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Women in Antarctica

There may have been women in Antarctica, exploring the regions around Antarctica for many centuries. The most celebrated "first" for women was in 1935 when Caroline Mikkelsen became the first woman to set foot on one of Antarctica's islands.[1] Early male explorers, such as Richard Byrd, named areas of Antarctica after wives and female heads of state.[2] As Antarctica moved from a place of exploration and conquest to a scientific frontier, women worked to be included in the sciences. The first countries to have female scientists working in Antarctica were the Soviet Union, South Africa and Argentina.[3][4][5]

A woman working at the West Antarctic Ice Sheet (WAIS) Divide Field Camp in 2012.

Besides exploring and working as scientists, women have also played supportive roles as wives, fund-raisers, publicists, historians, curators and administrators of organizations and services that support Antarctic operations.[6] Many early women on Antarctica were the wives of explorers.[7] Some women worked with Antarctica from afar, crafting policies for a place they had never seen.[2] Women who wished to have larger roles in Antarctica and on the continent itself had to "overcome gendered assumptions about the ice and surmount bureaucratic inertia".[8] As women began to break into fields in Antarctica, they found that it could be difficult to compete against men who already had the "expeditioner experience" needed for permanent science positions.[9] Women who were qualified for expeditions or jobs in Antarctica were less likely to be selected than men, even after a 1995 study by Jane Mocellin showed that women cope better than men with the Antarctic environment.[10]

Historic barriers against inclusion edit

 
Mary Byrd Land, named after the wife of Rear Admiral Richard E. Byrd in 1929.

Most early policies and practices, including the construction and creation of Antarctic organizations, were created initially by men.[11] Women were originally excluded from early exploration in Antarctica based on the opinion that women could not handle the extremes in temperature or crisis situations.[12] Vivian Fuchs, who was in charge of the British Antarctic Survey in the 1960s, believed that women could not carry heavy equipment and that Antarctic facilities were unsuitable for women.[13] The United States believed for many years that the climate of Antarctic was too harsh for women.[14]

Antarctica was seen by many men as a place where men could imagine themselves heroic conquerors. In Western culture, frontier territories are often associated with masculinity.[15] Antarctica itself was envisioned by many male explorers as a "virginal woman" or "monstrous feminine body" to be conquered by men.[16] Women were often "invoked in terms of place naming and territorial conquest and later even encouraged to have babies in Antarctica."[11] Using women as territorial conquest is literal in the way that Argentina and Chile flew pregnant women to Antarctica to give birth and stake a national claim to the area.[8] Silvia Morella de Palma was the first woman to give birth in Antarctica, delivering 3.4 kg (7 lb 8 oz) Emilio Palma at the Argentine Esperanza base 7 January 1978.

Men enjoyed having a space that was free of women and which, in the late 1940s, "allowed them to continue the kind of male companionship and adventure they had enjoyed during the Second World War."[17] In one news article about Antarctica written in 1958, the writer describes the use of dazzlement: "On the womanless continent, the purpose of the dazzlement is not to catch the eye of a flirtatious blonde, but to attract spotters in the event that the explorers become lost in the frozen waste."[18] Men's space in Antarctica resisted change. In the 1980s, there was an attempt by men to memorialize the "Sistine ceiling" of the Weddell hut in Antarctica as an Australian national heritage site of "high significance." The "Sistine ceiline" was covered in 92 different pinups of women from the 1970s and 1980s.[19] This represented a "male's only club" in which participants believed women would spoil the "purity of a homosocial work, and play, environment."[20] In 1983, the San Bernardino County Sun newspaper published an article about Antarctica stating that it "is still one of the last macho redoubts, where men are men and women are superfluous."[21] One scientist, Lyle McGinnis, who had been going to Antarctica since 1957, resented women in the field saying that "men never grouse." He believed that women complained and needed "comfort."[22] Not all men felt that way. Other men felt that women's presence made life in Antarctica better and one male engineer stated that without women around, "men are pigs."[23] Sociologist Charles Moskos stated that as more women are introduced to a group, there is less aggression and a "more civil culture develops."[24]

Many of the careers in Antarctica are in the sciences and women faced barriers there as well. As women attempted to work in science, arguments using biological determinism, evolutionary psychology and popular notions of neurobiology were used as excuses as to why there were fewer women in the sciences.[25] These arguments described how "women are ill-adapted on evolutionary grounds for science and the competitive environment of the laboratory."[25] Some women described feeling that they were "a bit of a joke" working in Antarctica and felt that men regarded them as incapable. [26]

Antarctic exploration and science research was often facilitated by national navies, who often did not want women on their ships.[27] The United States Navy used the excuse that "sanitation facilities were too primitive" on Antarctica as an excuse to bar women.[21] The U.S. Navy also considered Antarctica a "male-only bastion."[28] Admiral George Dufek said in 1956 that "women would join American Teams in the Antarctic over his dead body."[29] He also believed that women's presence on Antarctica "would wreck men's illusions of being heroes and frontiersmen."[13] Military groups also were worried about "sexual misconduct."[24]

Change was slow as women began to try to become part of Antarctic exploration and research.[30] An article run in The Daily Herald newspaper of Chicago in 1974 described women finally coming to Antarctica as integrating the "land with a definite feminine touch."[31] The article described women's perfumed smells, ways of entertaining guests on Antarctica and the "dainty feet" of Caroline Mikkelsen.[31] Eventually both the "presence and impact of female Antarctic researchers has increased rapidly."[32]

Early women involved in Antarctica edit

 
Ingrid Christensen (left) and Mathilde Wegger on a voyage in 1931.

