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Douglas Mawson

Sir Douglas Mawson OBE FRS[1] FAA (5 May 1882 – 14 October 1958) was an Australian geologist, Antarctic explorer, and academic. Along with Roald Amundsen, Robert Falcon Scott, and Sir Ernest Shackleton, he was a key expedition leader during the Heroic Age of Antarctic Exploration.


Douglas Mawson

Mawson in 1914
Born(1882-05-05)5 May 1882
Died14 October 1958(1958-10-14) (aged 76)
NationalityAustralian
EducationFort Street Model School and University of Sydney, Sydney
OccupationsGeologist, chemistry demonstrator, Antarctic explorer, academic
Known forFirst ascent of Mount Erebus
First team to reach the South Magnetic Pole
Sole survivor of Far Eastern Party
Australasian Antarctic Expedition
Mawson's Huts
Mawson Plateau
Spouse(s)Francisca Paquita Delprat (1891–1974), married 1914
ChildrenPatricia (1915–1999)
Jessica (1917–2004)
AwardsFellow of the Royal Society[1]
Bigsby Medal (1919)
Clarke Medal (1936)
Polar Medal(1909, 1934)

Mawson was born in England and came to Australia as an infant. He completed degrees in mining engineering and geology at the University of Sydney. In 1905 he was made a lecturer in petrology and mineralogy at the University of Adelaide. Mawson's first experience in the Antarctic came as a member of Shackleton's Nimrod Expedition (1907–1909), alongside his mentor Edgeworth David. They were part of the expedition's northern party, which became the first to attain the South Magnetic Pole and to climb Mount Erebus.

After his participation in Shackleton's expedition, Mawson became the principal instigator of the Australasian Antarctic Expedition (1911–1914). The expedition explored thousands of kilometres of previously unexplored regions, collected geological and botanical samples, and made important scientific observations. Mawson was the sole survivor of the three-man Far Eastern Party, which travelled across the Mertz and Ninnis Glaciers named after his two deceased companions. Their deaths forced him to travel alone for over a month to return to the expedition's main base.

Mawson was knighted in 1914 and during World War I worked with the British and Russian militaries. He returned to the University of Adelaide in 1919 and became a full professor in 1921, contributing much to Australian geology. He returned to the Antarctic as the leader of the British Australian and New Zealand Antarctic Research Expedition (1929–1931), which led to a territorial claim in the form of the Australian Antarctic Territory. Mawson is commemorated by numerous landmarks and from 1984 to 1996 appeared on the Australian $100 note.

Early life

Mawson was born on 5 May 1882 to Robert Ellis Mawson and Margaret Ann Moore. He was born in Shipley, West Riding of Yorkshire, but was less than two years old when his family emigrated to Australia and settled at Rooty Hill, now in the western suburbs of Sydney; Later he and his family moved to the inner-Sydney suburb of Glebe in 1893. He attended Forest Lodge Public School, Fort Street Model School and the University of Sydney, where he graduated in 1902 with a Bachelor of Engineering degree.[2]

Early work

He was appointed geologist to an expedition to the New Hebrides (now Vanuatu) in 1903; his report, The Geology of the New Hebrides, was one of the first major geological works of Melanesia. Also that year he published a geological paper on Mittagong, New South Wales. His major influences in his geological career were Professor Edgeworth David and Professor Archibald Liversidge. He then became a lecturer in petrology and mineralogy at the University of Adelaide in 1905.[2] He identified and first described the mineral davidite.

Nimrod Expedition

 
Mackay, David and Mawson raise the flag at the South Magnetic Pole on 16 January 1909

Mawson joined Ernest Shackleton's Nimrod Expedition (1907–1909) to the Antarctic, originally intending to stay for the duration of the ship's presence in the first summer. Instead both he and his mentor, Edgeworth David, stayed an extra year. In doing so they became, in the company of Alistair Mackay, the first to climb the summit of Mount Erebus and to trek to the South Magnetic Pole, which at that time was over land.

Australasian Antarctic Expedition

 
Mawson rests at the side of his sledge, Adelie Land, Antarctica, 1912.
 
Photo of Douglas Mawson's sledge

Mawson turned down an invitation to join Robert Falcon Scott's Terra Nova Expedition in 1910; Australian geologist Griffith Taylor went with Scott instead. Mawson chose to lead his own expedition, the Australasian Antarctic Expedition, to King George V Land and Adelie Land, the sector of the Antarctic continent immediately south of Australia, which at the time was almost entirely unexplored. The objectives were to carry out geographical exploration and scientific studies, including a visit to the South Magnetic Pole. Mawson raised the necessary funds in a year, from British and Australian governments, and from commercial backers interested in mining and whaling.[3]

The expedition, using the ship SY Aurora commanded by Captain John King Davis, departed from Hobart on 2 December 1911, landed at Cape Denison (named after Hugh Denison, a major backer of the expedition) on Commonwealth Bay on 8 January 1912, and established the Main Base. A second camp was located to the west on the ice shelf in Queen Mary Land. Cape Denison proved to be unrelentingly windy; the average wind speed for the entire year was about 50 mph (80 km/h), with some winds approaching 200 mph (320 km/h). They built a hut on the rocky cape and wintered through nearly constant blizzards. Mawson wanted to do aerial exploration and brought the first aeroplane to Antarctica. The aircraft, a Vickers R.E.P. Type Monoplane,[4] was to be flown by Francis Howard Bickerton. When it was damaged in Australia shortly before the expedition departed, plans were changed so it was to be used only as a tractor on skis. However, the engine did not operate well in the cold, and it was removed and returned to Vickers in England. The aircraft fuselage itself was abandoned. On 1 January 2009, fragments of it were rediscovered by the Mawson's Huts Foundation, which is restoring the original huts.[5]

