commander’s stripes, boyish humility, overweening faith in the righte...
Research for this biography has taken the author from the United States to various parts of the Unit...
the men (and a few women) and machines behind the drift stations on either side of the geographic an...
The centenary of one of the lesser known of the ‘Heroic Era ’ Antarctic expeditions, Ernest Shacklet...
In 1911 the world was watching, waiting, hoping, attention focused on a desolate spot at the very en...
D. Walton and P. Clarkson present a history of the last 50 years of international collaborations sti...
This finely produced but maddeningly inconsistent work seeks to explore a segment of Svalbard’...
This paper describes the significant direct and indirect contributions to science made by the Norweg...