Oral records from Oceania indicate that women explorers may have traveled to the Antarctic regions like male explorers Ui-te-Rangiora around 650 CE and Te Ara-tanga-nuku in 1000 CE, but this is unconfirmed.[33] The first western woman to visit the Antarctic region was Louise Séguin, who sailed on the Roland with Yves Joseph de Kerguelen in 1773.[33]

The oldest known human remains in Antarctica was a skull that belonged to a young Yaghan woman on Yamana Beach at the South Shetland Islands, which dates back to 1819 to 1825. Her remains were found by the Chilean Antarctic Institute in 1985.[34]

In the early twentieth century, women were interested in going to Antarctica. When Ernest Shackleton advertised his 1914 Antarctic expedition, three women wrote to him, requesting to join. The women never became part of the journey.[16] In 1919, newspapers reported that women wanted to go to Antarctica, writing that "several women were anxious to join, but their applications were refused."[35] Later, in 1929, twenty-five women applied to the British, Australian and New Zealand Antarctic Research Expedition (BANZARE). They were also rejected.[35] When a privately funded British Antarctic Expedition was proposed in 1937, 1,300 women applied to join.[35] None of those 1,300 were accepted. After 3 years of attempted funding the expedition was cancelled with the onset of World War Two.[36][37]

Women who were wives of explorers who were left behind "endured years of loneliness and anxiety."[38] Women like Kathleen Scott raised money for their husbands' journeys.[38]

The first women involved in exploration of Antarctica were wives and companions of male travelers and explorers. Women accompanied men as "whaling wives" to Antarctic waters.[39] The first women to see the continent of Antarctica was Norwegian Ingrid Christensen and her companion, Mathilde Wegger, both of whom were traveling with Christensen's husband.[40] The first woman to step onto the land of Antarctica, an island, was Caroline Mikkelsen in 1935. Mikkelsen only briefly went ashore and was also there with her husband.[41] Later, after her husband died, Mikkelsen remarried and didn't talk about her experience in Antarctica in order "to spare his feelings."[42] Christensen went back to Antarctica three times after her first glimpse of the land.[43] She eventually landed at Scullin monolith, becoming the first woman to set foot on the Antarctic mainland. She was followed by her daughter, Augusta Sofie Christensen, and two other women, Lillemor Rachlew and Solveig Widerøe.[36][44][45] Because the women believed the landing wasn't an actual "first," they didn't make much of their accomplishment.[43]

In the years of 1946 and 1947, Jackie Ronne and Jennie Darlington were the first women to spend the year in Antarctica.[46] When Ronne and Darlington decided to accompany their husbands in 1946 to Antarctica, men on the expedition "signed a petition trying to stop it happening."[47] Ronne worked as the mission's "recorder."[48] Ronne and Darlington both wrote about their experiences on the ice and, in the case of Darlington's book, about how conflict between team members also "strained relations between the two women."[49] One of the ways that Darlington tried to fit in with the men of the group was to make herself as "inconspicuous within the group as possible."[50] One man, first seeing Darlington arrive at the Antarctic base, "fled in fright, thinking that he'd gone mad."[50] Both women, upon returning from Antarctica, downplayed their own roles letting "their husbands take most of the honour."[51]

In 1948, the British diplomat, Margaret Anstee, was involved in the Falkland Islands Dependency Survey (FIDS) and helped make policy for the program.[2]

Further exploration and science edit

 
Irene Bernasconi and others in 1968 at Esperanza Base

Women scientists first began researching Antarctica from ships. The first woman scientist, Maria V. Klenova of the Soviet Union, worked on the ships Ob and Lena just off the Antarctic coastline in 1955 to 1956.[52] Klenova's work helped create the first Antarctic atlas.[29] Women served on Soviet Union ships going to Antarctica after 1963.[52] The first women to visit a US station and the first to fly to Antarctica were Pat Hepinstall and Ruth Kelley, Pan Am flight attendants who spent four hours on the ground at the McMurdo Station on 15 October 1957.[53]

Often women going to Antarctica had to be approved in both official and unofficial ways. An early candidate for becoming one of the first women scientists to go to Antarctica was geologist Dawn Rodley. She had been approved of not only by the expedition sponsor, Colin Bull, but also by the wives of the male team-members.[54] Rodley was set to go in 1958, but the United States Navy, who were in charge of Operation Deep Freeze, refused to take her to Antarctica.[54]

The Navy decided that sending a four-woman team would be acceptable and Bull began to build a team including Lois Jones, Kay Lindsay, Eileen McSaveney and Terry Tickhill.[54] These four women were part of the group who became the first women to visit the South Pole.[55] Jones's team worked mainly in Wright Valley. After their return, Bull found that several of his male friends resented the addition of women and even called him a "traitor".[54] The first United States all-female team was led by Jones in 1969.[28] Her team, which included the first women to set foot on the South Pole, were used by the navy as a publicity stunt. They were "paraded around" and called "Powderpuff explorers".[56] The first United States woman to step into the Antarctic interior in 1970 was engineer Irene C Peden, who also faced various barriers to her working on the continent.[57] Peden described how a "mythology had been created about the women who'd gone to the coast – that they had been a problem," and that since they had not published their work within the year, they were "heavily criticized."[58] Men in the Navy in charge of approving her trip to Antarctica were "dragging their feet", citing that there were not women's bathrooms available and that without another female companion, she would not be allowed to go.[59] The admiral in charge of transportation to Antarctica suggested that Peden was trying to go there for adventure, or to find a husband, rather than for her research.[14] Despite her setbacks, including not receiving critical equipment in Antarctica, Peden's research on the continent was successful.[14]

 
Ursula B. Marvin in Antarctica, 1978–1979

The first two U.S. woman to winter at a U.S. Antarctic research station were Mary Alice McWhinnie and



Mary Odile Cahoon. Mary Alice was the station science leader (chief scientist) at McMurdo Station in 1974 [60] and Mary Odile was a nun and biologist.[56] United States women in 1978 were still using equipment and arctic clothing designed for men, although "officials said that problem is being quickly remedied."[61] American Ann Peoples became the manager of the Berg Field Center in 1986, becoming the first woman to serve in a "significant leadership role".[62]

British women had similar problems to the Americans. The director of the British Antarctic Survey (BAS) from 1959 to 1973 was Vivian Fuchs, who "firmly believed that the inclusion of women would disrupt the harmony and scientific productivity of Antarctic stations."[50] British women scientists started working on curating collections as part of the BAS prior to being allowed to visit Antarctica.[50] Women who applied to the BAS were discouraged. A letter from BAS personnel sent to a woman who applied in the 1960s read, "Women wouldn't like it in Antarctica as there are no shops and no hairdresser."[63] The first BAS woman to go to Antarctica was Janet Thomson in 1983 who described the ban on women as a "rather improper segregation."[64][65] Women were still effectively barred from using UK bases and logistics in 1987.[66] Women didn't overwinter at the Halley Research Station until 1996, forty years after the British station was established.[3]

Argentina sent four women scientists, biologist Irene Bernasconi, bacteriologist María Adela Caría, biologist Elena Martinez Fontes and algae expert Carmen Pujals, to Antarctica in 1968.[5] They were the first group of female scientists to conduct research in Antarctica.[67] Bernasconi was the first woman to lead an Antarctic expedition. She was aged 72 at the time.[68] Later, in 1978, Argentina sent a pregnant woman, Silvia Morello de Palma, to the Esperanza Base to give birth and to "use the baby to stake [their] territorial claims" to Antarctica.[69]

Once Australia opened up travel to Antarctica for women, Elizabeth Chipman, who first worked as a typist at Casey Station in 1976, chronicled all of the women to travel there up to 1984.[70] Chipman worked to find the names of all women who had ever been to or even near Antarctica and eventually donated 19 folio boxes of her research to the National Library of Australia.[70][71]

Women gain ground edit

 
In-Young Ahn at King Sejong Station in Antarctica in 2015.