Mawson's exploration program was carried out by five parties from the Main Base and two from the Western Base. Mawson himself was part of a three-man sledging team, the Far Eastern Party, with Xavier Mertz and Lieutenant Belgrave Ninnis, who headed east on 10 November 1912, to survey King George V Land. After five weeks of excellent progress mapping the coastline and collecting geological samples, the party was crossing the Ninnis Glacier 480 km east of the main base. Mertz was skiing and Mawson was on his sled with his weight dispersed, but Ninnis was jogging beside the second sled. Ninnis fell through a crevasse, and his body weight is likely to have breached the snow bridge covering it. The six best dogs, most of the party's rations, their tent, and other essential supplies disappeared into the massive crevasse. Mertz and Mawson spotted one dead and one injured dog on a ledge 165 feet (50 m) below them, but Ninnis was never seen again.[6]

After a brief service, Mawson and Mertz turned back immediately. They had one week's provisions for two men and no dog food but plenty of fuel and a primus. They sledged for 27 hours continuously to obtain a spare tent cover they had left behind, for which they improvised a frame from skis and a theodolite. Their lack of provisions forced them to use their remaining sled dogs to feed the other dogs and themselves:

Their meat was stringy, tough and without a vestige of fat. For a change we sometimes chopped it up finely, mixed it with a little pemmican, and brought all to the boil in a large pot of water. We were exceedingly hungry, but there was nothing to satisfy our appetites. Only a few ounces were used of the stock of ordinary food, to which was added a portion of dog's meat, never large, for each animal yielded so very little, and the major part was fed to the surviving dogs. They crunched the bones and ate the skin, until nothing remained.[7]

There was a quick deterioration in the men's physical condition during this journey. Both men suffered dizziness; nausea; abdominal pain; irrationality; mucosal fissuring; skin, hair, and nail loss; and the yellowing of eyes and skin. Later Mawson noticed a dramatic change in his travelling companion. Mertz seemed to lose the will to move and wished only to remain in his sleeping bag. He began to deteriorate rapidly with diarrhoea and madness. On one occasion Mertz refused to believe he was suffering from frostbite and bit off the tip of his own little finger. This was soon followed by violent raging—Mawson had to sit on his companion's chest and hold down his arms to prevent him from damaging their tent. Mertz suffered further seizures before falling into a coma and dying on 8 January 1913.[8]

It was unknown at the time that husky liver contains extremely high levels of vitamin A. It was also not known that such levels of vitamin A could cause liver damage to humans.[9] With six dogs between them (with a liver on average weighing 1 kg), it is thought that the pair ingested enough liver to bring on a condition known as hypervitaminosis A. However, Mertz may have suffered more because he found the tough muscle tissue difficult to eat and therefore ate more of the liver than Mawson.[10] While both men suffered, Mertz suffered more severely.

Mawson continued the final 100 miles (160 km) alone. During his return trip to the Main Base he fell through the lid of a crevasse, and was saved only by his sledge wedging itself into the ice above him. He managed to climb out using the harness attaching him to the sled.

When Mawson finally made it back to Cape Denison, the ship Aurora had left only a few hours before. It was recalled by wireless communication, only to have bad weather thwart the rescue effort. Mawson and six men who had remained behind to look for him wintered a second year until December 1913. In Mawson's book Home of the Blizzard, he describes his experiences. His party, and those at the Western Base, had explored large areas of the Antarctic coast, describing its geology, biology and meteorology, and more closely defining the location of the South Magnetic Pole. In 1915, the Royal Geographical Society awarded him their Founder's Medal[11] and in 1916 the American Geographical Society awarded him the David Livingstone Centenary Medal.[12]

The expedition was the subject of David Roberts' book Alone on the Ice: The Greatest Survival Story in the History of Exploration.

Home of the Blizzard

In his book The Home of the Blizzard, Mawson talked of "Herculean gusts" on 24 May 1912 which he learned afterwards "approached two hundred miles per hour".[13] Mawson reported that the average wind speed for March was 68 miles per hour (109 km/h); for April, 52.5 miles per hour (84.5 km/h); and for May, 67.799 miles per hour (109.112 km/h).[14] These katabatic winds can reach around 300 km/h (190 mph) and led Mawson to dub Cape Denison "the windiest place on Earth".[15][16]

Later life

Mawson married Francisca Adriana (Paquita) Delprat (daughter of the metallurgist G. D. Delprat) on 31 March 1914 at Holy Trinity Church of England, Balaclava, Victoria. They had two daughters, Patricia and Jessica. Also in 1914, he was knighted, and was preoccupied with news of the Scott disaster until the outbreak of World War I. Mawson served in the war as a major in the British Ministry of Munitions. Returning to the University of Adelaide in 1919, he was promoted to the professorship of geology and mineralogy in 1921, and made a major contribution to Australian geology. He organised and led the joint British Australian and New Zealand Antarctic Research Expedition in 1929–31, which resulted in the formation of the Australian Antarctic Territory in 1936. He also spent much of his time researching the geology of the northern Flinders Ranges in South Australia.

