To even get to the continent of Antarctica one has to cross thousands  of miles of harsh, ice-choked waters, and once you’re there, things are  even worse. Antarctica is the coldest, driest, remotest, windiest and  highest elevated continent on Earth. There are no trees, no rivers, no  cities and very little life. Even today, with all our technology, many  parts of this continent are unexplored and mysterious. NASA theorizes we  have more data on the surface of Mars than we do some parts of  Antarctica. It takes a brave person to conquer this harsh land, even  with modern materials and supplies, but around the turn of the century  it took a rare kind of explorer with a rare kind of bravery. Here’s a  list of the top ten heartiest souls to brave the harsh lands of the  south pole.
8.Sir Edmund Hillary
While best known for being the first man to the summit of Mt.  Everest, Sir Edmund Hillary also made a number of expeditions to  Antarctica. He lead the New Zealand section of the Commonwealth  Trans-Antarctic expedition, in 1958. Hilary’s section was the first to  reach the pole since Scot, in 1912, making him the third man to ever  reach the pole. He also commentated a number of sight-seeing flights  over the continent during the 1970′s, and established the Marble Point  runway, in 1957. Hilary’s first-hand accounts of the continent’s many  dangers are still required research for people planning to visit  Antarctica.  His achievements were so great that he is honored (and was  in his lifetime) through being the main image on a New Zealand $5 note.
7.Sir James Clark Ross
Many 19th century explorers, whalers and sealers knew about  Antarctica, but due to it’s remoteness and the dangers of the  surrounding Antarctic Ocean, it was largely ignored. James Clark Ross  thought the land was worth exploring and, between 1839 and 1843, he took  two ships, the HMS Erebus and the HMS Terror, farther south than any  man had ever traveled. By sailing around the vast coastlines of the  continent, Ross was possibly the first to establish that Antarctica was a  continent, not just a series of islands. Ross discovered the Victoria  Barrier, a massive ice shelf that was later named after him. He was  knighted upon his return to England, and chronicled his journeys in “A  Voyage of Discovery and Research to southern and Antarctic regions”  which included one of the first uses of the term “Antarctica” for the  southern continent.
6.Nobu Shirase
While most of history remembers Scot and Amundsen heroically racing  for the pole around 1911, few remember the Japanese navy’s expedition  around the same time. Nobu Shirase and his crew were the first human  beings to make landfall on Edward VII peninsula, in 1911, and journeyed  to 80°05′S – remarkable for such a small expedition. Nobu’s seven man  team explored the southern Alexandra range before adverse weather forced  them to return to their ship. One remarkable part of this expedition  was an unexpected encounter with the Fram, one of Roland Amundsen’s  ships, which was waiting for his return from the pole. At one point  Nobu’s ship had to take an unplanned pit stop to winter-over in Sidney  Australia, where they were assisted by fellow Antarctic explorer, Sir  Edgeworth David (number 5 on the list), who was given a 17th century  Samurai sword in thanks. The sword still is on display in a Sydney  museum.
5.Sir Edgeworth David
It’s a bit confusing, but worth mentioning, that there are actually  two south poles. The geographic south pole is the exact bottom of the  planet, and what most people are referring to when they say “south  pole”.  The other south pole is the magnetic south pole and, in 1909, it  was located at 72° 25′S 155° 16′E, a few hundred miles off the  geographic south pole. Welsh Australian coal magnate and geologist, Sir  Edgeworth David, was part of the first expedition to attempt to reach  the southern magnetic pole;  he and his men lived off a diet of seals  and penguins while exploring the southern coasts. 
He was also the first person to reach the summit of Mr Erebus,  Antarctica’s only active Volcano. It certainly does take guts to not  only go to Antarctica, but to climb an active Volcano while you’re  there. David later returned with Ernest Shackleton in the Nimrod  expedition and successfully found the south magnetic pole, in 1909, for  which he received the Muller Medal from the Australian Association for  the Advancement of Science.
4.Richard Evelyn Byrd
1929, When aircraft and flight were still in their infancy, US Naval  officer Richard Evelyn Byrd, a Pilot and a photographer took a rickety  Ford Tri-motor and became one of the first people to fly over the South  Pole. Due to the extremely high altitude of the continent and the  trans-antarctic mountain range in their way, the crew had to dump much  of their supplies and equipment to lighten the airplane’s load, barely  climbing over the peaks of the Trans Antarctic mountains. 