The National Science Foundation (NSF) started long-range planning in 1978, looking towards facilities that could accommodate a population made up of 25% women.[61] In the 1979–1980 season, there were only 43 women on the continent.[72] By 1981, there were nearly one woman for every ten men in Antarctica.[62] In 1983, the ratio was back to 20 men for every woman.[21] In the 1980s, Susan Solomon's research in Antarctica on the ozone layer and the "ozone hole" causes her to gain "fame and acclaim."[73]

In Spain, Josefina Castellví, helped coordinate and also participated in her country's expedition to Antarctica in 1984.[74] Later, after a Spanish base was constructed in 1988, Castellví was put in charge after the leader, Antoni Ballester, had a stroke.[74]

The first female station leader on Antarctica was Australian, Diana Patterson, head of Mawson Station in 1989. [75] The first woman station leader in charge of an American Antarctic station was LT Trina Baldwin, CEC, USN (Civil Engineer Corps, United States Navy).[76] The first all-female overwintering group was from Germany and spent the 1990–1991 winter at Georg von Neumayer. The first German female station leader and medical doctor was Monika Puskeppeleit.[77] In 1991 In-Young Ahn was the first female leader of an Asian research station (King Sejong Station) and the first South Korean woman to step onto Antarctica.[78]

There were approximately 180 women in Antarctica during the 1990–1991 season.[72] Women from several different countries were regular members of overwintering teams by 1992.[77] The first all-women expedition reached the South Pole in 1993.[23] Diana Patterson, the first female station leader on Antarctica, saw change coming in 1995. She felt that many of the sexist views of the past had given way so that women were judged not by the fact that they were women, but "by how well you did your job."[79]

During the 1994 austral winter,[80] women managed all three of the American Antarctic stations: Janet Phillips at Amundsen-Scott South Pole Station, Karen Schwall at McMurdo Station and Ann Peoples at Palmer Station.

Social scientist, Robin Burns, studied the social structures of Antarctica in the 1995–1996 season. She found that while many earlier women struggled, there was more acceptance of women in Antarctica during the 1995 - 1996 season.[81] One of the station managers, Ann Peoples, felt that a tipping point had been reached during the 1990's and that life for women on Antarctica became more normal.[62] There were still men in Antarctica who were not afraid to voice their opinion that women should not "be on the ice," but many others enjoyed having "women as colleagues and friends."[82] Women around this time began to feel like it was "taken for granted now that women go to the Antarctic."[50]

Studies done in the early 2000s showed that women's inclusion in Antarctic groups were beneficial overall.[83] In the early 2000s, Robin Burns had found that female scientists who enjoyed their experience in Antarctica, were the ones who were able to finish their scientific work and to complete their projects.[84]

Recent history edit

 
Women celebrate at 2013 Icestock in Antarctica.

American Lynne Cox swam a mile in Antarctic water in 2003.[85]

In 2005, writer Gretchen Legler described how there were many more women in Antarctica that year and that some were lesbians.[86] International Women's Day in 2012 saw more than fifty women celebrating in Antarctica and who made up 70% of the International Antarctic Expedition.[87] In 2013, when the Netherlands opened their first Antarctic Lab, Corina Brussaard was there to help set it up.[88]

Homeward Bound was a 10-year program designed to encourage women's participation in science and planned to send the first large (78 member) all-women expedition to Antarctica in 2016.[89] The first group, consisting of 76 women, arrived in Antarctica for three weeks in December 2016.[90] Fabian Dattner and Jess Melbourne-Thomas founded the project and the Dattner Grant provided funding. Each participant contributed $15,000 to the project.[91] Homeward bound included businesswomen and scientists who look at climate change and women's leadership.[64] The plan was to create a network of 1,000 women who would become leaders in the sciences.[91] The first voyage departed South America in December 2016[92][90]

An all-woman team of United Kingdom Army soldiers, called Exercise Ice Maiden, started recruiting members in 2015 to cross the continent under their own power in 2017.[93] It intended to study women's performance in the extreme antarctic summer environment.[94] A team of six women completed the journey in 62 days after starting on 20 November 2017.[95]

Currently, women make up 55% of membership in the Association of Polar Early Career Scientists (APECS).[32] In 2016, nearly a third of all researchers at the South Pole were women.[64] The Australian Antarctic Program (AAP) makes a "conscious effort to recruit women."[96]

A social media network has recently been created, "Women in Polar Science". It aims to connect women working in the Arctic and Antarctic sciences and provides them with a platform to share and exchange knowledge, experiences and opportunities.

Sexual harassment and sexism edit

When heavy equipment operator, Julia Uberuaga, first went to Antarctica in the late 70s and early 80s, she recalled that "the men stared at her, or leered at her, or otherwise let her know she was unwelcome on the job."[24] Rita Matthews, who went to Antarctica during the same period, said that the "men were all over the place. There were some that would never stop going after you."[24] In 1983, Marilyn Woody described living at McMurdo station and said, "It makes your head spin, all this attention from all these men."[21] Then she said, "You realize you can put a bag over your head and they'll still fall in love with you."[22]

Another scientist, Cynthia McFee, had been completely shut out of the "male camaraderie" at her location and had to deal with loneliness for long periods of time.[22] Martha Kane, the second woman to overwinter at the South Pole, experienced "negative pressure" from men with "some viewing her as an interloper who had insinuated herself into a male domain."[22]

In the 1990s, some women experienced stigma in Antarctica. These women were labeled "whores" for interacting with men and those who did not interact with men were called "dykes."[97]

In the late 1990s and early 2000s, women felt that Antarctic operations were "not at all sympathetic to the needs of mothers and that there is a deep concern lest a pregnant woman give birth in Antarctica."[98]

Sexual harassment is still a problem for women working in Antarctica, with many women scientists fielding unwanted sexual advances over and over again.[99] Women continue to be outnumbered in many careers in Antarctica, including fleet operations and trades.[100]

Some organizations, such as the Australian Antarctic Division, have created and adopted policies to combat sexual harassment and discrimination based on gender.[81] The United States Antarctic Program (USAP) encourages women and minorities to apply.[101]

Women record-breakers edit

Silvia Morella de Palma was the first woman to give birth in Antarctica, delivering 3.4 kg (7 lb 8 oz) Emilio Palma at the Argentine Esperanza base 7 January 1978.