Upon his retirement from teaching in 1952 he was made an emeritus professor of the University of Adelaide. He died at his Brighton home on 14 October 1958 from a cerebral haemorrhage.[2] He was 76 years old. At the time of his death he had still not completed editorial work on all the papers resulting from his expedition, and this was completed by his eldest daughter, Patricia, only in 1975.

Legacy

In 1948, Carroll William Dodge published a genus of fungi within the family Lichinaceae, named Mawsonia in his honour.[17]

His image appeared on several postage stamps of the Australian Antarctic Territory: 5 pence (1961),[18] 5 pence (1961), 27 cents and 75 cents (1982),[19] 10 cents (2011),[20] 45 cents (1999).[21]

His image appeared from 1984 to 1996 on the Australian paper one hundred dollar note and in 2012 on a $1 coin issued within the Inspirational Australians series.[22] Mawson Peak (Heard Island), Mount Mawson (Tasmania), Mawson Station (Antarctica), Dorsa Mawson (Mare Fecunditatis), the geology building on the main University of Adelaide campus, suburbs in Canberra and Adelaide, a University of South Australian campus and the main street of Meadows, South Australia are named after him. At Oxley College in Burradoo, New South Wales, a sports house is called Mawson, as is at Clarence High School in Hobart, Tasmania, Forest Lodge Public School and Fort Street High School, both in Sydney, where he was educated. The Mawson Collection of Antarctic exploration artefacts is on permanent display at the South Australian Museum, including a screening of a recreated version of his journey that was shown on ABC Television on 12 May 2008.

Mawson (postcode 2607) is a suburb of Canberra, district of Woden Valley, Australian Capital Territory. The suburb was gazetted in 1966 and is named after him. The theme for street names in this area is Antarctic exploration.

In 2011, Ranulph Fiennes included Mawson in his book My Heroes: Extraordinary Courage, Exceptional People.

In 2013 an "Australian Mawson Centenary Expedition" was led by Australian Polar scientists Chris Turney and Chris Fogwill, of the University of New South Wales, together with Antarctic veteran geologist and mountaineer Greg Mortimer and a group of scientists and adventurers. The expedition was centred on Antarctic and Sub-Antarctic oceanography, climate and biology. The ship, the MV Akademik Shokalskiy, became trapped in the Antarctic sea ice.[23] In December 2013, some of the expedition members revisited Mawson's huts at Cape Denison on Commonwealth Bay.[24]

After the release of Mawson's journals and other expedition records, some historians have questioned Mawson's navigation, risk-taking and leadership.[3]

In December 2013, the first opera to be based on Mawson's 1911–1914 expedition to Antarctica, The Call of Aurora (by Tasmanian composer Joe Bugden)[25] was performed at The Peacock Theatre in Hobart. The Call of Aurora investigates the relationship between Douglas Mawson and his wireless operator, Sidney Jeffryes, who developed symptoms of paranoia and had to be relieved of his duties.

In 2019, Australian Dance Theatre presented the premiere of South by Artistic Director Garry Stewart in Adelaide. The acclaimed contemporary dance work reflects upon the treacherous journey across the wilds of eastern Antarctica undertaken by Mawson and his ill-fated team in the summer of 1912–1913. Garry Stewart won Outstanding Achievement in Choreography for South in 2019 at the Australian Dance Awards, presented by AusDance. The work has since toured regional South Australia.

David Roberts' account of Mawson's AAE expedition, Alone on the Ice, and the deadly effect of dog liver are referenced in the plot of an episode of British television series New Tricks, where it is used to commit the almost-perfect murder.

The Mawson Trail in South Australia is also named after him.

Minor planet 4456 Mawson is named in his honour.[26]

Burial

Sir Douglas was buried at the historic cemetery of St Jude's Church, 444 Brighton Road, Brighton, South Australia, in 1958. 35°1′1.99″S 138°31′26.89″E / 35.0172194°S 138.5241361°E / -35.0172194; 138.5241361

