Tuesday, November 13, 2012

Postscript: The South Pole and the Polar Plunge

After fourteen months on the Ice, I took three months off and then returned for the 2012 winter season. While most of the season was similar to the previous one, there were two significant new events. On February 1, I was selected to go on what is colloquially known as a Sleigh Ride. During the end of the summer season, a number of flights are sent from McMurdo to the South Pole Station to resupply it with fuel for the next year. Since these planes can hold about 30 passengers and would otherwise be empty, a handful of people are selected for a "field trip" to the South Pole. Once the plane lands, it takes about thirty minutes to transfer the fuel, allowing the passengers to visit the station and take pictures at the geographic and ceremonial poles. In a surprise move upon returning to McMurdo, the pilot did not immediately land but rather flew the plane over the disintegrating sea ice and McMurdo Station, banking sharply so that we could take aerial photos of the landscape. What fantastic views!

A few months later, in the deep darkness of the winter solstice, Scott Base hosted its annual Polar Plunge, in which people jump into the ocean through a hole in the ice, immersing themselves in 28-degree Fahrenheit (minus-2-degree Celsius) water. Having missed this event my first winter, I opted to take the plunge this year. A video of my jump is at the bottom of this post. Enjoy!

The Flight to the Pole

The LC-130 plane, used to fly fuel to the South Pole Station

Getting comfortable for a three-hour flight

Larry with his new winter hat

A view of Mt. Discovery from the air

Clouds casting shadows on the ice shelf below

Crevasses in the otherwise smooth ice on the ground

A long view of Minna Bluff

A view of the Transantarctic Mountains

An unknown rock formation protruding from the ice

The South Pole

The back side of the Amundsen-Scott South Pole Station

The front side of the station

The station is built on stilts that are able to lift hydraulically; as the snow collects, the station avoids getting buried.

The geographic South Pole, elevation 9301 feet 

I'm at the South Pole!!! After taking this picture, I did a big lap around the pole marker so that I  could say I've run around the world. :)

Larry at the South Pole

Because the ice shifts about 33 feet per year, the location of the pole is recalibrated every New Years Day. Since I was there on February 1, the pole marker would have been within 3 feet of the actual pole. On one side of the marker is a tribute to Amundsen and his men who were the first humans to reach the South Pole on December 14, 1911,

Scott and his men arrived five weeks later on January 17, 1912, thereby losing the race to the Pole.

The ceremonial pole is a surrounded by the flags of the twelve original signatories of the Antarctic Treaty.

Larry at the ceremonial pole


The Flight Back to McMurdo

The plance sits next to the fuel line used for resupplying the station.

In the cockpit of the LC-130

This and the next several photos are some of the views I saw from the plane on the flight back to McMurdo Station. Unfortunately, I don't know the names of any of them.





One of the melt pools on Black Island, about thirty miles south of McMurdo Station.

More melt pools on Black Island

Black Island's textured terrain

The peaks of Black Island

The dust trails on the north side of Black Island. Due to the wind patterns coming from the south, Black Island is  generally snow-free, especially during the summer. This leaves a great deal of exposed rock and dust to be blown off the island onto the Ross Ice Shelf. Because this black debris heats up in the sun, it melts the snow underneath is much more quickly than would otherwise be the case, thereby creating pools, trenches, and other uneven texture in the ice.

A close of up debris from Black Island on the ice shelf

The edge of the Black Island debris with the Transantarctic Mountains in the background

The edge of the sea ice as it breaks up

Pieces of ice floating in the open sea

The sea, the disintegrating sea ice, and the Transantarctic Mountains.


This is the path created by the icebreaker ship in the sea ice so that the fuel and supply ships could make it safely to station.

Mt. Erebus letting off steam into the sky

The icebreaker and the fuel ship on the water.

The sea ice melts near Ob Hill with Mt. Erebus in the background

Hut Point Peninsula with Mt. Erebus in the background

Mt. Erebus overlooking McMurdo Sound


The Polar Plunge

4 comments:

  1. Replies
    1. You're welcome! Thanks for reading! It's been fun posting about Antarctica. :)

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  2. Lololol re: your polar plunge! You are crazy!!! Can we look forward to more blogging from you?

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    1. LOL! Yes, I probably am a bit crazy. This post will be the end of the Antarctic blog for now, although if I get a job at Palmer Station, I may revive it. Otherwise, I may start a new blog sometime. :)

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