In 1988 American Lisa Densmore became the first woman to reach the summit Mount Vinson.[102]

In 1993, American Ann Bancroft led the first all woman expedition to the South Pole.[103] Bancroft, and Norwegian Liv Arnesen, were the first women to ski across Antarctica in 2001.[103]

In 2010, the first female chaplain to serve on the continent of Antarctica was Chaplain, Lt Col Laura Adelia of the U.S. Air Force, where she served the people at McMurdo Station.[104]

Maria Leijerstam became the first person to cycle to the South Pole from the edge of the continent in 2013. She cycled on a recumbent tricycle.[105]

Anja Blacha set the record for the longest solo, unsupported, unassisted polar expedition by a woman in 2020.[106][107]

Honors and awards edit

In 1975, Eleanor Honnywill became the first woman to be awarded the Fuchs Medal from the British Antarctic Survey (BAS).[77]

The first woman to receive a Polar Medal was Virginia Fiennes, in 1986. She was honored for her work in the Transglobe Expedition.[77] She was also the first woman to "winter in both polar regions."[27]

Denise Allen was the first woman awarded the Australian Antarctic Medal in 1989.[77]

See also edit

  Geography portal

References edit

Citations edit

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External links edit

women, antarctica, there, have, been, women, antarctica, exploring, regions, around, antarctica, many, centuries, most, celebrated, first, women, 1935, when, caroline, mikkelsen, became, first, woman, foot, antarctica, islands, early, male, explorers, such, ri. There may have been women in Antarctica exploring the regions around Antarctica for many centuries The most celebrated first for women was in 1935 when Caroline Mikkelsen became the first woman to set foot on one of Antarctica s islands 1 Early male explorers such as Richard Byrd named areas of Antarctica after wives and female heads of state 2 As Antarctica moved from a place of exploration and conquest to a scientific frontier women worked to be included in the sciences The first countries to have female scientists working in Antarctica were the Soviet Union South Africa and Argentina 3 4 5 A woman working at the West Antarctic Ice Sheet WAIS Divide Field Camp in 2012 Besides exploring and working as scientists women have also played supportive roles as wives fund raisers publicists historians curators and administrators of organizations and services that support Antarctic operations 6 Many early women on Antarctica were the wives of explorers 7 Some women worked with Antarctica from afar crafting policies for a place they had never seen 2 Women who wished to have larger roles in Antarctica and on the continent itself had to overcome gendered assumptions about the ice and surmount bureaucratic inertia 8 As women began to break into fields in Antarctica they found that it could be difficult to compete against men who already had the expeditioner experience needed for permanent science positions 9 Women who were qualified for expeditions or jobs in Antarctica were less likely to be selected than men even after a 1995 study by Jane Mocellin showed that women cope better than men with the Antarctic environment 10 Contents 1 Historic barriers against inclusion 2 Early women involved in Antarctica 3 Further exploration and science 4 Women gain ground 5 Recent history 6 Sexual harassment and sexism 7 Women record breakers 8 Honors and awards 9 See also 10 References 10 1 Citations 10 2 Sources 11 External linksHistoric barriers against inclusion edit nbsp Mary Byrd Land named after the wife of Rear Admiral Richard E Byrd in 1929 Most early policies and practices including the construction and creation of Antarctic organizations were created initially by men 11 Women were originally excluded from early exploration in Antarctica based on the opinion that women could not handle the extremes in temperature or crisis situations 12 Vivian Fuchs who was in charge of the British Antarctic Survey in the 1960s believed that women could not carry heavy equipment and that Antarctic facilities were unsuitable for women 13 The United States believed for many years that the climate of Antarctic was too harsh for women 14 Antarctica was seen by many men as a place where men could imagine themselves heroic conquerors In Western culture frontier territories are often associated with masculinity 15 Antarctica itself was envisioned by many male explorers as a virginal woman or monstrous feminine body to be conquered by men 16 Women were often invoked in terms of place naming and territorial conquest and later even encouraged to have babies in Antarctica 11 Using women as territorial conquest is literal in the way that Argentina and Chile flew pregnant women to Antarctica to give birth and stake a national claim to the area 8 Silvia Morella de Palma was the first woman to give birth in Antarctica delivering 3 4 kg 7 lb 8 oz Emilio Palma at the Argentine Esperanza base 7 January 1978 Men enjoyed having a space that was free of women and which in the late 1940s allowed them to continue the kind of male companionship and adventure they had enjoyed during the Second World War 17 In one news article about Antarctica written in 1958 the writer describes the use of dazzlement On the womanless continent the purpose of the dazzlement is not to catch the eye of a flirtatious blonde but to attract spotters in the event that the explorers become lost in the frozen waste 18 Men s space in Antarctica resisted change In the 1980s there was an attempt by men to memorialize the Sistine ceiling of the Weddell hut in Antarctica as an Australian national heritage site of high significance The Sistine ceiline was covered in 92 different pinups of women from the 1970s and 1980s 19 This represented a male s only club in which participants believed women would spoil the purity of a homosocial work and play environment 20 In 1983 the San Bernardino County Sun newspaper published an article about Antarctica stating that it is still one of the last macho redoubts where men are men and women are superfluous 21 One scientist Lyle McGinnis who had been going to Antarctica since 1957 resented women in the field saying that men never grouse He believed that women complained and needed comfort 22 Not all men felt that way Other men felt that women s presence made life in Antarctica better and one male engineer stated that without women around men are pigs 23 Sociologist Charles Moskos stated that as more women are introduced to a group there is less aggression and a more civil culture develops 24 Many of the careers in Antarctica are in the sciences and women faced barriers there as well As women attempted to work in science arguments using biological determinism evolutionary psychology and popular notions of neurobiology were used as excuses as to why