

Found a good "Antarctic (South Pole Region) Survival" link? Let Us Know!
COLD WEATHER OPERATIONS ~ SUSTAINING HEALTH & PERFORMANCE: US Army Research Institute of Environmental Medicine,
TECHNICAL NOTE NO. TN/02-2, October, 2001
Winter Travel ~ Snowshoes & Toboggans: To
the moose hunter snow-shoes are often an absolute necessity, and trapping in
many cases would be impossible without them. They are thus brought fully within
the scope of our volume, and we give a few simple directions for their
manufacture. For winter traffic over deep snows there is no better sled in the
world than the Indian toboggan. Our illustration gives a very clear idea of the
sled, and it can be made in the following way...
How to Build an Igloo by Susan Witmore:
During the winter season, a companion and I spent two nights in an igloo near
Carson Pass, California. At 8,570 feet the snow was too deep for hiking without
snowshoes, and night temperatures dipped to minus five degrees Fahrenheit.
Despite the cold, we kept relatively warm in our igloo. I learned to make igloos
from Kim Grandfield's Snow and Igloo classes at Sunrise Mountain Sports, not
from an Inuit elder. If you have an opportunity to watch and participate in
building an igloo with someone who knows the process, that is the best way to
learn...
Survival
Stories Attacked by a ferocious leopard seal, plunging into a bottomless
crevasse, lost overnight in a near-hurricane-force blizzard, poisoned slowly by
carbon monoxide. These four dizzying tales of survival in the Antarctic wastes
will leave you shivering with fright, aching with sympathy, and above all,
thanking Providence it was them and not you.
Australian
Antarctic Division: Expeditioner
Handbook
All expeditioners are expected to read the Expeditioner
Handbook 2005 to ensure that they understand the terms and conditions of their
employment with the Australian Antarctic Division (AAD). In particular, Chapter
16 is very important and is a complete version of the Antarctic Service Code of
Personal Behavior that outlines expeditioner's personal responsibilities with
regard to the station community and to the AAD.
Antarctic
Fact Files - A fascinating departure point to explore the natural
history, geography, environment, science and other human activity in the world's
most remote region.
Antarctic
FAQs - About everything from wildlife and living to food and the
environment.
Can
You Survive in the Antarctic? Instructional Module #8: In
the Antarctic, most of the food people eat goes directly to generating heat. For
example, even when a person feels comfortably warm, they are using over half
their total caloric intake just to maintain their body temperature. The colder
it gets outside the body, the more food people need. Humans are so ill equipped
for intense cold that they soon reach a state where they cannot stay warm no
matter how much they eat. Stripped naked at 32 degrees, humans die of lowered
core temperature in as little as 20 minutes. Traveling in the Antarctic requires
that humans eat high energy or calorie-rich food and wear specially insulated
clothing.
Happy
Camper School Our class was taught by two very skilled and experienced
outdoorsmen, Brennan Brunner and Scott Metcalf (aka Scooter), from the Field
Safety Training Department, better known as FSTP (fstop-acronyms are big here at
McMurdo!). Our day started out in the classroom and the first thing we discussed
was the contents of an emergency survival bag. Survival bags are filled with
essentials that will help two people to survive in the harsh Antarctic
environment for two to three days.
Training
for the Antarctic - a Personal Perspective In
the United States Antarctic Program it is often necessary to train people from
all walks of life to cope with the special difficulties of life in the
Antarctic.
Anyone who is assigned to a field camp or whose duties take them out of the
boundaries of
McMurdo
Station must be trained in Antarctic survival by taking the Snowcraft I
course also known as 'Happy Camper Camp'.
Happy
Camper School Today we have come back from 2 days of happy camping out
on the Ross Ice Shelf.. Each person that comes here must go through this basic
training course to learn the essentials of Antarctic survival. It is
particularly important if one is planning on working in a remote field camp
where you actually stay in tents. (That may be my situation) The course consists
of some classroom time discussing hypothermia and frostbite, use of HF and VHF
radios, what to do in a "Herby" (hurricane force blizzard) and then of
course the fun part, building snow shelters and sleeping outside.
Field
Manual - Appendix G Palmer Station Survival Cache Contents [PDF]
Live
From Antarctica - Remote...alien...distant...Terra Australis Incognita,
the 'Unknown Southern Land'...the 'last place on earth'.... For most of human
history, and still for most people today, Antarctica is a blank, a great white
continent covered with ice, unconnected to daily life back in the industrial
world. Scientists know better, and now you can see why through their reports
From the Field.
Photos
from the current 'Live from Antarctica 2' team, - What can you expect to
see in Antarctica?
Cool
Antarctica - A travel-oriented view of Antarctica with pictures, maps,
history and more.
Antarctica:
The World Fact Book
Antarctica:
The Frozen Continent at the South Pole
Antarctica
Online
Two
Women...in Antarctica - Liv and Ann have announced their next
expedition. In the Spring of 2005 they will attempt to become the first women to
cross the Arctic Ocean.
Scientific
Journeys to the South Pole
Nature:
Antarctica: and The End of the Earth - From PBS.
The
Seventh Continent
Arctic/Antarctic
Ecosystems Project - Lots of information.
Classroom Antarctica
Each Unit has a selection of activities. Mix and match activities to meet your
own school or States learning objectives. Adapt the activities to the range of
abilities in your class and the particular interests of your students. Some
activities are designed around
Expeditioner
Profiles (pdf). There are hundreds of useful web links throughout and a
wealth of support material listed in the
Classroom
Resources.
Antarctic
clothing. By Ray Young A few days before leaving for Antarctica we all
go down to the Antarctic NZ clothing warehouse and get issued with various items
of clothing designed to keep us from freezing during our stay on the ice.
SOME ANTARCTIC E-BOOKS:
An
Antarctic Mystery: or, The Sphinx of the Ice Fields (Philadelphia: J. B.
Lippincott Co., 1899), by Jules Verne, trans. by Frances Cashel Hoey
(HTML in Israel)
The
Boy Aviators' Polar Dash: or, Facing Death in the Antarctic, by
John Henry Goldfrap (Gutenberg text)
The
Home of the Blizzard, Being the Story of the Australasian Antarctic Expedition,
1911-1914, by Douglas Mawson (Gutenberg text)
The
South Pole: An Account of the Norwegian Antarctic Expedition in the "Fram,"
1910-1912, by Roald Amundsen, trans. by Arthur G. Chater
(Gutenberg text and HTML)
The
Worst Journey in the World: Antarctic, 1910-13, by Apsley
Cherry-Garrard, illust. by Edward Adrian Wilson (Gutenberg text)
South!
The Story of Shackleton's Last Expedition, 1914-17, by Ernest
Henry Shackleton (Gutenberg text)
The
Voyages of Captain Scott, by Robert Falcon Scott and Charles
Turley (Gutenberg text)
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Recommended Gear:
Polypropylene Thermal Balaclava, Face Mask, Hood
X Loop Snow Goggles
ECWCS Polypro Thermal Long Underwear - Crew Neck
... and ...
ECWCS Polypro Thermal Underwear- Bottom Only
U.S. Army Cold Weather Boot Sock
Northern Outfitters Mountain Pack Boot
Crescent Moon Back Country Snow Shoes
Emergency BRW Survival Bags - (4) gs PLUS 4 HeatMax 18 Hour Body Warmers.
Grabber Mycoal 24 Hour Ultra Warmer Pack - 10 Pack