References

  1. ^ a b Alderman, A. R.; Tilley, C. E. (1960). "Douglas Mawson 1882-1958". Biographical Memoirs of Fellows of the Royal Society. 5: 119–127. doi:10.1098/rsbm.1960.0011.
  2. ^ a b c Jacka, F. J. Mawson, Sir Douglas (1882–1958). Australian Dictionary of Biography Online. Retrieved 26 July 2016.
  3. ^ a b Mark Pharoah, curator of the Mawson collection at the South Australia Museum in Adelaide. Cited by Andrew Luck-Baker, Douglas Mawson: An Australian hero's story of survival, BBC News, 27 February 2014.
  4. ^ CDWS-1 Air tractor tail
  5. ^ Australian Antarctic Division (2013). "Mawson's Huts Historic Site Management Plan 2013-2018" (PDF). Australian Antarctic Division. Retrieved 21 May 2019.
  6. ^ Douglas Mawson 1882-1958 www.south-pole.com
  7. ^ Sir Douglas Mawson (2009) [Autumn 1914]. Geoffrey Cowling; David Widger (eds.). The Home of the Blizzard: Being the Story of the Australasian Antarctic Expedition, 1911–1914. London, UK: Project Gutenberg.
  8. ^ Bickel, Lennard (2000). Mawson's Will: The Greatest Polar Survival Story Ever Written, Hanover, New Hampshire: Steerforth Press. ISBN 1-58642-000-3
  9. ^ Vitamin A toxicity
  10. ^ "Man's Best Friend?". Student BMJ 2002;10:131–170 May. Retrieved 11 November 2009.
  11. ^ (PDF). Royal Geographical Society. Archived from the original (PDF) on 27 September 2011. Retrieved 24 August 2015.
  12. ^ "The Cullum Geographical Medal" 26 March 2009 at the Wayback Machine. American Geographical Society. Retrieved 17 June 2010.
  13. ^ Mawson, D: The Home of the Blizzard, Vol I, page 133, J. B. Lippincott, no date
  14. ^ Mawson, D: The Home of the Blizzard, Vol I, page 168, J. B. Lippincott, no date
  15. ^ Trewby, M. (Ed., 2002): Antarctica. An encyclopedia from Abbott Ice Shelf to Zooplankton Firefly Books Ltd. ISBN 1-55297-590-8
  16. ^ Australian Antarctic Division > Home of the Blizzard. Retrieved 5 November 2011.
  17. ^ Burkhardt, Lotte (2022). Eine Enzyklopädie zu eponymischen Pflanzennamen [Encyclopedia of eponymic plant names] (pdf) (in German). Berlin: Botanic Garden and Botanical Museum, Freie Universität Berlin. doi:10.3372/epolist2022. ISBN 978-3-946292-41-8. S2CID 246307410. Retrieved 27 January 2022.
  18. ^ "123RF Stock Photo". Retrieved 30 August 2017.
  19. ^ "The James Caird Society". Retrieved 30 August 2017.
  20. ^ "Traveling Antarctica". 6 December 2011. Retrieved 30 August 2017.
  21. ^ "Australian Stamp Explorer no. 56 (Mawson's Hut)" (PDF). Retrieved 30 August 2017.
  22. ^ "Sir Douglas Mawson Featured on Australian $1 Coin - Coin Update". news.coinupdate.com.
  23. ^ "Australian Spirit of Mawson ship trapped in Antarctic sea ice". explorersweb.com. 29 December 2013. Retrieved 30 December 2013.
  24. ^ "Expedition to Mawson's Huts: a journey into Antarctica – video". The Guardian. 25 December 2013. Retrieved 30 December 2013.
  25. ^ . December 2013. Archived from the original on 4 March 2014. Retrieved 28 February 2014.
  26. ^ "(4456) Mawson". (4456) Mawson In: Dictionary of Minor Planet Names. Springer. 2003. p. 383. doi:10.1007/978-3-540-29925-7_4401. ISBN 978-3-540-29925-7.

Sources

  • Bickel, Lennard [1977] (2001). This Accursed Land, foreword by Sir Edmund Hillary, Edinburgh: Birlinn Ltd. ISBN 1-84158-141-0.
  • Caesar, Adrian:The White: Last Days in the Antarctic Journeys of Scott and Mawson 1911–1913 Pan MacMillan, Sydney, 1999, ISBN 0-330-36157-0
  • Hall, Lincoln (2000) Douglas Mawson, The Life of an Explorer New Holland, Sydney ISBN 1-86436-670-2
  • Jacka, F. J. "Mawson, Sir Douglas (1882–1958)", Australian Dictionary of Biography, Volume 10, MUP, 1986, pp 454–457.
  • Mawson, Sir Douglas, 2 vol. (1915) The Home of the Blizzard, being the story of the Australasian Antarctic expedition, 1911–1914 Vol. I, London: Ballantyne Press.
  • Roberts, Peder (2004). "Fighting the 'microbe of sporting mania': Australian science and Antarctic exploration in the early 20th century". Endeavour. Vol. 28, no. 3 (published September 2004). pp. 109–113. doi:10.1016/j.endeavour.2004.07.005. PMID 15350758.
  • Turney, Chris (2013), 1912: The Year The World Discovered Antarctica, Text Publishing, Melbourne.

Further reading

  • Jacka, Fred; Jacka, Eleanor, eds. (1988). Mawson's Antarctic Diaries. London, Sydney and Wellington: Unwin Hyman. ISBN 0-04-320209-8.
  • Roberts, David. Alone on the Ice: The Greatest Survival Story in the History of Exploration. (21 January 2013) W. W. Norton & Company. ISBN 9780393240160
  • Mawson's Antarctic Newspaper Mawson's Antarctic Newspaper, article in www.TheGlobalDispatches.com. Retrieved 9 January 2013
  • Mawson, Douglas (Sir) (1882–1958) National Library of Australia, Trove, People and Organisation record for Sir Douglas Mawson
  • Douglas Mawson in Antarctica
  • Hurley, Frank. Collection of Photographic Prints. Images of Mawson Expedition 1911–14 held at Pictures Branch, National Library of Australia, Canberra
  • National Archives of Australia, Records of BANZARE, Australian Antarctic Division, Department of External Affairs etc., personal papers of Baron Casey papers (M1129, A10299), Charles Francis Laseron, and P G Law (MP1002/1)
  • "Sir Douglas Mawson, the unsung hero of Antarctica, gets his due at last", Paul Harris, The Observer, 26 January 2013
  • E.M. Suzyumov (1960, 1968). A life given to the Antarctic. Douglas Mawson – Antarctic Explorer. Adelaide, Libraries Board of South Australia. Translated from the Russian. First published in "Remarcable Geographers and Travellers", State Publishing House of Geographical Literature, Moscow, 1960.