there were fewer women in the sciences 25 These arguments described how women are ill adapted on evolutionary grounds for science and the competitive environment of the laboratory 25 Some women described feeling that they were a bit of a joke working in Antarctica and felt that men regarded them as incapable 26 Antarctic exploration and science research was often facilitated by national navies who often did not want women on their ships 27 The United States Navy used the excuse that sanitation facilities were too primitive on Antarctica as an excuse to bar women 21 The U S Navy also considered Antarctica a male only bastion 28 Admiral George Dufek said in 1956 that women would join American Teams in the Antarctic over his dead body 29 He also believed that women s presence on Antarctica would wreck men s illusions of being heroes and frontiersmen 13 Military groups also were worried about sexual misconduct 24 Change was slow as women began to try to become part of Antarctic exploration and research 30 An article run in The Daily Herald newspaper of Chicago in 1974 described women finally coming to Antarctica as integrating the land with a definite feminine touch 31 The article described women s perfumed smells ways of entertaining guests on Antarctica and the dainty feet of Caroline Mikkelsen 31 Eventually both the presence and impact of female Antarctic researchers has increased rapidly 32 Early women involved in Antarctica edit nbsp Ingrid Christensen left and Mathilde Wegger on a voyage in 1931 Oral records from Oceania indicate that women explorers may have traveled to the Antarctic regions like male explorers Ui te Rangiora around 650 CE and Te Ara tanga nuku in 1000 CE but this is unconfirmed 33 The first western woman to visit the Antarctic region was Louise Seguin who sailed on the Roland with Yves Joseph de Kerguelen in 1773 33 The oldest known human remains in Antarctica was a skull that belonged to a young Yaghan woman on Yamana Beach at the South Shetland Islands which dates back to 1819 to 1825 Her remains were found by the Chilean Antarctic Institute in 1985 34 In the early twentieth century women were interested in going to Antarctica When Ernest Shackleton advertised his 1914 Antarctic expedition three women wrote to him requesting to join The women never became part of the journey 16 In 1919 newspapers reported that women wanted to go to Antarctica writing that several women were anxious to join but their applications were refused 35 Later in 1929 twenty five women applied to the British Australian and New Zealand Antarctic Research Expedition BANZARE They were also rejected 35 When a privately funded British Antarctic Expedition was proposed in 1937 1 300 women applied to join 35 None of those 1 300 were accepted After 3 years of attempted funding the expedition was cancelled with the onset of World War Two 36 37 Women who were wives of explorers who were left behind endured years of loneliness and anxiety 38 Women like Kathleen Scott raised money for their husbands journeys 38 The first women involved in exploration of Antarctica were wives and companions of male travelers and explorers Women accompanied men as whaling wives to Antarctic waters 39 The first women to see the continent of Antarctica was Norwegian Ingrid Christensen and her companion Mathilde Wegger both of whom were traveling with Christensen s husband 40 The first woman to step onto the land of Antarctica an island was Caroline Mikkelsen in 1935 Mikkelsen only briefly went ashore and was also there with her husband 41 Later after her husband died Mikkelsen remarried and didn t talk about her experience in Antarctica in order to spare his feelings 42 Christensen went back to Antarctica three times after her first glimpse of the land 43 She eventually landed at Scullin monolith becoming the first woman to set foot on the Antarctic mainland She was followed by her daughter Augusta Sofie Christensen and two other women Lillemor Rachlew and Solveig Wideroe 36 44 45 Because the women believed the landing wasn t an actual first they didn t make much of their accomplishment 43 In the years of 1946 and 1947 Jackie Ronne and Jennie Darlington were the first women to spend the year in Antarctica 46 When Ronne and Darlington decided to accompany their husbands in 1946 to Antarctica men on the expedition signed a petition trying to stop it happening 47 Ronne worked as the mission s recorder 48 Ronne and Darlington both wrote about their experiences on the ice and in the case of Darlington s book about how conflict between team members also strained relations between the two women 49 One of the ways that Darlington tried to fit in with the men of the group was to make herself as inconspicuous within the group as possible 50 One man first seeing Darlington arrive at the Antarctic base fled in fright thinking that he d gone mad 50 Both women upon returning from Antarctica downplayed their own roles letting their husbands take most of the honour 51 In 1948 the British diplomat Margaret Anstee was involved in the Falkland Islands Dependency Survey FIDS and helped make policy for the program 2 Further exploration and science edit nbsp Irene Bernasconi and others in 1968 at Esperanza BaseWomen scientists first began researching Antarctica from ships The first woman scientist Maria V Klenova of the Soviet Union worked on the ships Ob and Lena just off the Antarctic coastline in 1955 to 1956 52 Klenova s work helped create the first Antarctic atlas 29 Women served on Soviet Union ships going to Antarctica after 1963 52 The first women to visit a US station and the first to fly to Antarctica were Pat Hepinstall and Ruth Kelley Pan Am flight attendants who spent four hours on the ground at the McMurdo Station on 15 October 1957 53 Often women going to Antarctica had to be approved in both official and unofficial ways An early candidate for becoming one of the first women scientists to go to Antarctica was geologist Dawn Rodley She had been approved of not only by the expedition sponsor Colin Bull but also by the wives of the male team members 54 Rodley was set to go in 1958 but the United States Navy who were in charge of Operation Deep Freeze refused to take her to Antarctica 54 The Navy decided that sending a four woman team would be acceptable and Bull began to build a team including Lois Jones Kay Lindsay Eileen McSaveney and Terry Tickhill 54 These four women were part of the group who became the first women to visit the South Pole 55 Jones s team worked mainly in Wright Valley After their return Bull found that several of his male friends resented the addition of women and even called him a traitor 54 The first United States all female team was led by Jones in 1969 28 Her team which included the first women to set foot on the South Pole were used by the navy as a publicity stunt