Unexpected Antarctica
Far from being a wasteland of ice and snow, the world's most remote region is alive with history, color and life
- By Andrew Curry
- Smithsonian magazine, September 2004, Subscribe
(Page 2 of 2)
Among the attractions are the huts built by the earliest explorers, legends such as Robert Scott and Ernest Shackleton. World Monuments Fund president Bonnie Burnham says about 1,000 people tramp through the huts annually. Accidental time capsules whose contents are preserved almost perfectly by the cold, the century-old buildings are nonetheless being damaged by the harsh environment and increased traffic. Burnham and others are struggling to find a way to protect and preserve the structures, a job made complex by the fact that no single authority governs Antarctica. And though organizations like IAATO are working to responsibly manage tourism's impact, membership in the organization is voluntary.
The old rendering plants are also still standing, monuments to an ambition no less fierce than the explorers'. "You can't help but be moved by the scale of industry and what it meant," Pat Keough says. Ironically, the abandoned slaughterhouses are occupied again—by fur seals. "If they have a choice, they'll move indoors," Keough says. "They're wedged into buildings side by side, leaping out at you from under beds or sinks." Not that the seals' return to Antarctica was entirely planned; the population began to recover only after hunters turned their attention to whaling. The depletion of whale populations increased the availability of krill, shrimplike organisms eaten by seals, which explains why there are probably more fur seals in Antarctica today than before humans first arrived.
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Comments (1)
I am looking for a photo from an old magazine artricle that showed a ships wheel in or on an iceberg. Could you find it for me? Let me know if I can purchase a print. My husband saw it in your magazine many years ago. Thank you Jane Britain
Posted by Jane Britain on May 25,2010 | 09:16 PM