External links

douglas, mawson, mawson, redirects, here, other, uses, mawson, disambiguation, this, article, includes, list, references, related, reading, external, links, sources, remain, unclear, because, lacks, inline, citations, please, help, improve, this, article, intr. Mawson redirects here For other uses see Mawson disambiguation This article includes a list of references related reading or external links but its sources remain unclear because it lacks inline citations Please help to improve this article by introducing more precise citations December 2022 Learn how and when to remove this template message Sir Douglas Mawson OBE FRS 1 FAA 5 May 1882 14 October 1958 was an Australian geologist Antarctic explorer and academic Along with Roald Amundsen Robert Falcon Scott and Sir Ernest Shackleton he was a key expedition leader during the Heroic Age of Antarctic Exploration SirDouglas MawsonOBE FRS FAAMawson in 1914Born 1882 05 05 5 May 1882Shipley West Riding of Yorkshire EnglandDied14 October 1958 1958 10 14 aged 76 Brighton South Australia AustraliaNationalityAustralianEducationFort Street Model School and University of Sydney SydneyOccupationsGeologist chemistry demonstrator Antarctic explorer academicKnown forFirst ascent of Mount ErebusFirst team to reach the South Magnetic PoleSole survivor of Far Eastern PartyAustralasian Antarctic ExpeditionMawson s HutsMawson PlateauSpouse s Francisca Paquita Delprat 1891 1974 married 1914ChildrenPatricia 1915 1999 Jessica 1917 2004 AwardsFellow of the Royal Society 1 Bigsby Medal 1919 Clarke Medal 1936 Polar Medal 1909 1934 Mawson was born in England and came to Australia as an infant He completed degrees in mining engineering and geology at the University of Sydney In 1905 he was made a lecturer in petrology and mineralogy at the University of Adelaide Mawson s first experience in the Antarctic came as a member of Shackleton s Nimrod Expedition 1907 1909 alongside his mentor Edgeworth David They were part of the expedition s northern party which became the first to attain the South Magnetic Pole and to climb Mount Erebus After his participation in Shackleton s expedition Mawson became the principal instigator of the Australasian Antarctic Expedition 1911 1914 The expedition explored thousands of kilometres of previously unexplored regions collected geological and botanical samples and made important scientific observations Mawson was the sole survivor of the three man Far Eastern Party which travelled across the Mertz and Ninnis Glaciers named after his two deceased companions Their deaths forced him to travel alone for over a month to return to the expedition s main base Mawson was knighted in 1914 and during World War I worked with the British and Russian militaries He returned to the University of Adelaide in 1919 and became a full professor in 1921 contributing much to Australian geology He returned to the Antarctic as the leader of the British Australian and New Zealand Antarctic Research Expedition 1929 1931 which led to a territorial claim in the form of the Australian Antarctic Territory Mawson is commemorated by numerous landmarks and from 1984 to 1996 appeared on the Australian 100 note Contents 1 Early life 2 Early work 3 Nimrod Expedition 4 Australasian Antarctic Expedition 5 Home of the Blizzard 6 Later life 7 Legacy 8 Burial 9 References 10 Sources 11 Further reading 12 External linksEarly life EditMawson was born on 5 May 1882 to Robert Ellis Mawson and Margaret Ann Moore He was born in Shipley West Riding of Yorkshire but was less than two years old when his family emigrated to Australia and settled at Rooty Hill now in the western suburbs of Sydney Later he and his family moved to the inner Sydney suburb of Glebe in 1893 He attended Forest Lodge Public School Fort Street Model School and the University of Sydney where he graduated in 1902 with a Bachelor of Engineering degree 2 Early work EditHe was appointed geologist to an expedition to the New Hebrides now Vanuatu in 1903 his report The Geology of the New Hebrides was one of the first major geological works of Melanesia Also that year he published a geological paper on Mittagong New South Wales His major influences in his geological career were Professor Edgeworth David and Professor Archibald Liversidge He then became a lecturer in petrology and mineralogy at the University of Adelaide in 1905 2 He identified and first described the mineral davidite Nimrod Expedition Edit Mackay David and Mawson raise the flag at the South Magnetic Pole on 16 January 1909 Mawson joined Ernest Shackleton s Nimrod Expedition 1907 1909 to the Antarctic originally intending to stay for the duration of the ship s presence in the first summer Instead both he and his mentor Edgeworth David stayed an extra year In doing so they became in the company of Alistair Mackay the first to climb the summit of Mount Erebus and to trek to the South Magnetic Pole which at that time was over land Australasian Antarctic Expedition Edit Mawson rests at the side of his sledge Adelie Land Antarctica 1912 Photo of Douglas Mawson s sledge Mawson turned down an invitation to join Robert Falcon Scott s Terra Nova Expedition in 1910 Australian geologist Griffith Taylor went with Scott instead Mawson chose to lead his own expedition the Australasian Antarctic Expedition to King George V Land and Adelie Land the sector of the Antarctic continent immediately south of Australia which at the time was almost entirely unexplored The objectives were to carry out geographical exploration and scientific studies including a visit to the South Magnetic Pole Mawson raised the necessary funds in a