February 2013 – Volume Nineteen, Number Two
EXPEDITION NEWS, now in its 19th year, is the monthly review of significant expeditions, research projects and newsworthy adventures. It is distributed online to media representatives, corporate sponsors, educators, research librarians, explorers, environmentalists, and outdoor enthusiasts. This forum on exploration covers projects that stimulate, motivate and educate.
HAMS LAUNCH DXPEDITION TO REMOTE CLIPPERTON ATOLL
We were amateur radio operators once at EN. Truth be told, we’re still fluent in Morse code, although it doesn’t come up much in day-to-day conversation. As so-called “ham” radio celebrates its 100th anniversary as a hobby, you can find hams RVing, studying astronomy, hiking and backpacking, sailing, weather spotting, and preparing to handle emergency communications – situations where shortwave radio is often the only means of communications.
Thus, it gladdens our solder-stained fingers to learn of an expedition – actually a DXpedition (DX being shorthand for distance), leaving San Diego this month for the remote uninhabited atoll of Clipperton. The island is located 621-mi./1,000 km southwest of Mexico in the Pacific Ocean and is considered to be an important living lab to understand the ecology and impact of human activities in the Pacific. The Explorers Club-flagged project will be led by Dr. Robert W. Schmieder, director of Cordell Expeditions, a nonprofit scientific organization based in Walnut Creek, Calif.
The team hopes to conduct amateur radio conversations (or QSO’s) with up to 100,000 radio amateurs worldwide using the callsign TX5K.
Once on Clipperton, the 30-member international team will also monitor, collect and remove plastic and other debris that beaches on the island; and search for alien species (the nasty big-headed ant, algae, and insects) as they study the equilibrium of the wildlife found there. Exotic species like invasive rats were introduced by a recent shipwreck. How do they compete with local animals is one question they hope to answer.
They will also develop and attempt to fly the longest kite, potentially setting a new world record, according to Belgian Louis-Philippe Loncke who will explore the island, film and remove the plastic.
Moving all the equipment on and off the support ship is a risky challenge as the coral reef cannot be damaged and the team will have to deal with powerful surf. The island has no water – the inland lake is acid – and the sun, heat, rats and large crabs will be a constant threat.
But for the 100,000 hams around the world who compete with one another for the most countries contacted, it will be a thrill to add this remote territory to their logbooks.
(For more information: www.cordell.org/CI/)
NOLS PLANS DENALI EXPEDITION
To inspire youth of color – and particularly African-American youth – to get outside, get active and connect with nature, the National Outdoor Leadership School (NOLS) is planning an expedition with African-American participants to summit Denali in June 2013. The longest and most strenuous day on Denali will be the summit day, a five-mile trip up and back to High Camp.
Five miles is roughly equal to 10,000 steps, thus the origin of a rallying cry for partner organization to encourage families to hike their own “10,000 Steps to Denali” in outdoor spaces near their home.
Afterwards, team members will tour public and charter schools, outdoor outreach organizations, and church groups to serve as role models, inspiring youth of color to connect with America’s wild places, according to Bruce A. Palmer, director of admission and marketing.
“Certainly not everyone wants to climb Denali, but we do think this expedition will open young people of color to opportunities for enjoying an outdoor lifestyle.”
The budget for the project is $260,000 according to the sponsorship proposal. Supporters include REI, The North Face Deuter USA, and Optic Nerve.
(For more information: www.nols.edu).
EXPEDITION UPDATE
Arctic Explorer Abandons Attempt to Solo Summit Denali
After 19 days on North America's tallest mountain, Arctic explorer and Minnesota climber Lonnie Dupre has abandoned his third attempt to become the first person to summit Mount McKinley (also known as Denali) alone in the month of January (see EN, January 2013).
As he did during his first attempt to summit Denali in 2011, Dupre reached high camp at 17,200 feet. He had hoped that after a 12-hour climb from the 14,200-ft. camp, he could make the final push to the summit. However, extremely hard snow made it impossible to build a safe snow cave and instead of getting much needed rest, he spent the night trying to keep the cave – and himself – warm. When he called his base camp at 4 a.m. on January 27, it was -35 degrees F. in the snow cave.
It was virtually a life-or-death decision for Dupre, his staff said in a statement to press. Even if he had made the summit, which would have meant a 12-hour or more travel day between 17,200 feet and the summit and back, he knew he would lack the energy or means to survive back at the 17,200-ft. camp.
Although disappointed that his third consecutive try at a solo summit in January was not successful, Dupre does not consider his expedition a failure. During the expedition, he conducted research and gathered microbe samples for the Biosphere 2 project run by Adventurers and Scientists for Conservation (see related story). The data will provide a better understanding of how climate change affects the production of living matter in extreme environments.
Dupre, a resident of Grand Marais, Minn., has 25 years of polar expedition experience, and is best known as the first to circumnavigate Greenland via non-motorized means, and two expeditions to the North Pole.
(For more information: www.OneWorldEndeavors.com).
Shackleton’s Stash Returned to Antarctic
Three bottles of rare, 19th century Scotch found beneath the floor boards of Antarctic explorer Ernest Shackleton's abandoned expedition base were recently returned to the polar continent after a distiller flew them to Scotland to recreate the long-lost recipe, according to the Associated Press (see EN, December 2011).
Unopened bottles of the Mackinlay's whisky will be transferred by March from Ross Island to Shackleton's desolate hut at Cape Royds and returned beneath the restored hut. It’s part of a program to protect the legacy of the so-called heroic era of Antarctic exploration from 1898 to 1915.
Bottled in 1898 after the blend was aged 15 years, the Mackinlay bottles were among three crates of Scotch and two of brandy buried beneath a basic hut Shackleton had used during his dramatic 1907 Nimrod excursion to the Antarctic. The expedition failed to reach the South Pole but set a record at the time for reaching the farthest southern latitude.
Shackleton's stash was discovered frozen in ice by conservationists in 2010. The crates were frozen solid after more than a century beneath the Antarctic surface. But the bottles within were found intact - and researchers could hear the whisky sloshing around inside. Antarctica's minus 22 degrees F. (-30 degrees C.) temperature was not enough to freeze the liquor.
Distiller Whyte & Mackay, which now owns the Mackinlay brand, chartered a private jet to take the bottles from the Antarctic operations headquarters in the New Zealand city of Christchurch to Scotland for analysis in 2011.