They were paraded around and called Powderpuff explorers 56 The first United States woman to step into the Antarctic interior in 1970 was engineer Irene C Peden who also faced various barriers to her working on the continent 57 Peden described how a mythology had been created about the women who d gone to the coast that they had been a problem and that since they had not published their work within the year they were heavily criticized 58 Men in the Navy in charge of approving her trip to Antarctica were dragging their feet citing that there were not women s bathrooms available and that without another female companion she would not be allowed to go 59 The admiral in charge of transportation to Antarctica suggested that Peden was trying to go there for adventure or to find a husband rather than for her research 14 Despite her setbacks including not receiving critical equipment in Antarctica Peden s research on the continent was successful 14 nbsp Ursula B Marvin in Antarctica 1978 1979The first two U S woman to winter at a U S Antarctic research station were Mary Alice McWhinnie andMary Odile Cahoon Mary Alice was the station science leader chief scientist at McMurdo Station in 1974 60 and Mary Odile was a nun and biologist 56 United States women in 1978 were still using equipment and arctic clothing designed for men although officials said that problem is being quickly remedied 61 American Ann Peoples became the manager of the Berg Field Center in 1986 becoming the first woman to serve in a significant leadership role 62 British women had similar problems to the Americans The director of the British Antarctic Survey BAS from 1959 to 1973 was Vivian Fuchs who firmly believed that the inclusion of women would disrupt the harmony and scientific productivity of Antarctic stations 50 British women scientists started working on curating collections as part of the BAS prior to being allowed to visit Antarctica 50 Women who applied to the BAS were discouraged A letter from BAS personnel sent to a woman who applied in the 1960s read Women wouldn t like it in Antarctica as there are no shops and no hairdresser 63 The first BAS woman to go to Antarctica was Janet Thomson in 1983 who described the ban on women as a rather improper segregation 64 65 Women were still effectively barred from using UK bases and logistics in 1987 66 Women didn t overwinter at the Halley Research Station until 1996 forty years after the British station was established 3 Argentina sent four women scientists biologist Irene Bernasconi bacteriologist Maria Adela Caria biologist Elena Martinez Fontes and algae expert Carmen Pujals to Antarctica in 1968 5 They were the first group of female scientists to conduct research in Antarctica 67 Bernasconi was the first woman to lead an Antarctic expedition She was aged 72 at the time 68 Later in 1978 Argentina sent a pregnant woman Silvia Morello de Palma to the Esperanza Base to give birth and to use the baby to stake their territorial claims to Antarctica 69 Once Australia opened up travel to Antarctica for women Elizabeth Chipman who first worked as a typist at Casey Station in 1976 chronicled all of the women to travel there up to 1984 70 Chipman worked to find the names of all women who had ever been to or even near Antarctica and eventually donated 19 folio boxes of her research to the National Library of Australia 70 71 Women gain ground edit nbsp In Young Ahn at King Sejong Station in Antarctica in 2015 The National Science Foundation NSF started long range planning in 1978 looking towards facilities that could accommodate a population made up of 25 women 61 In the 1979 1980 season there were only 43 women on the continent 72 By 1981 there were nearly one woman for every ten men in Antarctica 62 In 1983 the ratio was back to 20 men for every woman 21 In the 1980s Susan Solomon s research in Antarctica on the ozone layer and the ozone hole causes her to gain fame and acclaim 73 In Spain Josefina Castellvi helped coordinate and also participated in her country s expedition to Antarctica in 1984 74 Later after a Spanish base was constructed in 1988 Castellvi was put in charge after the leader Antoni Ballester had a stroke 74 The first female station leader on Antarctica was Australian Diana Patterson head of Mawson Station in 1989 75 The first woman station leader in charge of an American Antarctic station was LT Trina Baldwin CEC USN Civil Engineer Corps United States Navy 76 The first all female overwintering group was from Germany and spent the 1990 1991 winter at Georg von Neumayer The first German female station leader and medical doctor was Monika Puskeppeleit 77 In 1991 In Young Ahn was the first female leader of an Asian research station King Sejong Station and the first South Korean woman to step onto Antarctica 78 There were approximately 180 women in Antarctica during the 1990 1991 season 72 Women from several different countries were regular members of overwintering teams by 1992 77 The first all women expedition reached the South Pole in 1993 23 Diana Patterson the first female station leader on Antarctica saw change coming in 1995 She felt that many of the sexist views of the past had given way so that women were judged not by the fact that they were women but by how well you did your job 79 During the 1994 austral winter 80 women managed all three of the American Antarctic stations Janet Phillips at Amundsen Scott South Pole Station Karen Schwall at McMurdo Station and Ann Peoples at Palmer Station Social scientist Robin Burns studied the social structures of Antarctica in the 1995 1996 season She found that while many earlier women struggled there was more acceptance of women in Antarctica during the 1995 1996 season 81 One of the station managers Ann Peoples felt that a tipping point had been reached during the 1990 s and that life for women on Antarctica became more normal 62 There were still men in Antarctica who were not afraid to voice their opinion that women should not be on the ice but many others enjoyed having women as colleagues and friends 82 Women around this time began to feel like it was taken for granted now that women go to the Antarctic 50 Studies done in the early 2000s showed that women s inclusion in Antarctic groups were beneficial overall 83 In the early 2000s Robin Burns had found that female scientists who enjoyed their experience in Antarctica were the ones who were able to finish their scientific work and to complete their projects 84 Recent history edit nbsp Women celebrate at 2013 Icestock in Antarctica American Lynne Cox swam a mile in Antarctic water in 2003 85 In 2005 writer Gretchen Legler described how there were many more women in Antarctica that year and that some were lesbians 86 International Women s Day in 2012 saw more than fifty women celebrating in Antarctica and who made up 