This collection of journals memoirs and letters tells the remarkable story of Robert Falcon Scott's last journey to the Antarctic as seen through the eyes of Charles S. Wright the expedition's physicist and glaciologist. When Captain Scott left Britain in 1910 on his second and last Antarctic expedition he took with him the most comprehensive party of scientists yet to visit the continent. Among them was Charles Wright a young Canadian. During the thirty-month expedition Wright proved to be a keen observer keeping an account of the adventure in his diaries and letters. Detailing both his scientific discoveries and his reactions to the hardships and wonders of the expedition Wright's story culminates in the dramatic search for and discovery of Scott and two other members of the party who perished on their return to their base camp from an expedition to the Pole. Wright's diaries illustrated in brilliant detail by his daughter Pat F. Wright have been edited by Pat Wright and by polar explorer and glaciologist Colin Bull. They provide an insider's view of a significant adventure in advancement of polar scientific discovery.<b>Colin Bull</b> dean emeritus at The Ohio State University has conducted extensive glaciological and geophysical research in the Antarctic and the Arctic over the last forty years. <b>Pat F. Wright</b> is a nature artist and owns a wildlife artists' gallery on Saltspring Island British Columbia.
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