The recipe for the whisky had been lost. But Whyte & Mackay recreated a limited edition of 50,000 bottles from a sample drawn with a syringe through a cork of one of the bottles. The conservation work of the Antarctic Heritage Trust receives five British pounds for every bottle sold.
EXPEDITION NOTES
Shackleton’s Epic Voyage Re-created
It took Adelaide, South Australia, adventurer Tim Jarvis and his five-person crew 12 days to make the 800 nautical mile sea voyage from Elephant Island, an icy chunk of Antarctica’s South Shetlands archipelago, to South Georgia Island in a bid to re-create Sir Ernest Shackleton’s epic journey to rescue his crew in 1916. Shackleton and crew endured 14 days to cover the same distance.
The recent voyage was made in a 22-1/2-ft. replica of Shackleton’s James Caird lifeboat. The next step will be for Jarvis, mountaineer Barry Gray and cameraman Ed Wardle to traverse the mountainous interior of South Georgia Island to reach the whaling station at Stromness in a journey which should take two days. At press time, they were waiting for the weather to clear.
Wardle, who has twice reached the summit of Mt Everest, said of the sea voyage, “it was the hardest thing I have ever done."
(For more information: www.shackletonepic.com)
Don’t Forget to Write
A Dutch company called Mars One has announced plans to create the first human settlement on the Red Planet in just 10 years.
Mars One plans to pick travelers to submit to a full-time training program that will conclude with a one-way ticket to Mars, where a prepared colony will be waiting.
Prospective colonists must be at least 18 years old, and the Mars One team says qualities such as resiliency, adaptability, creativity, resourcefulness and curiosity will be given high priority. All necessary skills for Mars survival will be taught to the colonists over the next decade as they prepare full time to blast into space – and history.
Mars One founders Bas Landsorp and Arno Wielders, entrepreneurs with ties to technology and space industries, said they plan to send probes and rovers as early as 2016 to prepare the planet for human habitation.
According to the Los Angeles Times, Space X founder Elon Musk is also eyeing plans to populate Mars, offering aspiring Martians a berth for half a million dollars.
(For more information: www.mars-one.com/en/)
Moon is “Awesomely Beautiful Place”
Forty years ago, at the age of 36, General Charles Duke was the youngest man to walk on the moon, and third to last. On Jan. 11 he was in The Explorers Club’s Clark Room – an intimate setting indeed for an SRO crowd of members, guests and media includingC-SPAN, which will broadcast his interview this spring.
Besides Apollo 16, Duke is known for telling Apollo 11 astronauts, as they almost had to abort their lunar landing in 1969, “You’ve had a bunch of us guys about to turn blue. We’re breathing again.”
He admitted to Club member James Clash, who interviewed him as part of the “Exploring Legends” series, that he fell on his backpack while attempting a “Lunar Olympics” high jump on the lunar soil.
“Were you afraid?” Clash asked him.
“Fear is all right if you respond with training,” he responded. Later Duke commented, “We were overwhelmed by the beauty of the moon. This is the most awesomely beautiful place I’ve ever seen.” He says the iPhone on his hip has 2,000 times the memory of his Apollo 16 computer in 1972.
“I tell folks that we didn’t spend a dime going to the moon. The money was spent employing the hundreds of thousands of people across America.”
Duke continued, “Going to the moon was a tremendously rewarding human experience for me. It’s been 40 years and I still get excited talking about it.”
Report From the Outdoor Retailer Show in Salt Lake
What the Consumer Electronic Show (CES) is to Las Vegas, that’s how important the bi-annual Outdoor Retailer Show (www.oudoorretailer.com) is to Salt Lake when over 20,000 outdoor industry representatives come to the city.
Outdoor Retailer brings together 950 brands and thousands of retailers, industry advocates and media to conduct the business of outdoor recreation through booth displays, product demos, award programs, guest speakers, and networking events such as an indoor floor hockey competition.
For those in the expedition field, this is where you go to score either cash or in-kind sponsorship from companies such as The North Face, Mountain Hardwear, or Sierra Designs.
While the manufacturers are primarily concerned about convincing outdoor specialty retailers to buy their products, they will often lend an ear to an appropriate expedition sponsorship pitch.
Here are some highlights from this year’s trade show:
• We’re Staying Right Here
Outdoor Retailer organizers, backed by the unanimous support of the Outdoor Industry Association (OIA), announced the Winter and Summer Market tradeshows will continue at the Salt Palace Convention Center in Salt Lake City through the end of 2016. Outdoor Retailer began hosting the tradeshow in Salt Lake City in 1996 and was previously contracted with Salt Lake through 2014. The next show, the Outdoor Retailer Summer Market, is scheduled for July 31 to Aug. 3, 2013.
• Outdoors Needs More Diversity
The NOLS expedition to Denali (see previous story) is but a small step towards increasing diversity in the outdoor experience. But more needs to be done, according to Frank Hugelmeyer, president and CEO of the Outdoor Industry Association. During a Winter Market breakfast, he said, “The outdoor industry does not look like the face of America. We are not diverse enough. We have to be much more inclusive than we are. … this is our fiscal cliff.”
By extension, the same could be said about the exploration field.
• Strayed is Back on Course
Cheryl Strayed, 44, admitted that she was addicted to sex and drugs, a topic a bit hard to take so early in the morning during her breakfast presentation to the Conservation Alliance about her book, Wild: From Lost to Found on the Pacific Crest Trail (Alfred A. Knopf, 2012).
“Maybe there ought to be an Indoor Retailer Show?” she joked. The bestselling author later explained how she straightened out her life by hiking the Pacific Crest Trail, beginning her 94-day journey just 48 hours after shooting heroin.
What kept her going? “The astounding and profound beauty of the wilderness, our sacred land … it contributes to who we are as humans.” She says one goal of writing her book was to tell the story that the outdoors belong to everyone.
• Turning Explorers into Citizen-Scientists
Ever been on an expedition and had a selfish feeling, like you could be doing more for the world? Then consider a partnership with Adventurers and Scientists for Conservation (ASC) based in Bozeman, Mont.
The ASC, established in January 2011, is a nonprofit dedicated to improving the availability of scientific information through partnerships between adventure athletes and scientists.