year from British and Australian governments and from commercial backers interested in mining and whaling 3 The expedition using the ship SY Aurora commanded by Captain John King Davis departed from Hobart on 2 December 1911 landed at Cape Denison named after Hugh Denison a major backer of the expedition on Commonwealth Bay on 8 January 1912 and established the Main Base A second camp was located to the west on the ice shelf in Queen Mary Land Cape Denison proved to be unrelentingly windy the average wind speed for the entire year was about 50 mph 80 km h with some winds approaching 200 mph 320 km h They built a hut on the rocky cape and wintered through nearly constant blizzards Mawson wanted to do aerial exploration and brought the first aeroplane to Antarctica The aircraft a Vickers R E P Type Monoplane 4 was to be flown by Francis Howard Bickerton When it was damaged in Australia shortly before the expedition departed plans were changed so it was to be used only as a tractor on skis However the engine did not operate well in the cold and it was removed and returned to Vickers in England The aircraft fuselage itself was abandoned On 1 January 2009 fragments of it were rediscovered by the Mawson s Huts Foundation which is restoring the original huts 5 Mawson s exploration program was carried out by five parties from the Main Base and two from the Western Base Mawson himself was part of a three man sledging team the Far Eastern Party with Xavier Mertz and Lieutenant Belgrave Ninnis who headed east on 10 November 1912 to survey King George V Land After five weeks of excellent progress mapping the coastline and collecting geological samples the party was crossing the Ninnis Glacier 480 km east of the main base Mertz was skiing and Mawson was on his sled with his weight dispersed but Ninnis was jogging beside the second sled Ninnis fell through a crevasse and his body weight is likely to have breached the snow bridge covering it The six best dogs most of the party s rations their tent and other essential supplies disappeared into the massive crevasse Mertz and Mawson spotted one dead and one injured dog on a ledge 165 feet 50 m below them but Ninnis was never seen again 6 After a brief service Mawson and Mertz turned back immediately They had one week s provisions for two men and no dog food but plenty of fuel and a primus They sledged for 27 hours continuously to obtain a spare tent cover they had left behind for which they improvised a frame from skis and a theodolite Their lack of provisions forced them to use their remaining sled dogs to feed the other dogs and themselves Their meat was stringy tough and without a vestige of fat For a change we sometimes chopped it up finely mixed it with a little pemmican and brought all to the boil in a large pot of water We were exceedingly hungry but there was nothing to satisfy our appetites Only a few ounces were used of the stock of ordinary food to which was added a portion of dog s meat never large for each animal yielded so very little and the major part was fed to the surviving dogs They crunched the bones and ate the skin until nothing remained 7 There was a quick deterioration in the men s physical condition during this journey Both men suffered dizziness nausea abdominal pain irrationality mucosal fissuring skin hair and nail loss and the yellowing of eyes and skin Later Mawson noticed a dramatic change in his travelling companion Mertz seemed to lose the will to move and wished only to remain in his sleeping bag He began to deteriorate rapidly with diarrhoea and madness On one occasion Mertz refused to believe he was suffering from frostbite and bit off the tip of his own little finger This was soon followed by violent raging Mawson had to sit on his companion s chest and hold down his arms to prevent him from damaging their tent Mertz suffered further seizures before falling into a coma and dying on 8 January 1913 8 It was unknown at the time that husky liver contains extremely high levels of vitamin A It was also not known that such levels of vitamin A could cause liver damage to humans 9 With six dogs between them with a liver on average weighing 1 kg it is thought that the pair ingested enough liver to bring on a condition known as hypervitaminosis A However Mertz may have suffered more because he found the tough muscle tissue difficult to eat and therefore ate more of the liver than Mawson 10 While both men suffered Mertz suffered more severely Mawson continued the final 100 miles 160 km alone During his return trip to the Main Base he fell through the lid of a crevasse and was saved only by his sledge wedging itself into the ice above him He managed to climb out using the harness attaching him to the sled When Mawson finally made it back to Cape Denison the ship Aurora had left only a few hours before It was recalled by wireless communication only to have bad weather thwart the rescue effort Mawson and six men who had remained behind to look for him wintered a second year until December 1913 In Mawson s book Home of the Blizzard he describes his experiences His party and those at the Western Base had explored large areas of the Antarctic coast describing its geology biology and meteorology and more closely defining the location of the South Magnetic Pole In 1915 the Royal Geographical Society awarded him their Founder s Medal 11 and in 1916 the American Geographical Society awarded him the David Livingstone Centenary Medal 12 The expedition was the subject of David Roberts book Alone on the Ice The Greatest Survival Story in the History of Exploration Home of the Blizzard EditIn his book The Home of the