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A fascinating account of the early days of Antarctic exploration from an expert storyteller.
In the 1830s, the forbidding Antarctic region represented the ultimate mystery. The prospect of discovering a lucrative whaling ground made this uncharted and untapped region especially enticing. Three expeditions to the pole were launched simultaneously by the United States, France, and Britain, each vying to be the first to venture farther south than any vessel had ever sailed before. These expeditions paved the way for the explorers, traders, and whalers of what was to become known as the "Heroic Age" of Antarctic exploration. The Race to the White Continent is a captivating account of their adventures.
"Enthralling enough to make the most steadfastly land-loving reader want to set sail through arduous conditions to uncharted lands. Highly recommended."—Booklist
"[Gurney] is obviously at home with sailing ships....Consequently, there is a refreshing gusto to this book."—Roland Huntford, New York Times Book Review
This wonderfully written book tells of the first Herculean
expeditions to Antarctica, from astronomer Edmond Halley s 1699
voyage in the "Paramore" to the sealer John Balleny s 1839
excursion in the "Eliza Scott," all in search of land, glory, fur,
science, and profit. Life was harsh: crews had poor provisions and
inadequate clothing, and scurvy was a constant threat. With
unreliable often homemade charts, these intrepid explorers sailed
in the stormy waters of the Southern Ocean below the Convergence,
that sea frontier marking the boundary between the freezing
Antarctic waters and the warmer sub-Antarctic seas. These men were
the first to discover and exploit a new continent, which was not
the verdant southern island they had imagined but an inhospitable
expanse of rock and ice, ringed by pack ice and icebergs:
Antarctica."
"Compass" chronicles the misadventures of those who attempted to
perfect the magnetic compass so precious to sixteenth-century
seamen that, by law, any man found tampering with it had his hand
pinned to the mast with a dagger. From the time man first took to
the seas until only one thousand years ago, sight and winds were
the sailor's only navigational aids. It was not until the
development of the compass that maps and charts could be used with
any accuracy even so, it would be hundreds of years and thousands
of shipwrecks before the marvelous instrument was perfected. And
its history up to modern times is filled with the stories of
disasters that befell sailors who misused it. In this page-turning
history of man's search for reliable navigation of treacherous sea
routes around the globe, Alan Gurney brings to life the instrument
Victor Hugo called "the soul of the ship."
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