The group mobilizes an army of citizen-scientists – ambassadors of the outdoors – to help the science community gather inexpensive, reliable, and otherwise unattainable data from around the world.
“We provide adventurers with an opportunity to make a difference while they play,” said Gregg Treinish, founder/executive director. He explains that by the end of 2012, ASC has sent out over 1,000 explorers and adventurers into the field to collect data on behalf of 110 scientists.
In March, he plans to travel to Mongolia to search for feces containing DNA evidence of wolverines. “We start by looking for tracks, then scat and traces of urine,” he tells EN at Winter Market.
When asked if his parents in Cleveland thought their son would grow up to someday search for wolverine poop, he said, “They are supportive, but lose a lot of sleep because of me. Still, I do it because we as a society have put ourselves above other species. Other species deserve equal respect.”
(For more information: adventureandscience.org)
• Climbing Legend Fred Beckey Honored
Mountaineer, environmentalist and author Fred Beckey, 90, received a Lifetime Achievement Award from the Outdoor Industry Association, presented by adidas Outdoor. Beckey completed more first ascents than any other human and has been a legendary figure in the world of mountaineering for more than 70 years.
(For more information: www.outdoorindustry.org)
QUOTE OF THE MONTH
An explorer who is unaware of the environment and cultures around him can do more harm than he can imagine … to exploration and to the natives of the area.”
– Sven Hedin, Swedish geographer, topographer, explorer, photographer, and travel writer (1865-1952)
MEDIA MATTERS
Lost Navy Submarine Found off Key West
The husband-wife team of Christine Dennison and Tim Taylor were profiled in the New York Times on Jan. 10 about their success in locating a previously lost Navy submarine, the R-12, that sank and was missing for nearly 70 years.
According to the story by Nate Schweber, the R-12 was built in Quincy, Mass., during World War I and launched just two months after the Treaty of Versailles was signed. It patrolled Pearl Harbor in the 1920s and the Panama Canal in the early 1940s. Tragically, it sank somewhere off the coast of Key West, Fla., on June 12, 1943.
The R-12 went down in just 15 seconds, taking 42 men with it. It was just the sixth U.S. submarine (out of 52 lost) from WWII to be found and the second in U.S. waters.
In October 2010, Taylor, an underwater explorer, searched 11 miles off the coast of Key West using a remote-controlled submarine outfitted with sonar. It generated an image of something 600 feet below the surface, about 200 feet long, shaped like a mangled rocket.
The couple plan to hold a memorial in Key West in June to commemorate the 70th anniversary of the R-12’s sinking, and have advocated for the submarine’s final resting spot to be included inside the Florida Keys National Marine Sanctuary.
CLIMBING FOR DOLLARS
Dark Snow Project Turns to Crowdfunding
There is already much excitement in the arts, media and beyond about the potential of crowdfunding – via sites such as Kickstarter and IndieGoGo – to finance projects that might otherwise have remained an unfulfilled dream. To date, though, few scientific expeditions have successfully utilized this new online tool.
The Dark Snow Project expects to change this. Jason Box, a climatologist based at the Byrd Polar Research Center at Ohio State University, is hoping to raise $150,000 over the coming months to pay for an expedition this summer to the "ice dome" of Greenland to gather samples of snow.
Dark Snow is a field and lab project to measure the impact of changing wildfire and industrial soot on snow and ice reflectivity. Soot darkens snow and ice, increasing solar energy absorption, hastening the melt of the cryosphere (portions of the Earth’s surface where water is in solid form).
At press time, Box had already raised more than $60,000, but was turning to crowdfunding to secure the remaining amount. Roughly two-thirds of this money, he says, will be spent on renting a plane to transport the team onto the ice sheet.
Box has also invited Peter Sinclair along as a team-member, who, as "Greenman3610", is probably best known for his YouTube videos on climate change (www.youtube.com/user/greenman3610).
This collaboration will ensure that anyone who has made a donation will be kept up-to-date with the researchers' progress. It will also mean the wider world will gain better insight into not just the science being conducted, but also the environmental implications of soot settling on the Arctic snow and ice.
(For more information: www.darksnowproject.org)
Polartec Challenge Grants Awarded
Last month, Polartec announced the recipients of its 22nd annual Polartec Challenge Grant, an international grant program encouraging the spirit and practice of human-powered outdoor adventure. Four adventures will receive funding and support from Polartec for 2013:
• Agnieszka and Mateusz Waligora will attempt a nearly 1,243-mi./2,000 km, three-desert bicycle traverse of the rugged Canning Stock Route in Australia, and raise awareness about the Aboriginal history of the regions covered.
• Meghan Kelly, Pip Hunt, Nat Segal, McKenna Peterson, Karissa Tuthill, and Martha Hunt will attempt to ski first descents in Greenland via a sailboat from Iceland.
• Amber Valenti, Rebecca Dennis and Sabra Purdy will embark on a 2,734-mi./4,400 km source-to-sea expedition on the free-flowing Amur River through three countries in southern Siberia – as a living reminder of what's been lost by damming, and as a celebration of wild places that still exist.
• Alexander Martin and a team of fellow adventurers will cross Asia using bikes and paddles to tell stories of the people and places traveled through, and inspire others to human-powered travel and river conservation.
In addition to the grant money, all of this year’s Polartec Challenge winners will be fully outfitted with Polartec garments, designed to keep them warm, dry and comfortable in harsh climates.
(For more information: www.polartec.com/polartec-challenge/)
EXPEDITION MARKETING
That’s One Giant Schlep
To promote a new line of products called Apollo, Unilever will send 22 consumers into space. Former astronaut Buzz Aldrin, hired as a spokesperson, announced the contest in New York last month. The brand refers to the effort as the Axe Apollo Space Academy, or AASA, to rhyme with NASA. Trips will be on a suborbital space plane, the Lynx, in 2014. The value of each ticket is priced at $100,000 and will depart from Curacao. The theme for the campaign is: “Nothing beats an astronaut. Ever.”
Says Aldrin in an online video, “Now you can become part of this privileged group and experience everything that I have.”
(For more information: www.spacexc.com)
ON THE HORIZON
Public Invited to John Glenn Interview, Mar. 16, 2013, New York
The public is invited to a major Explorers Club event on Mar. 16 featuring a live interview with Senator John Glenn at New York’s Waldorf Astoria Hotel. The interview will be conducted by Club member Jim Clash as part of the Club’s new “Exploring Legends” lecture series.
