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The Coldest Journey on Earth
By ALEXANDER KUMAR, September 21, 2012

This week, Sir Ranulph Fiennes, the world’s greatest living explorer, released details of his latest undertaking.

Departing at the end of the year, Sir Ranulph will lead a team of six explorers, including Brian Newham, Ian Prickett
and Spencer Smirl, to make the first crossing of the continent of Antarctica during the Antarctic winter. This is one of
the last great journeys remaining on our planet.

It’s a formidable expedition, and in memory of the summer crossing of the continent by Sir Edmund Hillary and Sir
Vivian Fuchs in the 1950s, it will celebrate the Queen’s Jubilee, mark the centenary of Capt. Robert Falcon Scott’s
South Pole expedition, unite the Commonwealth and raise more than $10 million for its chosen charity, Seeing Is
Believing, which fights preventable blindness.

In fact it has been secretly planned now for four years. I had known about this expedition for some time and have been
bursting at the seams with excitement over the possibility of seeing a new and original challenge change the world’s
perceptions of “impossible.” Yet I have myself been living the experience to a certain degree — to minus 70 degrees
Celsius, to be precise.

It is such an extreme undertaking that certain technology had to be invented for this expedition. For instance, a Finning
(U.K.) Caterpillar track-type tractor has been adapted so the team members can move across the continent. In doing so,
they will endure the coldest temperatures on earth — below minus 80 degrees Celsius (minus 112 degrees Fahrenheit),
with wind chill below minus 100 degrees Celsius (minus 148 degrees Fahrenheit) — as well as more than three months
of darkness. They also face a relative lack of oxygen; because of the cold and distance from the Equator, the pressure
will be equivalent in places to 3,800 meters (more than 12,400 feet) above sea level.

A train of specially adapted containers will be dragged behind with fuel as well as basic living quarters and science labs
— a place for sleeping, eating, conducting science experiments and surviving what I know to be and have termed the
worst winter in the world.

However, the Antarctic winter is deceptive to those who don’t know it, haven’t experienced it and are left to fear it. It is
one of the most beautiful places I have ever lived, offering crystal-clear night skies, unparalleled views of the universe
and the occasional appearance of Southern Lights, aurora australis.

But there will be no opportunity for escape, should disaster strike. The expedition will need to be self-sufficient for at
least eight months, which will require caution and planning. There are many dangers, including crevasses on the step up
and step down from the plateau. Put simply: On this continent, there are no second chances.

Besides the physical challenges, as I have found during the past winter on the ice, the true test of anyone who dares to
take on Antarctica in the winter lies in the mind. This is a psychological marathon and the single greatest stretching of
the human mind anyone can endure, given the darkness, isolation, confinement, separation from home lives, sensory
deprivation, extreme cold temperatures and hypoxia, as well as the challenges of physical endurance.

In a recent interview, Sir Ranulph explained why he was taking on the challenge: “We do it because we like to break
world records.” George Leigh Mallory, when asked why he would attempt to climb Everest, replied, “Because it is
there.” Sir Ranulph has also climbed Everest, and went on to explain: “Sometimes we don’t succeed, but it’s what we
go for. It’s our specialty.”

Antarctica is an international continent, with many countries jostling for priority. Exploration is a competitive business
these days, perhaps as it once was among polar explorers of the past. As Sir Ranulph put it: “We heard a rumor that
Norwegian explorers were contemplating this. We realized we were going to have to have a go.”
In asking the other European crew members on this base who have just spent the winter here about the expedition, they
roll their eyes and tut “c’est ne pas possible” — this is not possible. They explain to me that the best logistics experts
had considered it and deemed it impossible because of constraints in technology. As a team we have grown to know this
winter — the cold and life at this extreme, and the dangers at the uttermost end of the world. I have also come to know
Antarctica and respect it for its raw unforgiving brutality, and having explored all seven continents I know that it is
more extreme anddangerous than even the Arctic, even lacking polar bears.

I refer to each continent as one of the seven dwarfs … but you would be ‘Dopey’ yourself if you think Antarctica could
be ‘Sleepy’.

In fact, perhaps Antarctica best fits the personality of Bashful or Grumpy. On the one hand, you may begin to trust her
and think after a time you have an understanding with her. But she will betray you and this understanding without a
second thought. Antarctica decides if and when you will leave. That is the sole (soul) term and agreement you accept in
remaining here under her will for the winter.