This meant that if the airplane ran out of fuel or had mechanical  problems, there would be no way for them to traverse the continent on  foot. All of this just a little over a year after Charles Lindbergh’s  trans Atlantic flight. Admiral Bird lead four more expeditions to  Antarctica, becoming one of the first people who dared to “winter over”  in the continent, where perpetual darkness and an average temperature of  -70 degrees Fahrenheit (-50 Celsius) makes the environment almost  unsurvivable.
3.Robert Falcon Scott
When it comes to something as historic as reaching the South Pole,  there is no shame in taking second place. Robert Falcon Scott’s first  expedition to the Antarctic was in 1901, but his crew’s lack of  experience and the lack of proper supplies resulted in the expedition’s  need to be rescued by relief ships. While this expedition was a success,  many were surprised at Scott’s declaration that he would be the first  man to reach the south pole, after barely surviving his first trip. He  put far more planning into his next expedition to the South Pole. He  received a telegram from Amundsen in Melbourne while preparing for the  journey, Amundsen warning Scott he planned on being first to the Pole.  Scott refused to treat this expedition as a race. He didn’t alter his  schedule to try to beat the Norwegian to the pole, confident he was  traveling by a much better known route and that he would make it first.
Scott chose five men for his final march to the pole, and when he  reached it he found that Amundsen had preceded him by four weeks. On the  return journey, while crossing the Ross ice shelf, a blinding blizzard  pinned the men down, where a combination of scurvy, dehydration and  hypothermia ended their lives. All the men knew their fate, and took  time to write final letters to their loved ones. A monument to the  expedition’s bravery still stands on observation point, a simple wooden  cross inscribed with the names of the lost men and a line from Tension’s  Ulysses: “To strive, to seek, to find, and not to yield”
2.Roald Amundsen
Amundsen is possibly one of the most well known polar explorers in  history, and has the unique distinction of being the first man to reach  both the north and south pole in his lifetime. Compared with Scott’s  expedition, which was riddled with setbacks and problems, Amundsen’s  south polar expedition was fairly uneventful. His use of hearty sled  dogs instead of Scot’s more fragile Norwegian ponies, as well as careful  use of his resources were the reason for his smooth journey, but  Amundsen’s expedition was still extremely difficult. 
He and his men trekked across hundreds of miles of totally unexplored  mountainous regions and planted their flag on the south pole on  December 14th, 1911 naming the area “Polheim” or “Land of the pole”. Not  disliking his polar rival, Amundsen left a note for Scott Reading:
Dear Captain Scott — As you probably are the first to reach this area  after us, I will ask you to kindly forward this letter to King Haakon  VII. If you can use any of the articles left in the tent please do not  hesitate to do so. The sledge left outside may be of use to you. With  kind regards I wish you a safe return.
Yours truly,
Roald Amundsen.
Roald Amundsen.
Amundsen only lead that one expedition to the pole, but spent the  rest of his life exploring until he disappeared near Bear Island while  assisting in a rescue mission.
1.Ernest Shackleton
Compared to the two men that reached the pole, Shackleton’s  contribution may seem infinitesimal, but historians remark that  Shackleton and his men shared one of the most amazing adventures ever  documented. Shackleton’s early expeditions included the first journey to  the southern magnetic pole and charting a route through the  trans-antarctic mountains that was later used by Scott on his southward  trek. Being that the pole had already been conquered, Shackleton decided  the next great quest would be to traverse the continent from shore to  shore.
Tragically, this expedition was put to a halt when Shackleton’s ship  (ironically called the HMS Endurance) was trapped in pack ice and  eventually crushed, stranding the crew the near by Elephant Island. For  almost a year the crew survived on seal, penguin and whale meat. They  used seal blubber to make oil for fires to stay warm, and in one popular  photo were seen playing soccer on the ice shelf. Shackleton realized  that without help they couldn’t live like this forever, and decided to  use the surviving longboats to make a treacherous voyage to a whaling  station on the remote south Georgia island, 800 miles northward. With  little food and water, and no medical supplies, Shackleton and five of  his men braved the ice-packed seas. 
After weeks, they landed on South Georgia island, starving and  suffering from dehydration. Unfortunately, they’d landed on the  uninhabited southern coast, so for the last arduous leg of the journey  Shackleton and his men had to cross a mountain range that no one had  previously crossed. He reached the whaling station and started to work  on an expedition to rescue his crew. After almost a year and a half  marooned in the antarctic, Shackleton’s crew was finally met with relief  ships that took them home. Despite the fact his trans antarctic  expedition was, ultimately, a failure as a voyage, it was a victory for  the tenacity of the human spirit
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