Glenn, along with fellow Mercury astronaut Scott Carpenter, will receive the “President’s Legends Medal” at the 109th Explorers Club Annual Dinner later that evening, also at the Waldorf.
An Honorary Member of the 108-year-old Club, Glenn became the first American to orbit the Earth on Feb. 20, 1962, as part of the Mercury program. After leaving NASA, he won a senate seat and served for over 30 years as a democrat from Ohio. When he was 77, Glenn flew again, aboard the Shuttle Discovery, and still holds the record for oldest man in space.
Limited seating at $100 per ticket is available to the general public by contacting 212 628 8383 or reservations@explorers.org.
WEB WATCH
Extreme Bliss
What’s the best definition of extreme bliss? We’re not quite sure, but we suspect this comes close: Swedish adventurer Aleksander Gamme took this video during a long roundtrip trek to the South Pole in 2011-12. Along the way he buried excess items in snowdrifts to keep his backpack light. The video was taken on day 86 when he discovered just what he left behind. No translation is necessary. See the video here: http://t.co/4E6JHXiT
DEPARTMENT OF CORRECTIONS
Here’s What We Meant to Say
We forgot an important word in our e-mail subject line last month. In the story about Denali climber Lonnie Dupre, we should have asked whether Denali can ever be soloed in January, not just winter. The story was correct – if Dupre had been successful climbing last month, he would have become the first person to complete a solo ascent of the iconic peak in January (see related story). We have explorer Eric Larsen to thank for this correction. The first solo winter ascent with safe return was made by Vern Tejas in 1988.
EXPEDITION CLASSIFIEDS
Discover Peru with an Explorer – Unique occasion this year to visit Peru with Yurek Majcherczyk, Fellow of the Explorers Club – author, original explorer of the Colca Canyon – the world’s deepest. Three different trips available by level of activities. From regular sightseeing trips to multi-day trekking/backpacking expeditions to the Amazon source via Colca Canyon. Continuation to Titicaca Lake, Cuzco and Machu Picchu.
Many educational lectures will be offered to the participants, as well as signed copies of Yurek's The Conquest of Rio Colca. More information will be sent on request by writing to yurek@classic-travel.com or calling 973 473 1249. Also visit: www.classic-travel.com
Yosemite Housing – Stay at Hans Florine's home in Yosemite: http://www.hansbasecamp.com. Mention you saw the listing in the Expedition News and receive 10% off.
New York-area Housesitter Available – New Yorker Maura Kinney is looking for an
explorer’s apartment or home to house sit or sublet while the owner is away on an
expedition. She’s available in New York and southern Connecticut. A travel marketing
director working in Greenwich, Kinney is also an avid equestrian. Reach her at maurakinney1@hotmail.com, 917 488 4755.
Advertise in Expedition News – For just 50 cents a word, you can reach an estimated 10,000 readers of America’s only monthly newsletter celebrating the world of expeditions on land, in space, and beneath the sea. Join us as we take a sometimes irreverent look at the people and projects making Expedition News. Frequency discounts are available. (For more information: blumassoc@aol.com).
Ripped From the Pages of EN – Read the book that was spawned by Expedition News. Autographed copies of You Want to Go Where? – How to Get Someone to Pay for the Trip of Your Dreams (Skyhorse Publishing) – are available to readers for the discounted price of $14.99 plus $2.89 s & h (international orders add $9.95 s & h). If you have a project that is bigger than yourself – a trip with a purpose – learn how it’s possible to generate cash or in-kind (gear) support. Written by EN editor Jeff Blumenfeld, it is based upon three decades helping sponsors select the right exploration projects to support. Payable by PayPal to blumassoc@aol.com, or by check to Expedition News, 1281 East Main Street – Box 10, Stamford, CT 06902
EXPEDITION NEWS is published by Blumenfeld and Associates, Inc., 1281 East Main Street – Box 10, Stamford, CT 06902 USA. Tel. 203 655 1600, editor@expeditionnews.com. Editor/publisher: Jeff Blumenfeld. Assistant editor: Jamie Gribbon. Research editor: Lee Kovel. ©2013 Blumenfeld and Associates, Inc. All rights reserved. ISSN: 1526-8977. Subscriptions: US$36/yr. available by e-mail only. Credit card payments accepted through www.paypal.com. Read EXPEDITION NEWS at www.expeditionnews.com. Enjoy the EN blog at www.expeditionnews.blogspot.com.
Thursday, February 7, 2013
Wednesday, January 9, 2013
Expedition News - Can Denali Be Soloed in January?
January 2013 – Volume Nineteen, Number One
EXPEDITION NEWS, now in its 19th year, is the monthly review of significant expeditions, research projects and newsworthy adventures. It is distributed online to media representatives, corporate sponsors, educators, research librarians, explorers, environmentalists, and outdoor enthusiasts. This forum on exploration covers projects that stimulate, motivate and educate.
GREAT AFRICAN EXPEDITION ENTERS PHASE TWO
Sir Samuel White Baker’s great great grandson David Baker and British filmmaker Jonathan Maguire will join African explorer and anthropologist Julian Monroe Fisher for phase two of The RailRiders 2012-2016 Great African Expedition. Leaving this month, the team will retrace the 1860’s expeditionary route of Sir Samuel White Baker and his wife Lady Florence from Juba throughout South Sudan and Uganda.
In February 2012, Julian Monroe Fisher announced an ambitious five-year - nine expedition ethnographical research project deep in the heart of Africa.
The objectives of the ongoing project are to compare the 19th century Ethnographic documentation of the African tribal kingdoms gathered during the expeditions of the Victorian age explorers with the realities of 21st century Africa. The project will retrace the African expeditionary routes of the famed Victorian explorers to include Baker, Speke, Grant, Burton, de Brazza, Wissman, Baumann, Park, Cameron, Stanley and Livingstone.
By researching the personal letters, diaries and papers from the Victorians during and after their expeditions that are now scattered globally in private collections and museums, Fisher hopes to develop insight into the African cultures that the explorers encountered. They hope to shed light on what changes occurred as a result of colonization and post colonization in some of the most remote corners of Africa.