70 of the International Antarctic Expedition 87 In 2013 when the Netherlands opened their first Antarctic Lab Corina Brussaard was there to help set it up 88 Homeward Bound was a 10 year program designed to encourage women s participation in science and planned to send the first large 78 member all women expedition to Antarctica in 2016 89 The first group consisting of 76 women arrived in Antarctica for three weeks in December 2016 90 Fabian Dattner and Jess Melbourne Thomas founded the project and the Dattner Grant provided funding Each participant contributed 15 000 to the project 91 Homeward bound included businesswomen and scientists who look at climate change and women s leadership 64 The plan was to create a network of 1 000 women who would become leaders in the sciences 91 The first voyage departed South America in December 2016 92 90 An all woman team of United Kingdom Army soldiers called Exercise Ice Maiden started recruiting members in 2015 to cross the continent under their own power in 2017 93 It intended to study women s performance in the extreme antarctic summer environment 94 A team of six women completed the journey in 62 days after starting on 20 November 2017 95 Currently women make up 55 of membership in the Association of Polar Early Career Scientists APECS 32 In 2016 nearly a third of all researchers at the South Pole were women 64 The Australian Antarctic Program AAP makes a conscious effort to recruit women 96 A social media network has recently been created Women in Polar Science It aims to connect women working in the Arctic and Antarctic sciences and provides them with a platform to share and exchange knowledge experiences and opportunities Sexual harassment and sexism editWhen heavy equipment operator Julia Uberuaga first went to Antarctica in the late 70s and early 80s she recalled that the men stared at her or leered at her or otherwise let her know she was unwelcome on the job 24 Rita Matthews who went to Antarctica during the same period said that the men were all over the place There were some that would never stop going after you 24 In 1983 Marilyn Woody described living at McMurdo station and said It makes your head spin all this attention from all these men 21 Then she said You realize you can put a bag over your head and they ll still fall in love with you 22 Another scientist Cynthia McFee had been completely shut out of the male camaraderie at her location and had to deal with loneliness for long periods of time 22 Martha Kane the second woman to overwinter at the South Pole experienced negative pressure from men with some viewing her as an interloper who had insinuated herself into a male domain 22 In the 1990s some women experienced stigma in Antarctica These women were labeled whores for interacting with men and those who did not interact with men were called dykes 97 In the late 1990s and early 2000s women felt that Antarctic operations were not at all sympathetic to the needs of mothers and that there is a deep concern lest a pregnant woman give birth in Antarctica 98 Sexual harassment is still a problem for women working in Antarctica with many women scientists fielding unwanted sexual advances over and over again 99 Women continue to be outnumbered in many careers in Antarctica including fleet operations and trades 100 Some organizations such as the Australian Antarctic Division have created and adopted policies to combat sexual harassment and discrimination based on gender 81 The United States Antarctic Program USAP encourages women and minorities to apply 101 Women record breakers editSilvia Morella de Palma was the first woman to give birth in Antarctica delivering 3 4 kg 7 lb 8 oz Emilio Palma at the Argentine Esperanza base 7 January 1978 In 1988 American Lisa Densmore became the first woman to reach the summit Mount Vinson 102 In 1993 American Ann Bancroft led the first all woman expedition to the South Pole 103 Bancroft and Norwegian Liv Arnesen were the first women to ski across Antarctica in 2001 103 In 2010 the first female chaplain to serve on the continent of Antarctica was Chaplain Lt Col Laura Adelia of the U S Air Force where she served the people at McMurdo Station 104 Maria Leijerstam became the first person to cycle to the South Pole from the edge of the continent in 2013 She cycled on a recumbent tricycle 105 Anja Blacha set the record for the longest solo unsupported unassisted polar expedition by a woman in 2020 106 107 Honors and awards editIn 1975 Eleanor Honnywill became the first woman to be awarded the Fuchs Medal from the British Antarctic Survey BAS 77 The first woman to receive a Polar Medal was Virginia Fiennes in 1986 She was honored for her work in the Transglobe Expedition 77 She was also the first woman to winter in both polar regions 27 Denise Allen was the first woman awarded the Australian Antarctic Medal in 1989 77 See also editArctic exploration European and American voyages of scientific exploration Farthest South First women to fly to Antarctica Heroic Age of Antarctic Exploration History of Antarctica List of Antarctic women List of polar explorers Timeline of women in Antarctica Women in science nbsp Geography portalReferences editCitations edit Women in Antarctica Sharing this Life Changing Experience Archived 10 March 2012 at the Wayback Machine transcript of speech by Robin Burns given at the 4th Annual Phillip Law Lecture Hobart Tasmania Australia 18 June 2005 Retrieved 5 August 2010 a b c Dodds 2009 p 506 a b Bogle Ariel 11 August 2016 New Wikipedia Project Champions Women Scientists in the Antarctic Mashable Retrieved 24 August 2016 SANAE IV Antarctic Legacy of South Africa Retrieved 29 August 2016 a b Women Scientists Antarctica Bound Alamogordo Daily News 24 January 1969 Retrieved 29 August 2016 via Newspapers com Burns 2007 p 1092 Burns 2001 p 11 a b Dodds 2009 p 508 Burns 2000 p 167 Francis Gavin 2012 Empire Antarctica Ice Silence and Emperor Penguins Berkeley CA Chatto amp Windus pp 89 255 ISBN 9781619021846 a b Dodds 2009 p 505 Hament Ellyn A Warmer Climate for Women in Antarctica Origins Antarctica Scientific Journeys from McMurdo to the Pole Exploratorium Retrieved 24 August 2016 a b Lewander 2009 p 95 a b c Davis Amanda 14 April 2016 This IEEE Fellow Blazed a Trail for Female Scientists in Antarctica The Institute Retrieved 27 August 2016 Collins 2009 p 515 a b Blackadder 2015 p 170 Dodds 2009 p 507 Montgomery Ruth 1 November 1958 Womanless Continent of Snow and Cold Lincoln Evening Journal Retrieved 29 August 2016 via Newspapers com Collins 2009 p 516 Glasberg Elena 2011 Living Ice Rediscovery of the Poles in an Era of Climate Crisis Women s Studies Quarterly 39 3 229 230 doi 10 1353 wsq 2011 0072 S2CID 84341804 via Project MUSE a b c d Satchell Michael 5 June 1983 Women Who Conquer the South Pole The San Bernardino County Sun Retrieved 29 