Great nations had by 1880 lost interest in the South Polar regions. Decades of tentative exploration had found nothing of strategic or economic significance. Melbourne's men of science wondered otherwise, however, and enthusiastically tried to raise an expedition. They failed in this-yet inspired the first publicly recorded landing on the Antarctic continent, by Henrik Bull and his whaling expedition out of Melbourne. This sensational news led to the first overwintering in Antarctica, by crewman C.E. Borchgrevink's expedition. McConville describes Australia's early Antarctic explorations, the efforts of Melbourne's Antarctic Exploration Committee, and the daring exploratory voyages of Bull and Borchgrevink.
In Search of the Last Continent : Australia and Early Antarctic Exploration
Description
Author Description
Andrew McConville is a reference and research librarian at the State Library of Victoria. Andrew has a particular interest in the history of 19th century Antarctic exploration.