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  • The Aurora anchor, at Cape Evans. During Shackleton’s Endurance Expedition the Ross Sea Party was tasked with laying depots for Shackleton’s expected trans-antarctic trek. The depot's were laid at great cost to the men, but Shackleton's trek never happened because Shackleton's ship the Endurance was caught and crushed in the sea ice. The cable broke on this anchor during a storm, blowing the Aurora out to sea and stranding the Ross Sea Party at Cape Evan for almost 2 years. Three men were lost during that time, and a cross was erected for these lost men.
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  • An amazing and painful snowmobile trip out to Cape Evans, with 20-40 knot winds blowing down the slopes of Erebus turning our route into occasional near white out conditions. The temperature with wind chill was in the minus 30's F. Add to that the wind chill of driving at 40 kph. Ok. Need I say more? It was a very uncomfortable ride, but we suffered through the 1+ hr ride to Cape Evans.
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  • Elaine Hood, my escort to Cape Evans on the third visit.
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  • Scott's Cape Evans Hut, Biologist's Bench
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  • Scott's Cape Evans Hut
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  • Terra Nova Hut during my third visit out to Cape Evans. A cake walk compared to the first vist, with a nice calm day and temps in the 20's.
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  • Scott's Cape Evans Hut
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  • Cape Evans hut and Windvane hill on December 7, 2015.
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  • Mount Erebus from Windvane Hill, Cape Evans
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  • Scott's Cape Evans Hut
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  • Scott's Cape Evans Hut
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  • Pictured is George Murray Levick’s jotted notes in a photo exposure guide booklet, recently found buried in the ice at Cape Evans. It’s shown to me here by Lizzie Meek, program artifacts manager at the Antarctic Heritage Trust. Touching artifacts in the huts is strictly off limits, and the only person who could be holding this notebook is Lizzie, as she was returning it to the hut as an artifact of Scott’s 1911-1914 Terra Nova expedition. Levick was a photographer and surgeon with the Eastern Party, which became the Northern Party when they discovered Amundsen at the Bay of Whales, embarking on his quest to be the first to the South Pole. Because of Amundsen’s presence Levick’s team looked for other quarters to carry out their program. When the relief ship failed to pick them up they endured one of the most difficult over winters in Antarctic history in an ice cave on Inexpressible Island, surviving on Weddell Seals, burning blubber for light and warmth.
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  • Terra Nova Hut on Nov 3rd, 2015 as we arrive at Cape Evans and gather our gear to cross the area where the sea ice meets the fast ice attached to the shore. Because of tidal action this area can form hidden crevasses. I was feeling an urgent need to get out of the wind blasting down Erebus, which was driving the wind chill temperature extremely low.
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  • Inaccessible Island on route to Cape Evans
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  • Mike Lucibella and Ralph Maestas stopping for a safety check in route to Scott's Terra Nova Hut at Cape Evans. We stopped frequently to check on each other, adding hand warmers to our gloves to keep fingers from freezing, and covering any exposed skin on our faces. I shot a few photographs on the way over, but because of the low temperatures my camera batteries died within 5 minutes of putting them in the camera.
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  • Cape Evans hut.
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  • Evans and Wilson's beds
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  • Scott's Cape Evans Hut #11
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  • Scott's Cape Evans Hut #2, Cherry's and Bower's bunks on left
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  • Mount Erebus on an extremely cold and windy day (-30's wind chill) on way to Cape Evans
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  • Scott's Cape Evans Hut with Barne Glacier Beyond
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  • Mount Erebus from Cape Evans Windvane Hill
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  • Scott's Cape Evans Hut
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  • Scott's Cape Evans Hut #8
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  • Scott's Cape Evans Hut #13
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  • Cape Evans, along the shore on the right side you may just make out Scott's Terra Nova expedition hut.
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  • Scott's Cape Evans Hut #6, Biologist's Bench
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  • Scott's Cape Evans Hut #7
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  • Scott's Cape Evans Hut #9, Ponting's Darkroom
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  • Scott's Cape Evans Hut #10
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  • Scott's Cape Evans Hut #12
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  • Scott's Cape Evans Hut #1
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  • Galley and mess deck table near the hut entrance.
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  • Physics bench detail
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  • Wardroom table and Tenements Bunks, where Bowers, Cherry-Garrard, Oats, Meares and Atkinson slept.
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  • Captain R.F. Scott's sleeping area.
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  • Shelf above Henry Bowers bunk, and what looks like the hat he wore in several photos I've seen.
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  • Physics Bench
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  • Wright and Simpson's bunks
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  • Visually it was stunning, the sun lit the snow to a golden color and the drift tore down 12,000 foot Erebus and across the sea ice creating small tornadoes and dense clouds of snow that would occasionally blot out all but the nearest one or two flagged poles marking the route. At times the blown snow stayed at ground level, blowing hard from right to left across our route, and it was so thick that I couldn’t see the ground, rather it felt like I was crossing a fast flowing river of snow. It was disorienting, and if not for the flagged poles it would be easy to loose direction.
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  • Stores on the ramp above the hut. Royal Society Range on distant shore of McMurdo Sound.
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  • Looks like an old can of paint
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  • Nelson and Day's bunks
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  • Meteorology lab gear
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  • Wall made of packing crates.
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  • Work Bench.
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  • Emperor Penguin feet
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  • The stables built onto the side of the hut where the ponys and mules were housed.
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  • Physics Laboratory bench
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  • Hut entrance, mess deck table, galley on left.
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  • Wardroom table, and stove
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  • Tenaments Bunks, where Bowers, Cherry-Garrard, Oats, Meares and  Atkinson slept.
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  • Abandoned stores in the ramp above the hut. Barne Glacier in background.
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  • Lizzie Meek and the New Zealand Heritage Trust at work in the hut. They were taking an inventory of the hut contents and taking measurements of the hut and making minor repairs. The huts are maintained as heritage sites and are regularly visited to ensure the buildings are stable and weather tight.
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  • Geologists Debenham and Taylor bunks
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  • Ponting's darkroom
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  • Crampons
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  • Bicycle in stable, I'd like to hear more about how this bicycle was used and how far they rode it.
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  • Wardroom dining area
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  • 100 year old cordage
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  • Terra Nova Hut
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  • Biology bench
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  • Nelson and Day's bunks
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  • The famous blue pill, all-in-one remedy for any sailor ailment.
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  • Looking side on at the Hut Point Peninsula from McMurdo Sound. That large rock sticking up is the back side of Castle Rock.
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  • Pony feed bag in stable
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  • Inaccessible Island
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  • Cape Evans wardroom table and the "tenements" bunks.
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  • 12,400 ft Mount Erebus from Wind Vane Hill, Cape Evans, Antarctica.
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  • Pitcher on table in Cape Evans Hut.
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  • Cape Evans Hut Detail
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Portraits of Place - Photographs by Shaun O'Boyle

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