August 2016 via Newspapers com a b c d Satchell Michael 5 June 1983 Women Who Conquer the South Pole continued The San Bernardino County Sun Retrieved 29 August 2016 via Newspapers com a b Legler 2004 p 37 a b c d Dean Cornelia 10 November 1998 After a Struggle Women Win A Place on the Ice In Labs and in the Field a New Outlook The New York Times Retrieved 30 August 2016 a b Hulbe Wang amp Ommanney 2010 p 960 Burns 2000 p 173 a b Mills William James 2003 Exploring Polar Frontiers A Historical Encyclopedia Vol 1 Santa Barbara CA ABC CLIO pp 716 717 ISBN 9781576074220 a b The First Women in Antarctica National Science Foundation 11 January 2010 Retrieved 24 August 2016 a b Antarctic Women Then amp Now The Antarctic Book of Cooking and Cleaning Archived from the original on 27 September 2016 Retrieved 27 August 2016 Burns 2001 p 12 a b Miller Robert C 11 February 1974 Women in Antarctic The Daily Herald Retrieved 29 August 2016 via Newspapers com a b Celebrating Women in Antarctic Research The Scientific Committee on Antarctic Research Archived from the original on 17 August 2017 Retrieved 27 August 2016 a b Hulbe Wang amp Ommanney 2010 p 947 Henriques Martha The bones that could shape Antarctica s fate BBC Future Retrieved 22 July 2021 a b c Blackadder 2015 p 171 a b The first woman in Antarctica www antarctica gov au Australian Antarctic Division 2012 Retrieved 27 June 2016 Ernest Walker collection Archives Hub archiveshub jisc ac uk Retrieved 3 January 2021 a b Roldan Gabriela 2010 Changes in the Contributions of Women to Antarctic National Programmes PDF PCAS 13 Review hdl 10092 13909 Archived from the original PDF on 18 January 2017 Retrieved 30 August 2016 Lewander 2009 p 90 Blackadder 2015 p 172 Walker 2013 p 17 Blackadder 2015 p 173 174 a b Blackadder 2015 p 174 Blackadder Jesse 1 January 2013a Illuminations casting light upon the earliest female travellers to Antarctica DCA thesis hdl 1959 7 546781 Bogen H 1957 Main events in the history of Antarctic exploration Sandefjord Norwegian Whaling Gazette page 85 Famous Firsts The Antarctic Sun United States Antarctic Program 13 November 2009 Retrieved 25 August 2016 Long John 2001 Mountains of Madness A Scientist s Odyssey in Antarctica Washington D C Joseph Henry Press pp 10 ISBN 978 0309070775 first women antarctica Burns 2001 p 15 Rothblum Weinstock amp Morris 1998 p 2 a b c d e Aston Felicity September 2005 Women of the White Continent Geographical Campion Interactive Publishing 77 9 26 Retrieved 25 August 2016 via EBSCOhost Lewander 2009 p 93 a b Burns 2007 p 1094 Pan Am Way Down South PDF Pan Am Historical Foundation Retrieved 9 September 2016 a b c d Bull Colin 13 November 2009 Behind the Scenes The Antarctic Sun United States Antarctic Program Retrieved 25 August 2016 First Women at Pole South Pole Station Retrieved 24 August 2016 a b Legler 2004 p 36 Peden 1998 p 17 Peden 1998 p 18 Peden 1998 p 19 Mary Alice McWhinnie 1922 1980 Smithsonian Retrieved 19 August 2022 a b Hudson Ken 13 January 1978 Women in Antarctica No Longer Frozen Out Santa Cruz Sentinel Retrieved 29 August 2016 via Newspapers com a b c Rejcek Peter 13 November 2009 Women Fully Integrated Into USAP Over Last 40 Years The Antarctic Sun United States Antarctic Program Retrieved 25 August 2016 Jones Beth 20 May 2012 Women Won t Like Working in Antarctica as There are No Shops and Hairdressers The Telegraph Retrieved 25 August 2016 a b c Brueck Hilary 13 February 2016 Meet the All Women Team heading to Antarctica This Year Forbes Retrieved 27 August 2016 Janet Thomson An Improper Segregation of Scientists at the British Antarctic Survey Voices of Science British Library Archived from the original on 3 May 2017 Retrieved 27 August 2016 Sugden David 1987 The Polar and Glacial World In Clark Michael J Gregory Kenneth J Gurnell Angela M eds Horizons in Physical Geology Totowa NJ Barnes amp Noble Books p 230 ISBN 978 0389207528 Ferraro Daiana Paola Cabo Laura Isabel De Libertelli Marcela Monica Quartino Maria Liliana Clerici 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Heroines of the Ice PDF Australian Geographic 113 88 98 Retrieved 30 August 2016 Blackadder Jesse 2015 Frozen Voices Women Silence and Antarctica PDF In Hince Bernadette Summerson Rupert Wiesel Arnan eds Antarctica Music Sounds and Cultural Connections Canberra ANU Press Burns Robin 2000 Women in Antarctic Science Forging New Practices and Meanings Women s Studies Quarterly 28 1 165 180 JSTOR 40004452 Burns Robin 2001 Just Tell Them I Survived Women in Antarctica Crows Nest NSW Allen amp Unwin ISBN 978 1865083827 Burns Robin 2007 Women in Antarctica From Companions to Professionals In Riffenburgh Beau ed Encyclopedia of the Antarctic Vol 1 New York Routledge ISBN 9780415970242 Collins Christy 2009 The Australian Antarctic Territory A Man s World PDF Signs 34 3 514 519 doi 10 1086 593379 S2CID 129881739 Retrieved 28 August 2016 Dodds Kaus 2009 Settling and Unsettling Antarctica Signs 34 3 505 509 doi 10 1086 593340 JSTOR 10 1086 593340 S2CID 143450248 Hulbe Christina L Wang Weili Ommanney Simon 2010 Women in Glaciology a Historical Perspective PDF Journal of Glaciology 56 200 944 964 Bibcode 2010JGlac 56 944H doi 10 3189 002214311796406202 Retrieved 27 August 2016 Legler Gretchen 2004 The Sky the Earth the Sea the Soul In Allister Mark Christopher ed Eco man New Perspectives on Masculinity and Nature Charlottesville University of Virginia Press ISBN 978 0813923048 Lewander Lisbeth 2009 Women and Civilisation on Ice In Hansson Heidi Norberg Cathrine eds Cold Matters Cultural Perceptions of Snow Ice and Cold Umea Umea University pp 89 102 Peden Irene C 1998 If You Fail There Won t Be Another Woman on the Antarctic Continent for a Generation In Rothblum Esther D Weinstock Jacqueline S Morris Jessica F eds Women in the Antarctic New York The Haworth Press Inc ISBN 978 0789002471 Rothblum Esther D Weinstock Jacqueline S Morris Jessica F 1998 Introduction Women in the Antarctic New York The Haworth Press ISBN 978 0789002471 Rossiter Margaret W 2012 Women Scientists in America Forging a New World Since 1972 Vol 3 Baltimore The Johns Hopkins University Press ISBN 9781421402338 Verbitsky Jane 2015 Antarctica as a Community In Wilson Stacey Ann ed Identity Culture and the Politics of community Development Newcastle upon Tyne Cambridge Scholars Publishing ISBN 9781443871204 Walker Gabrielle 2013 Antarctica An Intimate Portrait of a Mysterious Continent Boston Houghton Mifflin Harcourt ISBN 9780151015207 External links editWomen in Antarctica Guide to the Papers of Elizabeth Chipman Women in Antarctic science editathons Scientific Committee on Antarctic Research Women in Red Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Women in Antarctica amp oldid 1217827944, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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