Blizzard Mawson talked of Herculean gusts on 24 May 1912 which he learned afterwards approached two hundred miles per hour 13 Mawson reported that the average wind speed for March was 68 miles per hour 109 km h for April 52 5 miles per hour 84 5 km h and for May 67 799 miles per hour 109 112 km h 14 These katabatic winds can reach around 300 km h 190 mph and led Mawson to dub Cape Denison the windiest place on Earth 15 16 Later life EditMawson married Francisca Adriana Paquita Delprat daughter of the metallurgist G D Delprat on 31 March 1914 at Holy Trinity Church of England Balaclava Victoria They had two daughters Patricia and Jessica Also in 1914 he was knighted and was preoccupied with news of the Scott disaster until the outbreak of World War I Mawson served in the war as a major in the British Ministry of Munitions Returning to the University of Adelaide in 1919 he was promoted to the professorship of geology and mineralogy in 1921 and made a major contribution to Australian geology He organised and led the joint British Australian and New Zealand Antarctic Research Expedition in 1929 31 which resulted in the formation of the Australian Antarctic Territory in 1936 He also spent much of his time researching the geology of the northern Flinders Ranges in South Australia Upon his retirement from teaching in 1952 he was made an emeritus professor of the University of Adelaide He died at his Brighton home on 14 October 1958 from a cerebral haemorrhage 2 He was 76 years old At the time of his death he had still not completed editorial work on all the papers resulting from his expedition and this was completed by his eldest daughter Patricia only in 1975 Mawson in 1914 Mawson in 1926 Caricature by Sir David LowLegacy EditIn 1948 Carroll William Dodge published a genus of fungi within the family Lichinaceae named Mawsonia in his honour 17 His image appeared on several postage stamps of the Australian Antarctic Territory 5 pence 1961 18 5 pence 1961 27 cents and 75 cents 1982 19 10 cents 2011 20 45 cents 1999 21 His image appeared from 1984 to 1996 on the Australian paper one hundred dollar note and in 2012 on a 1 coin issued within the Inspirational Australians series 22 Mawson Peak Heard Island Mount Mawson Tasmania Mawson Station Antarctica Dorsa Mawson Mare Fecunditatis the geology building on the main University of Adelaide campus suburbs in Canberra and Adelaide a University of South Australian campus and the main street of Meadows South Australia are named after him At Oxley College in Burradoo New South Wales a sports house is called Mawson as is at Clarence High School in Hobart Tasmania Forest Lodge Public School and Fort Street High School both in Sydney where he was educated The Mawson Collection of Antarctic exploration artefacts is on permanent display at the South Australian Museum including a screening of a recreated version of his journey that was shown on ABC Television on 12 May 2008 Mawson postcode 2607 is a suburb of Canberra district of Woden Valley Australian Capital Territory The suburb was gazetted in 1966 and is named after him The theme for street names in this area is Antarctic exploration In 2011 Ranulph Fiennes included Mawson in his book My Heroes Extraordinary Courage Exceptional People In 2013 an Australian Mawson Centenary Expedition was led by Australian Polar scientists Chris Turney and Chris Fogwill of the University of New South Wales together with Antarctic veteran geologist and mountaineer Greg Mortimer and a group of scientists and adventurers The expedition was centred on Antarctic and Sub Antarctic oceanography climate and biology The ship the MV Akademik Shokalskiy became trapped in the Antarctic sea ice 23 In December 2013 some of the expedition members revisited Mawson s huts at Cape Denison on Commonwealth Bay 24 After the release of Mawson s journals and other expedition records some historians have questioned Mawson s navigation risk taking and leadership 3 In December 2013 the first opera to be based on Mawson s 1911 1914 expedition to Antarctica The Call of Aurora by Tasmanian composer Joe Bugden 25 was performed at The Peacock Theatre in Hobart The Call of Aurora investigates the relationship between Douglas Mawson and his wireless operator Sidney Jeffryes who developed symptoms of paranoia and had to be relieved of his duties In 2019 Australian Dance Theatre presented the premiere of South by Artistic Director Garry Stewart in Adelaide The acclaimed contemporary dance work reflects upon the treacherous journey across the wilds of eastern Antarctica undertaken by Mawson and his ill fated team in the summer of 1912 1913 Garry Stewart won Outstanding Achievement in Choreography for South in 2019 at the Australian Dance Awards presented by AusDance The work has since toured regional South Australia David Roberts account of Mawson s AAE expedition Alone on the Ice and the deadly effect of dog liver are referenced in the plot of an episode of British television series New Tricks where it is used to commit the almost perfect murder The Mawson Trail in South Australia is also named after him Minor planet 4456 Mawson is named in his honour 26 Bust of Mawson on North Terrace Adelaide South Australia in front of the University of Adelaide The Mawson Laboratories at the University of Adelaide Burial EditSir Douglas was buried at the historic cemetery of St Jude s Church 444 Brighton Road Brighton South Australia in 1958 35 1 1 99 S 138 31 26 89 E 35 0172194 S 138 5241361 E 35 0172194 138 5241361 Sir Douglas Mawson s grave at St Jude s at Brighton South Australia Main plaque on the granite boulder marking the grave of Sir