I believe in Sir Ranulph’s team and aim, and I understand that only by pushing barriers, testing our limits and
overcoming what people claim is impossible do we further mankind in science and discovery.

Of course, it comes at great risk. One hundred years ago Scott traveled to the “uttermost end of the world” for the same
reasons. In his last words, Scott wrote: “We are weak, writing is difficult, but for my own sake I do not regret this
journey, which has shown that Englishmen can endure hardships, help one another, and meet death with as great a
fortitude as ever in the past. We took risks, we knew we took them; things have come out against us, and therefore we
have no cause for complaint, but bow to the will of providence, determined still to do our best to the last.”

Sometimes I think people forget these words or may have never read them. Today, as there were a hundred years ago,
there are some people who sit in the comfort of their homes who may never understand why people like Sir Ranulph
want to challenge life. But I hope they have their televisions turned on and tuned in for their children’s sake. This may
be the greatest expedition of our time.

                                                                              Sir Ranulph is the “Houdini of
                                                                              exploration” — except, unlike Houdini,
                                                                              these are not tricks and, as a 68-year-old
                                                                              missing several fingers, he holds the
                                                                              heavyweight title of exploration and a belt
                                                                              dangling with many world records. In
                                                                              making this journey, he may once again
                                                                              prove the impossible, possible.

                                                                              It will not be without struggle or strife that
                                                                              the Commonwealth flag will be hauled
                                                                              across Antarctica in the winter darkness,
                                                                              led once again by the same man who did it
                                                                              the first time on foot two decades ago
                                                                              during the summer, alongside the British
                                                                              doctor Mike Stroud.

                                                                              This journey is definitely “worth its
                                                                              weight in polar salt.” Being British-
                                                                              Indian, I know very well the story of
                                                                              Gandhi’s long salt march and, like
                                                                              Gandhi, the members of Sir Ranulph’s
                                                                              team will have a long walk to their
                                                                              destination, the Ross Ice Shelf coastline,
                                                                              and into history.

There is a lot more to this expedition than breaking records; in my next blog entry I will explain how I have been
involved in Sir Ranulph’s upcoming expediti on, the Coldest Journey on Earth.

Source: http://scientistatwork.blogs.nytimes.com/2012/09/21/the-coldest-journey-on-earth/

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The New York Times - Sir Ranulph Fiennes

