Adventure Travel to the South Pole
Continued. The goal of the “Millennium Expedition” to
the South Pole is multifaceted. Not since the failed British Expedition
led by Robert F.Scott in 1912 has anyone since attempted to cross such
a length of Antarctica and return back using unassisted land traversing
vehicles to reach the South Pole. When Scott proposed using steam driven
sledges and horses to traverse the route to the South Pole, it ended in
his death and the death of two others that had hoped to reach the South
Pole for the very first time since the existence of man. It seems only
fitting on the dawn of the New Millennium to attempt another assault at
this record. Using untested prototype Russian land traversing vehicles
the Millennium Expedition hopes to travel the more than 1400 mile round-trip
from Patriot Hills in the Antarctic Region of Ellsworth Land, near the
Ronne Ice Shelf. It is still unknown whether the “Snow Buggies” can withstand
the planets coldest climate of over -40 degrees Fahrenheit and forge huge
crevasses that could swallow up a vehicle in a blink of an eye. These Snow
buggies were commissioned for this expedition only three months prior to
the expedition and the critical test trials had to be postponed. Their
testing will be done here on Antarctica!
Also unknown is the toll that the altitude of 9,000 feet above sea level
will take on these diesel vehicles, especially when diesel fuel gels and
begins to freeze at temperatures above - 20 degrees Fahrenheit. It's easy
to feel that we are the guinea pigs in a huge experiment and in this vast
frozen desolation, our lives could be snuffed out, with any failure
of our equipment.
But these thoughts are soon pushed out of our minds as we concentrate
on the mission. We must travel 750 miles over unknown territory and arrive
at the South Pole and fly our Hot Air Balloon. In this modern day and age
of jet airplanes, no one has ever flown a Hot Air Balloon over the South
Pole. The South Pole was simply too inaccessible to be reached in previous
years, yet alone fly a fragile and cumbersome hot air balloon over. Original
plans had also called for the expedition to drop the 36 parachute jumpers
over the South Pole, however in 1997 three jumpers attempted this record
and all three died. The Trans-Antarctic Glacier is over 9,000 feet above
sea level at the South Pole and it's believed that flying the plane at
twelve thousand feet above sea level they may have gone unconscious shortly
after jumping out of the plane due to lack of oxygen at such a high altitude.
Since the cause was unclear, this portion of the expedition had to scrubbed.
Copyright by Curtis Lieber
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