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Endurance: Shackleton's lost ship is found in Antarctic
BBC News ^
Posted on 03/09/2022 1:01:01 AM PST by Winniesboy
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To: Winniesboy
2
posted on
03/09/2022 1:04:55 AM PST
by
Fzob
To: SunkenCiv
3
posted on
03/09/2022 1:14:19 AM PST
by
stockpirate
(Where Justice Ends Tyranny Begins...Repression Breeds Violence)
To: Winniesboy
4
posted on
03/09/2022 1:17:08 AM PST
by
mewzilla
(We need to repeal RCV wherever it's in use and go back to dumb voting machines.)
To: stockpirate
Plus 1 for Climate Change.
5
posted on
03/09/2022 1:32:56 AM PST
by
Does so
(Americans had no desire for war between 1939 and 1941. Rheinland? Sometimes War Finds YOU!)
To: Winniesboy
6
posted on
03/09/2022 3:13:35 AM PST
by
caww
( )
To: caww
7
posted on
03/09/2022 3:14:37 AM PST
by
caww
( )
To: caww
8
posted on
03/09/2022 3:15:30 AM PST
by
caww
( )
To: caww
9
posted on
03/09/2022 3:16:31 AM PST
by
caww
( )
To: Winniesboy
10
posted on
03/09/2022 3:17:09 AM PST
by
RaceBannon
(Rom 5:8 But God commendeth his love toward us, in that, while we were yet sinners, Christ died for )
Endured pretty well down there for 107 years.
11
posted on
03/09/2022 3:20:43 AM PST
by
DAC21
To: caww
Their daily lives were recorded by Australian photographer Frank Hurley. Hurley's images show how the crew survived during that uncertain period - when they were at the whim of the shifting pack ice.
The photograph below shows a football match on the ice. taken in mid-February 1915, after the men had tried to release Endurance for one last time, but then had to accept they were stuck - with the cold and dark Antarctic winter approaching.
"Shackleton saw the match as a good way to let off steam. They had even flattened the ice to create a pitch."
12
posted on
03/09/2022 3:23:34 AM PST
by
caww
( )
To: caww
13
posted on
03/09/2022 3:26:28 AM PST
by
caww
( )
To: caww
Photographer Frank Hurley has placed himself in this picture - which shows him playing chess to fill the long dark winter days of mid-1915. "We know this was taken before May 1915," says Meredith Hooper. "Because in May they all had a fit of madness and decided to shave their heads. And in this photo, Hurley, on the left, still has his hair."
14
posted on
03/09/2022 3:29:28 AM PST
by
caww
( )
To: caww
In this photo we see Jock Wordie the expedition geologist on the left - with Third Officer Alfred Cheetham in the centre - and Alexander Macklin the ship's doctor on the right.
Endurance's role changed from that of a ship to that of a shore station. Many of the crew were assigned new sleeping quarters in the hold - mockingly they called it 'The Ritz'.
The tradition of scrubbing the floor remained, and everyone - except perhaps Shackleton himself - took their turn.
15
posted on
03/09/2022 3:32:41 AM PST
by
caww
( )
To: Winniesboy
TBH.. I am amazed with how much is left after all this time! I don’t dive (although I ALWAYS wanted to learn even when I was a little girl). I would think it would be awesome to dive and see this historic beauty! Thanks for posting! Way cool.
To: caww
"The Ritz", ...this photo shows the midwinter dinner to celebrate the shortest day of the year - 22 June 1915.
"They had peas," says Hooper. "But no one had yet started eating. Knives and forks are poised."
"On the left is Perce Blackborow, a stowaway who was given the job of steward."
17
posted on
03/09/2022 3:35:49 AM PST
by
caww
( )
To: caww
Hurley's hair is growing back in the photo, which was taken in his cabin. Macklin the doctor is on the right.
For the first time, Hurley's images have been scanned digitally direct from the original glass plates on which they were taken - revealing details never seen before. The mid-ground and background in each shot is crisper and sharper. "You can see the Australian flag, a penguin picture and a boomerang," says Hooper.
The Carsons chocolates by Hurley's bed. On Saturday nights the crew would toast sweethearts and wives - and for those who didn't want alcohol, like Hurley, Shackleton had provided chocolates."
18
posted on
03/09/2022 3:40:44 AM PST
by
caww
( )
To: caww
Of all the many extraordinary events of the expedition, not the least remarkable is the survival of the glass plate negatives of those stunning Hurley photographs, after being dragged across the ice in the ship’s boats to Elephant Island, and then the long months on the frozen island, protected only by a wooden crate, waiting for the eventual rescue.
To: caww
Here, a group of men are gathered around the ship's stove during the night watch. "There would normally be only one or two men on the night watch," says Hooper. "But people on that shift got extra food, and so your mates would suddenly appear.
20
posted on
03/09/2022 3:43:51 AM PST
by
caww
( )
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