  • 1. The Coldest Journey on Earth By ALEXANDER KUMAR, September 21, 2012 This week, Sir Ranulph Fiennes, the world’s greatest living explorer, released details of his latest undertaking. Departing at the end of the year, Sir Ranulph will lead a team of six explorers, including Brian Newham, Ian Prickett and Spencer Smirl, to make the first crossing of the continent of Antarctica during the Antarctic winter. This is one of the last great journeys remaining on our planet. It’s a formidable expedition, and in memory of the summer crossing of the continent by Sir Edmund Hillary and Sir Vivian Fuchs in the 1950s, it will celebrate the Queen’s Jubilee, mark the centenary of Capt. Robert Falcon Scott’s South Pole expedition, unite the Commonwealth and raise more than $10 million for its chosen charity, Seeing Is Believing, which fights preventable blindness. In fact it has been secretly planned now for four years. I had known about this expedition for some time and have been bursting at the seams with excitement over the possibility of seeing a new and original challenge change the world’s perceptions of “impossible.” Yet I have myself been living the experience to a certain degree — to minus 70 degrees Celsius, to be precise. It is such an extreme undertaking that certain technology had to be invented for this expedition. For instance, a Finning (U.K.) Caterpillar track-type tractor has been adapted so the team members can move across the continent. In doing so, they will endure the coldest temperatures on earth — below minus 80 degrees Celsius (minus 112 degrees Fahrenheit), with wind chill below minus 100 degrees Celsius (minus 148 degrees Fahrenheit) — as well as more than three months of darkness. They also face a relative lack of oxygen; because of the cold and distance from the Equator, the pressure will be equivalent in places to 3,800 meters (more than 12,400 feet) above sea level. A train of specially adapted containers will be dragged behind with fuel as well as basic living quarters and science labs — a place for sleeping, eating, conducting science experiments and surviving what I know to be and have termed the worst winter in the world. However, the Antarctic winter is deceptive to those who don’t know it, haven’t experienced it and are left to fear it. It is one of the most beautiful places I have ever lived, offering crystal-clear night skies, unparalleled views of the universe and the occasional appearance of Southern Lights, aurora australis. But there will be no opportunity for escape, should disaster strike. The expedition will need to be self-sufficient for at least eight months, which will require caution and planning. There are many dangers, including crevasses on the step up and step down from the plateau. Put simply: On this continent, there are no second chances. Besides the physical challenges, as I have found during the past winter on the ice, the true test of anyone who dares to take on Antarctica in the winter lies in the mind. This is a psychological marathon and the single greatest stretching of the human mind anyone can endure, given the darkness, isolation, confinement, separation from home lives, sensory deprivation, extreme cold temperatures and hypoxia, as well as the challenges of physical endurance. In a recent interview, Sir Ranulph explained why he was taking on the challenge: “We do it because we like to break world records.” George Leigh Mallory, when asked why he would attempt to climb Everest, replied, “Because it is there.” Sir Ranulph has also climbed Everest, and went on to explain: “Sometimes we don’t succeed, but it’s what we go for. It’s our specialty.” Antarctica is an international continent, with many countries jostling for priority. Exploration is a competitive business these days, perhaps as it once was among polar explorers of the past. As Sir Ranulph put it: “We heard a rumor that Norwegian explorers were contemplating this. We realized we were going to have to have a go.”
  • 2. In asking the other European crew members on this base who have just spent the winter here about the expedition, they roll their eyes and tut “c’est ne pas possible” — this is not possible. They explain to me that the best logistics experts had considered it and deemed it impossible because of constraints in technology. As a team we have grown to know this winter — the cold and life at this extreme, and the dangers at the uttermost end of the world. I have also come to know Antarctica and respect it for its raw unforgiving brutality, and having explored all seven continents I know that it is more extreme anddangerous than even the Arctic, even lacking polar bears. I refer to each continent as one of the seven dwarfs … but you would be ‘Dopey’ yourself if you think Antarctica could be ‘Sleepy’. In fact, perhaps Antarctica best fits the personality of Bashful or Grumpy. On the one hand, you may begin to trust her and think after a time you have an understanding with her. But she will betray you and this understanding without a second thought. Antarctica decides if and when you will leave. That is the sole (soul) term and agreement you accept in remaining here under her will for the winter. I believe in Sir Ranulph’s team and aim, and I understand that only by pushing barriers, testing our limits and overcoming what people claim is impossible do we further mankind in science and discovery. Of course, it comes at great risk. One hundred years ago Scott traveled to the “uttermost end of the world” for the same reasons. In his last words, Scott wrote: “We are weak, writing is difficult, but for my own sake I do not regret this journey, which has shown that Englishmen can endure hardships, help one another, and meet death with as great a fortitude as ever in the past. We took risks, we knew we took them; things have come out against us, and therefore we have no cause for complaint, but bow to the will of providence, determined still to do our best to the last.” Sometimes I think people forget these words or may have never read them. Today, as there were a hundred years ago, there are some people who sit in the comfort of their homes who may never understand why people like Sir Ranulph want to challenge life. But I hope they have their televisions turned on and tuned in for their children’s sake. This may be the greatest expedition of our time. Sir Ranulph is the “Houdini of exploration” — except, unlike Houdini, these are not tricks and, as a 68-year-old missing several fingers, he holds the heavyweight title of exploration and a belt dangling with many world records. In making this journey, he may once again prove the impossible, possible. It will not be without struggle or strife that the Commonwealth flag will be hauled across Antarctica in the winter darkness, led once again by the same man who did it the first time on foot two decades ago during the summer, alongside the British doctor Mike Stroud. This journey is definitely “worth its weight in polar salt.” Being British- Indian, I know very well the story of Gandhi’s long salt march and, like Gandhi, the members of Sir Ranulph’s team will have a long walk to their destination, the Ross Ice Shelf coastline, and into history. There is a lot more to this expedition than breaking records; in my next blog entry I will explain how I have been involved in Sir Ranulph’s upcoming expediti on, the Coldest Journey on Earth. Source: http://scientistatwork.blogs.nytimes.com/2012/09/21/the-coldest-journey-on-earth/