In spring 2012, Fisher, traveling solo, concluded phase one of the project which successfully followed the geographical overland course of the River Nile from Cairo, Egypt, to Khartoum, Sudan. During phase two, for sections of the expedition, they will be joined by David Baker, 73, from Devizes, Wiltshire, UK, the great great grandson of Sir Samuel Baker and David’s daughter Melanie. Fisher and filmmaker Maguire will be with David Baker when he arrives for the first time to the exact point in Uganda where Sir Samuel White Baker and his wife Florence became the first Europeans to see Lake Albert.
Together Fisher, 57, from Greenwood, S.C., and Maguire, 31, from Lichfield, Staffordshire, UK, will be gathering content for an ethnographical film series and documentary presenting the life and expeditions of Sir Samuel White Baker.
Phase two will begin this month in Juba, the capital of the nation of South Sudan. For the journey the Great African Expedition team will use Folbot folding kayaks, dugout canoes, camels, donkeys, horses, feluccas, ferry boats, 4 x 4 Land Cruisers and their own feet. The project’s title sponsor is clothing manufacturer RailRider.
(For more information: contact@julianmonroefisher.com,
www.JulianMonroeFisher.com/greatafrica).
EXPEDITION UPDATE
Giant Squid Finally Filmed Alive in Deep Sea
A giant squid was filmed on the surface back in December 2007 (see EN, January 2007), but never in the deep sea … until now. A team from Japan's National Science Museum has captured footage of a giant squid in its natural habitat: nearly a third of a mile below the surface of the ocean. It is the first such video of its kind.
Giant squids, which can grow up to 60 feet in length, have been found dead on beaches and photographed in the ocean and – more often - on the surface. But scientists have never seen video of the strange creature below the waves, until a mission put together by the Japan Broadcasting Corp. (NHK) and the Discovery Channel filmed the elusive beast off the coast of Japan.
"The giant squid was so beautiful that it seemed to sparkle," Tsunemi Kubodera, one of the lead scientists on the expedition, told reporters. "I was so thrilled when I saw it first hand, but I was confident we would because we rigorously researched the areas we might find it, based on past data."
Using a manned submarine, Kubodera and his colleagues took 100 trips below the surface to spot the stealthy squid. The team used a specially designed camera to capture high definition images in deep water.
The video will be aired on the Discovery Channel on January 27.
Reid Stowe and Family Return to U.S.
Periodically we like to look into the status of long distance/duration sailor Reid Stowe who set history’s longest uninterrupted sea voyage – 1,152 days completed in July 2010. Stowe broke more than one record – he became the first man to travel alone at sea for 846 days. His girlfriend Soanya Ahmad also set a new record, becoming the first woman to be at sea consecutively for 306 days until she left the ship due to the pending birth of their son Dashen, now two years old. (See EN, July 2010).
The family eventually became restless in New York and set out for another journey, this time together. They wound up in Supenaam, Guyana, where Stowe made some repairs to the 72-ft. gaff-rigged schooner Anne.
Sadly, Stowe's mother and the schooner's namesake, passed away in September. With his father suffering from Alzheimer's, Stowe has returned to his homeport along the Cape Fear River in North Carolina to care for him.
According to a story in the Wilmington (N.C.) Star News (Dec. 13) by Zach Hanner, Stowe feels that despite all of the criticism he's faced for choosing to continue his voyage in spite of his son's birth, his trip has a real value that is grasped by thousands of supporters.
"Whether it's a young man who wants to be inspired to accomplish a huge feat or an elderly woman coping with the loneliness that inevitably comes with age, there's inspiration for everyone in our story," Stowe tells the newspaper. (For more information: www.1000days.net).
Dupre Attempts Denali in Winter for Third Time
Minnesota mountaineer Lonnie Dupre is headed to Denali this month for his third attempt to summit in January (see EN, December 2010). If he gains the summit, he will become the first person to complete a solo ascent of the iconic peak in January. While Dupre will be focused on his record-breaking ascent, he’ll also be working with Adventurer and Scientists for Conservation (ASC) to collect scientific data during the climb.
As a contributor to ASC’s microbe study, Dupre will provide small microbe samples to principal investigator Dr. Dragos George Zaharescu, a post-doctoral fellow at the University of Arizona and the Biosphere 2 project. Zaharescu is compiling samples from the world’s most remote alpine environments to study the microorganisms that live there.
Dupre, who has already departed for Alaska, is only $1,000 away from his Kickstarter fund-raising goal of $9,000. (For more information: www.lonniedupre.com)
EXPEDITION NOTES
Now Let’s See if They Can Boil Water Up There
There are pop-up retail stores in Times Square, Bryant Park and Grand Central Station every holiday. Now a pop-up is coming to Mt. Kilimanjaro. African safari and tour provider ET African Journeys has partnered with Mama Hope, a non-profit organization that invests in projects that bring food, security, clean water, education and health care to African communities in need. The tour operator is pitching the Mama Hope Kilimanjaro Expedition, a hike to benefit Moshi, Tanzania's St. Timothy's School.
Departing on Feb. 18, 2013, this trek up Africa's highest mountain boasts a new twist on the pop-up concept: a gourmet feast prepared by world-renowned African Chef Pierre Thiam at the world's highest-altitude pop-up restaurant. Chef Thiam will open the temporary restaurant at a base camp at 12,500 feet exclusively to celebrate the fund-raising climb.
After summiting Mount Kilimanjaro via the scenic Machame route, climbers will descend to the base camp restaurant to dine on Chef Thiam's specially prepared African regional cuisine, while enjoying views of the surrounding forests and grasslands. Cost to join the group is about $5,400. (For more information: http://www.etafricanjourneys.com/mamahope).
It Pays to Travel with Duct Tape
Cave explorer and author Chris Nicola of New York, upcoming recipient of a 2013 Explorers Club Citation of Merit (see related story), was as prepared as a Boy Scout during Icelandair flight 615 from Reykjavik to New York on Jan. 3. He found himself sitting in the next row from an Icelandic passenger who went over the edge after drinking heavily and then becoming scared shitless by heavy air turbulence. According to published reports, the berserk passenger grabbed two women and shouted that the plane was going down.
Nicola reports to his Facebook friends, “He ended up being tied and bound to his seat with duck (sic) tape and large plastic twist-ties when passengers took control of the situation. Yet another reason why cavers always carry duck tape.”
