South (57 page)

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Authors: Ernest Shackleton

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Peter (dog)
petrels
See also
bird life
Pinkey (dog)
Plankton
Pompey (dog)
porpoises
Port Chalmers
positions
of Ross Sea Party
Possession Bay
Possession Isles
“Potash and Perlmutter,” 101
Pram Point
pressure:
in Ross Sea
in Weddell Sea
See also
pack ice
Prince George Island
program of Expedition
public schools
Punta Arenas
pups
 
Queen Alexandra
Quest
 
Radiolaria
rain
rats on South Georgia
Rampart Berg
Razorback Island
refraction.
See
atmospheric effects
reindeer
Richards
Rickenson
Rio Secco
Rocky Mountain Depot
Ross
Ross Island
Ross Sea
Ross Sea Party Royal Geographical Society ,
xxiv
Ryan, Lieut., R. N. R.
 
Safety Camp
Saint (dog)
Sally (dog)
Samson (dog)
Sanders Island
Santiago
Saunders, Edward
scientific observations commenced
scientific work proposed
Scotia
Scott, Robert Falcon
sea elephants
sea leopard
seal blubber
seal meat
seals
crab-eater seal
Ross seal
Weddell seal
semaphore:
for sledging parties
on bridge
shags
Shackleton, Sir Ernest
shoaling, of sea floor
shore party
sledging parties, proposed
Snapper (dog)
Snow Hill
Soldier (dog)
Sorlle, Mr.
South Georgia
South Orkneys
South Sandwich Islands
Southern Sky
Spencer-Smith
splitting ice floes
Stained Berg
Stancomb Wills, Dame Janet
Stancomb Wills
(boat)
Stenhouse, Lieut. J. R.
Stevens
stove
Stromness
Sue (dog)
sun:
disappears
sets twice
See also
atmospheric effects
swells
 
temperature, air
sea
Tent Island
tent orderlies
tents
terns
See also
bird life
Terriss, Ellaline
“The Ritz,” 39
Thom, Captain
Thompson
tide rip
tobacco substitutes
Towser (dog)
Transcontinental party
Tripp, Leonard
Tulloch, Mr.
Turks’ Head
 
Uruguayan government
 
Vahsel Bay
Victoria Mountains
Vincent
Vinie’s Hill
Virol
 
wave, enormous
weather:
at Cape Evans
at Elephant Island
at Ocean Camp
at Patience Camp
See also
temperature
Weddell Sea
ice conditions in ,
Weddell Sea (
cont.
)
ice conditions in (
cont.
) 95
 
plateau
winds in
Western Mountains
whales
blue
humpback and finner seen
sperm
See also
killer whales
Wilhelmina Bay
Willywaw
Wild, Ernest
Wild, Frank
Wordie
World War
Worsley
wreckage at South Georgia
 
yaks
Yelcho
Young, Douglas
Young Island
FOR THE BEST IN CLASSIC ADVENTURE LOOK FOR THE
The
Bounty
Mutiny
William Bligh and Edward Christian
Edited and with an Introduction by R. D. Madison
The story of this famous mutiny has many beginnings and many endings but they all intersect on an April morning in 1789 near the island known today as Tonga. That morning, William Bligh and eighteen surly seamen were expelled from the
Bounty
and began what would be the greatest open-boat voyage in history, sailing some 4,000 miles to safety in Timor. The mutineers, led by Fletcher Christian, sailed off into a mystery that has never been entirely resolved. For the first time, all of the relevant texts and documents related to the famous mutiny, including the full text of Bligh’s
Narrative of the Mutiny
, the minutes of the court proceedings, and a rich selection of subsequent
Bounty
narratives.
ISBN 0-14-043916-1
 
Sailing Alone around the World
Joshua Slocum
Introduction and Notes by Thomas Philbrick
Setting off alone from Boston aboard the thirty-six foot wooden sloop
Spray
in April 1895, Captain Slocum began a three-year solo voyage of more than 46,000 miles that remains unmatched in maritime history for courage, skill, and determination. This autobiographical account endures as one of the greatest adventure narratives ever written.
ISBN 0-14-043736-3
 
The Voyage of the
Beagle
Charles Darwin’s Journal of Researches
Edited and Abridged with an Introduction by Janet Browne
and Michael Neve
This shortened version of Darwin’s journal of his five-year voyage on the HMS
Beagle
provides a profusion of detail about natural history and geology and illuminates the local people, politics, and customs of the places he visited.
ISBN 0-14-043268-X
FOR THE BEST IN CLASSIC ADVENTURE LOOK FOR THE
In Patagonia
Bruce Chatwin
Introduction by Nicholas Shakespeare
This exquisite account describes Chatwin’s journey through “the uttermost part of the earth,” that stretch of land at the southern tip of South America, where bandits were once made welcome and Charles Darwin formed part of his theory of evolution.
ISBN 0-14-243719-0
 
The Four Voyages
Christopher Columbus
Edited and Translated with an Introduction by J. M. Cohen
This volume includes Columbus’s letters and logbook and remains the definitive primary source on his voyages to Cuba, Hispaniola, Jamaica, Trinidad, and Central America.
ISBN 0-14-044217-0
 
The Travels
Marco Polo
Translated with an Introduction by Ronald Latham
Despite piracy, shipwreck, brigandage, and wild beasts, Polo moved in a world of highly organized commerce. This chronicle of his travels through Asia, whether read as fact or fiction, is alive with adventures, geographical information, and descriptions of natural phenomena.
ISBN 0-14-044057-7
 
In the South Seas
Robert Louis Stevenson
Edited with an Introduction by Neil Rennie
Combining personal anecdote and historical account, autobiography and anthropology, Stevenson and the South Sea islands, the English novelist’s posthumously published work is a classic of travel writing.
ISBN 0-14-043436-4
FOR THE BEST IN CLASSIC ADVENTURE LOOK FOR THE
Roughing It
Mark Twain
Edited with an Introduction by Hamlin Hill
A fascinating picture of the American frontier emerges from Twain’s fictionalized recollections of his experiences prospecting for gold, speculating in timber, and writing for a succession of small Western newspapers during the 1860s.
ISBN 0-14-039010-3
 
Chronicle of the Narváez Expedition
Alvar Núñez Cabeza de Vaca
Revised and Annotated Translation by Harold Augenbraum
and an Introduction by Ilan Stavans
The first major narrative detailing the exploration of North America by Spanish conquistadors, Cabeza de Vaca’s chronicle describes the nine-year odyssey endured by him and his men after a shipwreck forced them to make a westward journey on foot from present-day Florida to California.
ISBN 0-14-243707-7
 
The Loss of the Ship
Essex
, Sunk by a Whale
First Person Accounts
Thomas Nickerson and Owen Chase
Edited by Thomas Philbrick with an Introduction
by Nathaniel Philbrick
In 1820, the Nantucket whaleship
Essex
was rammed and sunk by an angry sperm whale. The incident was the
Titanic
story of its day and provided the inspiration for Melville’s
Moby-Dick
. This edition combines the only extant first-person narratives of the doomed voyage with every relevant contemporary account.
ISBN 0-14-043796-7
FOR THE BEST IN CLASSIC ADVENTURE LOOK FOR THE
The Oregon Trail
Francis Parkman, Jr.
Edited with an Introduction by David Levin
On April 28, 1846, Francis Parkman left Saint Louis on his first expedition west.
The Oregon Trail
documents his adventures in the wilderness, sheds light on America’s westward expansion, and celebrates the American spirit.
ISBN 0-14-039042-1

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