South: the story of Shackleton's 1914-1917 expedition eBook

This eBook from the Gutenberg Project consists of approximately 531 pages of information about South.

South: the story of Shackleton's 1914-1917 expedition eBook

This eBook from the Gutenberg Project consists of approximately 531 pages of information about South.

Our position on the morning of the 19th was lat. 76° 34´ S., long. 31° 30´ W. The weather was good, but no advance could be made.  The ice had closed around the ship during the night, and no water could be seen in any direction from the deck.  A few lanes were in sight from the mast-head.  We sounded in 312 fathoms, finding mud, sand, and pebbles.  The land showed faintly to the east.  We waited for the conditions to improve, and the scientists took the opportunity to dredge for biological and geological specimens.  During the night a moderate north-easterly gale sprang up, and a survey of the position on the 20th showed that the ship was firmly beset.  The ice was packed heavily and firmly all round the ‘Endurance’ in every direction as far as the eye could reach from the masthead.  There was nothing to be done till the conditions changed, and we waited through that day and the succeeding days with increasing anxiety.  The east-north-easterly gale that had forced us to take shelter behind the stranded berg on the 16th had veered later to the north-east, and it continued with varying intensity until the 22nd.  Apparently this wind had crowded the ice into the bight of the Weddell Sea, and the ship was now drifting south-west with the floes which had enclosed it.  A slight movement of the ice round the ship caused the rudder to become dangerously jammed on the 21st, and we had to cut away the ice with ice-chisels, heavy pieces of iron with 6-ft. wooden hafts.  We kept steam up in readiness for a move if the opportunity offered, and the engines running full speed ahead helped to clear the rudder.  Land was in sight to the east and south about sixteen miles distant on the 22nd.  The land-ice seemed to be faced with ice-cliffs at most points, but here and there slopes ran down to sea-level.  Large crevassed areas in terraces parallel with the coast showed where the ice was moving down over foot-hills.  The inland ice appeared for the most part to be undulating, smooth, and easy to march over, but many crevasses might have been concealed from us by the surface snow or by the absence of shadows.  I thought that the land probably rose to a height of 5000 ft. forty or fifty miles inland.  The accurate estimation of heights and distances in the Antarctic is always difficult, owing to the clear air, the confusing monotony of colouring, and the deceptive effect of mirage and refraction.  The land appeared to increase in height to the southward, where we saw a line of land or barrier that must have been seventy miles, and possibly was even more distant.

Sunday, January 24, was a clear sunny day, with gentle easterly and southerly breezes.  No open water could be seen from the mast-head, but there was a slight water-sky to the west and north-west.  “This is the first time for ten days that the wind has varied from north-east and east, and on five of these days it has risen to a gale.  Evidently the ice has become firmly packed in this quarter,

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South: the story of Shackleton's 1914-1917 expedition from Project Gutenberg. Public domain.