Nicola continues, “In hindsight, perhaps airlines should rethink their policy of handing out bottles of alcohol to passengers who might panic going through turbulent air space; passengers who could even end up being seated next to emergency doors. In this guy's case, there was one row (the one in which I was seated) separating him from an emergency door over the wing.”
QUOTE OF THE MONTH
“The easiest thing to forget is that an expedition is not a goal but an experience shared by what had better be your friends.”
- Theodore Roosevelt (1858 – 1919)
MEDIA MATTERS
When A Mountain Moved
Time came to a halt on a recent Sunday morning when the New York Times arrived with a 14-page Sports Sunday Special Report headlined “Avalanche.” This was a story anyone in exploration had to read. Right now. This minute. It was that good. Reporter John Branch extensively researched in great detail the circumstances surrounding “The Day A Mountain Moved,” the Tunnel Creek drainage slide of Feb. 19, 2012. That day in the Cascades, 75 miles east of Seattle, forever changed the lives of 16 people, ages 29 to 53, of whom three tragically died in the slide.
Branch writes about professional skier Elyse Saugstad, 33, “At first she thought she would be embarrassed that she had deployed her air bag, that the other expert skiers she was with, more than a dozen of them, would have a good laugh at her panicked overreaction. Seconds later, tumbling uncontrollably inside a ribbon of speeding snow, she was sure this was how she was going to die.”
Branch believes, “deadly avalanches are usually the product of bad decisions – human nature, not Mother Nature.”
The story is a must-read precautionary tale of the ageless lure of powder snow.
Branch writes, “Avalanche fatalities are rising as more people head into the backcountry, lured by everything from equipment advances and easier access to the timeless appeal of serenity and fresh snow.”
(See the story here: www.nytimes.com/avalanche).
Like Dropping Your House From a Crane
Extreme sailor Rich Wilson is a competitor in the Vendée Globe, the most challenging sailboat race on earth: 28,000 miles around the world, nonstop, single-handed in 60-foot-long, overpowered seagoing survival capsules, crossing three oceans, north to south and east to west, slashing past Antarctic icebergs at speeds more suitable to thrill sports like windsurfing or kiteboarding – 20 knots, 25 knots, 30 and even more, uninterrupted for days on end.
Angus Phillips, writing in the Wall Street Journal (Jan.1), reveals how brutal the race really is, quoting from Wilson’s new book, Race France to France (sitesALIVE!).
Phillips writes, “Mr. Wilson takes us there and back again with openness and honesty, displaying the ocean sailor's requisites – modesty, humor, vigor and a willingness to admit fear, exhaustion, depression and even sheer terror. ‘How to explain this violence to those ashore?’ he (Wilson) writes. ‘Take your house. Sit or stand in it. Get a crane and lift it 10 feet off a solid concrete slab. Then drop it, with you in it. . . . Now lift it up again and hover it over a concrete slab tilted to 45 degrees. Drop the house again from 10 feet. Now when it crashes it also bounces violently sideways, out from under you. . . . OK, now do that another thousand times.’”
And, by the way, “Don't forget to eat, sleep, write, make sail changes, analyze the weather, charge the batteries, bail the forepeak, drain the cockpit compartment and, oh, be really careful brushing your teeth, so you don't stab yourself in the throat.”
Read the entire review here:
http://online.wsj.com/article/SB10001424127887323277504578189384018410530.html?KEYWORDS=angus
Share Your News with Canada’s Mountain Life
Mountain Life Magazine is looking for submissions that include expeditions to mountainous regions, humanitarian adventures, first ascents/descents, epic trips, great photography, and short videos. It needs to be short enough to consume within a few minutes online. Projects by Canadians are of particular interest.
Published three times a year, Mountain Life Magazine (www.mountainlifemag.ca) is dedicated to showcasing the natural beauty of British Columbia’s Coast Mountains. Readership is close to one million print and online readers. (For more information: Todd Lawson, publisher and photo editor, todd@mountainlifemag.ca, 604 932 1974).
CLIMBING FOR DOLLARS
The North Face Awards $140,000 in Explore Fund Grants
The North Face awarded the second round of Explore Fund grants for 2012, more than $140,000 in grants to 58 projects that will impact more than 80,000 youth across the nation. As part of its mission to start a global movement of outdoor exploration, The North Face introduced the Explore Fund in 2010. The program has since provided more than $1 million in grants globally to organizations committed to inspiring the next generation of outdoor explorers and conservationists. Since launching in 2010, The North Face has donated more than $765,000 to over 300 nonprofit organizations in the U.S.
“There can be so many barriers to getting kids outdoors, whether it be a disability, health resources or simply a lack of access. A large percentage of the grants went toward funding organizations that are addressing these issues by providing access and education,” said Ann Krcik, director of Outdoor Exploration at The North Face.
The Explore Fund spring grant cycle will be announced by spring 2013. (For more information: www.explorefund.org).
EXPEDITION MARKETING
Best. Jump. Ever.
Energy-drink maker Red Bull’s much-hyped skydive from space was considered one of the best ad campaigns of 2012, according to Suzanne Vranica writing for the Wall Street Journal (Dec. 24). The drink maker’s logo was featured prominently as a world record was set for the highest parachute jump. Visible Measures Corp., which tracks online viewership, said the footage and videos related to the event received 171 million views across the web.
Bergans Sponsors First Bicycle Journey to the South Pole
In 1911, Roald Amundsen led the first successful trip to the South Pole, and Bergans of Norway was along for the journey. Bergans is now sponsoring polar explorer, adventurer and environmental advocate Eric Larsen's solo attempt to traverse Antarctica by bike.
Departing last month, Larsen is currently en route from Hercules Inlet to the geographic South Pole. If conditions permit, he will bike back to the coast again, a roundtrip of 1,500 miles. The goal of Larsen's Cycle South Expedition is to combine adventure and advocacy to demonstrate the many ways in which people can use a bicycle to protect the environment as well as improve their quality of life.
Larsen is riding a mountain bike with 5-in. tires to make it easier to ride on Antarctica's dry, wind-packed snow.
Bergans will be supporting Larsen with Merino wool base layers, wool and fleece mid-layers, shells using Dermizax windproof, waterproof breathable membranes, and soft shell pants, all designed for cycling; and an expedition down parka while off the bike.
Another sponsor is Optic Nerve – Larsen will be traveling with Optic Nerve’s new Boreas interchangeable spherical lens goggle as well as the Antero.