Douglas Mawson Plaque acknowledging gift of the boulder from Arkaroola marking Mawson s grave from the Sprigg familyReferences Edit a b Alderman A R Tilley C E 1960 Douglas Mawson 1882 1958 Biographical Memoirs of Fellows of the Royal Society 5 119 127 doi 10 1098 rsbm 1960 0011 a b c Jacka F J Mawson Sir Douglas 1882 1958 Australian Dictionary of Biography Online Retrieved 26 July 2016 a b Mark Pharoah curator of the Mawson collection at the South Australia Museum in Adelaide Cited by Andrew Luck Baker Douglas Mawson An Australian hero s story of survival BBC News 27 February 2014 CDWS 1 Air tractor tail Australian Antarctic Division 2013 Mawson s Huts Historic Site Management Plan 2013 2018 PDF Australian Antarctic Division Retrieved 21 May 2019 Douglas Mawson 1882 1958 www south pole com Sir Douglas Mawson 2009 Autumn 1914 Geoffrey Cowling David Widger eds The Home of the Blizzard Being the Story of the Australasian Antarctic Expedition 1911 1914 London UK Project Gutenberg Bickel Lennard 2000 Mawson s Will The Greatest Polar Survival Story Ever Written Hanover New Hampshire Steerforth Press ISBN 1 58642 000 3 Vitamin A toxicity Man s Best Friend Student BMJ 2002 10 131 170 May Retrieved 11 November 2009 List of Past Gold Medal Winners PDF Royal Geographical Society Archived from the original PDF on 27 September 2011 Retrieved 24 August 2015 The Cullum Geographical Medal Archived 26 March 2009 at the Wayback Machine American Geographical Society Retrieved 17 June 2010 Mawson D The Home of the Blizzard Vol I page 133 J B Lippincott no date Mawson D The Home of the Blizzard Vol I page 168 J B Lippincott no date Trewby M Ed 2002 Antarctica An encyclopedia from Abbott Ice Shelf to Zooplankton Firefly Books Ltd ISBN 1 55297 590 8 Australian Antarctic Division gt Home of the Blizzard Retrieved 5 November 2011 Burkhardt Lotte 2022 Eine Enzyklopadie zu eponymischen Pflanzennamen Encyclopedia of eponymic plant names pdf in German Berlin Botanic Garden and Botanical Museum Freie Universitat Berlin doi 10 3372 epolist2022 ISBN 978 3 946292 41 8 S2CID 246307410 Retrieved 27 January 2022 123RF Stock Photo Retrieved 30 August 2017 The James Caird Society Retrieved 30 August 2017 Traveling Antarctica 6 December 2011 Retrieved 30 August 2017 Australian Stamp Explorer no 56 Mawson s Hut PDF Retrieved 30 August 2017 Sir Douglas Mawson Featured on Australian 1 Coin Coin Update news coinupdate com Australian Spirit of Mawson ship trapped in Antarctic sea ice explorersweb com 29 December 2013 Retrieved 30 December 2013 Expedition to Mawson s Huts a journey into Antarctica video The Guardian 25 December 2013 Retrieved 30 December 2013 The Call of Aurora December 2013 Archived from the original on 4 March 2014 Retrieved 28 February 2014 4456 Mawson 4456 Mawson In Dictionary of Minor Planet Names Springer 2003 p 383 doi 10 1007 978 3 540 29925 7 4401 ISBN 978 3 540 29925 7 Sources EditBickel Lennard 1977 2001 This Accursed Land foreword by Sir Edmund Hillary Edinburgh Birlinn Ltd ISBN 1 84158 141 0 Caesar Adrian The White Last Days in the Antarctic Journeys of Scott and Mawson 1911 1913 Pan MacMillan Sydney 1999 ISBN 0 330 36157 0 Hall Lincoln 2000 Douglas Mawson The Life of an Explorer New Holland Sydney ISBN 1 86436 670 2 Jacka F J Mawson Sir Douglas 1882 1958 Australian Dictionary of Biography Volume 10 MUP 1986 pp 454 457 Mawson Sir Douglas 2 vol 1915 The Home of the Blizzard being the story of the Australasian Antarctic expedition 1911 1914 Vol I London Ballantyne Press Roberts Peder 2004 Fighting the microbe of sporting mania Australian science and Antarctic exploration in the early 20th century Endeavour Vol 28 no 3 published September 2004 pp 109 113 doi 10 1016 j endeavour 2004 07 005 PMID 15350758 Turney Chris 2013 1912 The Year The World Discovered Antarctica Text Publishing Melbourne Further reading EditJacka Fred Jacka Eleanor eds 1988 Mawson s Antarctic Diaries London Sydney and Wellington Unwin Hyman ISBN 0 04 320209 8 Roberts David Alone on the Ice The Greatest Survival Story in the History of Exploration 21 January 2013 W W Norton amp Company ISBN 9780393240160 Mawson s Antarctic Newspaper Mawson s Antarctic Newspaper article in www TheGlobalDispatches com Retrieved 9 January 2013 Mawson Douglas Sir 1882 1958 National Library of Australia Trove People and Organisation record for Sir Douglas Mawson Douglas Mawson in Antarctica Hurley Frank Collection of Photographic Prints Images of Mawson Expedition 1911 14 held at Pictures Branch National Library of Australia Canberra National Archives of Australia Records of BANZARE Australian Antarctic Division Department of External Affairs etc personal papers of Baron Casey papers M1129 A10299 Charles Francis Laseron and P G Law MP1002 1 Sir Douglas Mawson the unsung hero of Antarctica gets his due at last Paul Harris The Observer 26 January 2013 E M Suzyumov 1960 1968 A life given to the Antarctic Douglas Mawson Antarctic Explorer Adelaide Libraries Board of South Australia Translated from the Russian First published in Remarcable Geographers and Travellers State Publishing House of Geographical Literature Moscow 1960 External links Edit Wikimedia Commons has media related to Douglas Mawson Wikiquote has quotations related to Douglas Mawson Works by Douglas Mawson at Biodiversity Heritage Library Works by Douglas Mawson at Open Library Works by Douglas Mawson at Project Gutenberg Works by or about Douglas Mawson at Internet Archive Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Douglas Mawson amp oldid 1155747435, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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