Larsen hopes the Cycle South Expedition will create more awareness for the non-profits he supports: Worldbike, Davis Phinney Foundation, Winter Wildlands Alliance and Bikes Belong. During the expedition Larsen will document, film and share his experiences through social media and on the expedition's website, www.ericlarsenexplore.com.
WEB WATCH
GlacierWorks Compares Then and Now
GlacierWorks is a non-profit organization that demonstrates changes to glaciers in the Greater Himalaya by pairing archival photographs from the world’s greatest mountain photographers with contemporary, interactive images up to four billion pixels in size. It was founded in 2007 by filmmaker and mountaineer David Breashears, a pioneer in Everest photography who filmed scenes on the mountain in 1996 with a specially insulated 35-lb. IMAX film camera for the record-breaking Everest movie.
In March 2012, GlacierWorks began its 12th expedition to the Himalaya and journeyed to Mount Everest’s Base Camp. Once there, the team installed what would become the world’s highest photo exhibit: Rivers of Ice: Vanishing Glaciers of the Greater Himalaya, which featured comparative photography. The team also captured gigapixel images from viewpoints above the Khumbu glacier, in Base Camp and up the Icefall. These interactive images have been virtually connected to create a tour, which allows users to explore from the highest peaks to the tents below in razor-sharp detail.
From the photo exhibit, users can also access the gigapixel imagery that GlacierWorks captured on the North side of Mount Everest during previous expeditions by clicking on the prints hanging on the tent’s walls. Breashears says this is just the beginning of the curated storytelling capacity that GlacierWorks is developing with Microsoft Research.
The tour became an Internet sensation during the week of December 15, 2012, resulting in publication on major news outlets including the Huffington Post, The Times, Daily Mail and Washington Post. Its website received over 500,000 visitors over a span of three days, thousands of whom sent emails requesting more information about Breashears’ work. Now educators are seeking to use the imagery in classrooms.
“It is especially vital to our mission to connect students with the stories and technology that generates curiosity in the region, its future and enables them to explore it,” Breashears says.
See the Everest Tour Gigapixel here: http://www.glacierworks.org/the-glaciers/everest-tour-spring-2012/
ON THE HORIZON
Team Arctic Row Reports Back, The Explorers Club, New York, Jan. 30, 2013
Eddie Bauer and The Explorers Club will welcome Team Arctic Row on Jan. 30 in New York, fresh off completion of a non-stop, unsupported row across the Arctic Ocean. After spending 41 days rowing more than 1,000 miles through frigid Arctic waters, the team successfully finished their expedition in Point Hope, Alaska, on Aug. 26, 2012. As a result, the team pioneered a new route for modern ocean rowing, which is considered to be the longest in Arctic history measured by duration and distance. The team will share their stories, photographs, and video at The Explorers Club headquarters (46 East 70th Street) on Jan. 30 at 6 p.m. Non-members of the Explorers Club are welcome to go as the paying guest of organizing chairman Daryl Hawk. (Reservations@explorers.org, 212 628 8383).
Mountain Stories Descend Upon The Explorers Club, Feb. 9, 2013
On Feb. 9, 2013, seven outstanding individuals who have made their mark in mountaineering and exploration will present at The Explorers Club in New York. "Mountain Stories: Mountaineering and High Angle Rock Climbing From Antarctica to the Himalayas and Yosemite” is a public event that will occur in the Club’s historic Clark Room. Featured speakers are: Robert Anderson , Graham Bowley, Chip Brown, Broughton Coburn, Joe Fitschen, Jennifer Jordan and David Roberts. Reservations required. (www.explorers.org)
Explorers Club Annual Dinner Recognizes Seven, Mar. 16, 2013, New York
The Explorers Club announced its 2013 Medalists and Award Winners who will be honored Mar. 16, 2013, at the Waldorf Astoria in New York. The list of awardees are:
• Explorers Medal – James Cameron, an artist and engineer whose break-through submersible technology carried him to and from the deepest point on earth last March.
• President’s Legends Medals – John Glenn and Scott Carpenter, the first and second Americans to orbit the earth, served science and country through their pioneering Mercury flights which helped win the Cold War.
• Tenzing Norgay Quadrennial Award – Chhiring Dorje Sherpa has not only helped mankind explore routes on Himalayan peaks sacred and traditional, but gave unselfishly when a critical moment presented itself on K2, considered the world’s most dangerous mountain. At great risk to his own life, the multi-time Everest summiteer saved a fellow climber from certain death, allowing him to return to home and family.
• Citations of Merit – Erden Eruç demonstrated that technology is not always needed to do great things today. After a grueling five years and 11 days, Eruç completed a circumnavigation of the globe using a rowboat, bicycle, kayak, dugout canoe or walking as necessary, showing it is still possible to inspire with human power.
Christos Nicola, a long-time cave explorer, enriched the world through his book, The Secret of Priest’s Grotto: A Holocaust Survival Story, about how a Jewish family, fleeing the Nazis, lived for two years in a large cave, Popowa Yama, in Ukraine and survived WWII. (see related story on Nicola’s most memorable flight from Iceland in early January).
• Sweeney Medal – Monika Rogozinska, a journalist and mountaineer, has long been a behind-the scenes powerhouse for the Club. Rogozinska, helped establish the very successful Polish Chapter in 1993 and has been Chair since 2009.
(Tickets start at $375, Reservations@explorers.org, 212 628 8383).
EXPEDITION CLASSIFIEDS
Discover Peru with an Explorer – Unique occasion this year to visit Peru with Yurek Majcherczyk, Fellow of the Explorers Club – author, original explorer of the Colca Canyon – the world’s deepest. Three different trips available by level of activities. From regular sightseeing trips to multi-day trekking/backpacking expeditions to the Amazon source via Colca Canyon. Continuation to Titicaca Lake, Cuzco and Machu Picchu.
Many educational lectures will be offered to the participants, as well as signed copies of Yurek's The Conquest of Rio Colca. More information will be sent on request by writing to yurek@classic-travel.com or calling 973 473 1249. Also visit: www.classic-travel.com
Yosemite Housing – Stay at Hans Florine's home in Yosemite: http://www.hansbasecamp.com. Mention you saw the listing in the Expedition News and receive 10% off.
Advertise in Expedition News – For just 50 cents a word, you can reach an estimated 10,000 readers of America’s only monthly newsletter celebrating the world of expeditions on land, in space, and beneath the sea. Join us as we take a sometimes irreverent look at the people and projects making Expedition News. Frequency discounts are available. (For more information: blumassoc@aol.com).
Ripped From the Pages of EN – Read the book that was spawned by Expedition News. Autographed copies of You Want to Go Where? – How to Get Someone to Pay for the Trip of Your Dreams (Skyhorse Publishing) – are available to readers for the discounted price of $14.99 plus $2.89 s & h (international orders add $9.95 s & h). If you have a project that is bigger than yourself – a trip with a purpose – learn how it’s possible to generate cash or in-kind (gear) support. Written by EN editor Jeff Blumenfeld, it is based upon three decades helping sponsors select the right exploration projects to support. Payable by PayPal to blumassoc@aol.com, or by check to Expedition News, 1281 East Main Street – Box 10, Stamford, CT 06902
EXPEDITION NEWS is published by Blumenfeld and Associates, Inc., 1281 East Main Street – Box 10, Stamford, CT 06902 USA. Tel. 203 655 1600, editor@expeditionnews.com. Editor/publisher: Jeff Blumenfeld. Assistant editor: Jamie Gribbon. Research editor: Lee Kovel. ©2012 Blumenfeld and Associates, Inc. All rights reserved. ISSN: 1526-8977. Subscriptions: US$36/yr. available by e-mail only. Credit card payments accepted through www.paypal.com. Read EXPEDITION NEWS at www.expeditionnews.com. Enjoy the EN blog at www.expeditionnews.blogspot.com.
Friday, November 30, 2012
Expedition News - December 2012 - Life Discovered in Antarctic Brine
December 2012 – Volume Nineteen, Number Twelve
EXPEDITION NEWS, now in its 19th year, is the monthly review of significant expeditions, research projects and newsworthy adventures. It is distributed online to media representatives, corporate sponsors, educators, research librarians, explorers, environmentalists, and outdoor enthusiasts. This forum on exploration covers projects that stimulate, motivate and educate.
NEW LAND 2013 EXPEDITION WILL DOCUMENT ELLESMERE ISLAND
In March 2013, American John Huston and Norwegian Toby Thorleifsson will take part in the New Land 2013 Ellesmere Island Expedition, a 72-day journey across 630 miles of one of the last untouched wildernesses on Earth, the Canadian Arctic. With sled dogs and on skis, the four-man party will retrace historic expedition routes of Norwegian Otto Sverdrup (1854-1930), who led a team of 17 men between 1898 and 1902 in discovering and mapping more than 150,000 square kilometers of Ellesmere Island, the northernmost landmass of North America. Few people have ventured there since, according to a presentation at the Norwalk (Conn.) Maritime Aquarium on Nov. 29.
“It’s a land that some people call ‘Arctic Eden,’” Huston said. “It’s largely untouched.”
Fewer than 150 people live on the island, which is the size of Great Britain. But animal life includes Arctic wolves and foxes, musk oxen, caribou, lemmings and polar bears.
Goals of the 2013 expedition are to film a documentary about Ellesmere Island and celebrate Sverdrup’s accomplishments.
“It’s one of the least-known of the Norwegian expeditions of that time period, but it was one of the most successful,” Huston said.
Huston, 36, from Evanston, Ill., is a polar explorer, cross-country ski racer and photographer whose major expeditions have taken him to Greenland and both of the earth’s poles. From 2000 to 2006 he estimates he’s slept outdoors for 200 days a year. He’s passionate about relatively unknown historic winter expeditions. “These are lesser-known because they were successful.”
Huston explains, “The humble explorers are the ones who live, the ones who are successful. We call it being ‘smart tough.’”
Huston continues, “I am a huge fan of the early polar explorers and the lessons they can teach us. They were the astronauts of their time.”
In 2005, Huston was the only American to join a Norwegian team’s restaging of Roald Amundsen’s 1911 expedition to the South Pole for The History Channel using only 1911-period clothing, equipment and food. “I like to dive into the pages of my favorite history books by exploring in 100-year-old gear – no Gore-Tex, no plastics.”
A training video shown during the aquarium presentation was rather amusing – team members were shown dragging five truck tires at a time through a Chicago park.
“We kept hearing the same sarcastic remarks,” Huston said.
“Hey, dude! Where’s your car?”
“Is your wife punishing you?”
Huston’s recent book co-authored with Tyler Fish, Forward (Octane Press, 2011), recounts a two-month adventure in 2009 where he and adventurer Tyler Fish became the first Americans to walk to the North Pole without help from support crews. They hauled 300-pound sleds holding everything they needed.
His New Land Expedition partner, Tobias Thorleifsson, 33, from Oslo, is a polar explorer, historian, photographer, and consultant to the Norwegian Ministry of the Environment. After completing his naval service in the Norwegian Arctic, he joined several major Arctic expeditions, including a sailing voyage to Franz Josef Land in the Russian Arctic and a 65-day dogsled expedition on Ellesmere Island.
On the coming trip he’s keen to employ kite skis. “Won’t that subject the team to the potential of catastrophic injury?” EN asked.
Thorleifsson replies, “During the coming expedition we’ll be on flat terrain, not over the frozen ocean. Besides we will be supported in case of emergency.”
Additional sponsorship funding is being sought.
(For more information: www.forwardendeavors.com)
Scheduled to speak next at the aquarium is oceanographer, aquanaut and author Dr. Sylvia Earle on Jan. 24 (www.maritimeaquarium.org).
EXPEDITION NOTES
Taking Lung Transplant Physiology, Prosthetics,
and PTSD Research to Kilimanjaro
In January 2013, lung transplant physiology research goes to the top of Africa for the first time as a group of U.S. combat wounded veterans take on the summit of Tanzania’s Mount Kilimanjaro. The 14-man team, including amputees, will partner with Alaska Mountaineering School and St. Petersburg College to demonstrate to other combat wounded veterans facing seemingly insurmountable challenges and obstacles, that anything can be overcome.
The wounded vets will collect valuable information and medical data to contribute to the science of human performance, rehabilitation and recreation under extreme conditions. The unique information gathered is being prepared for dissemination to relevant groups including cardiopulmonary and rehabilitation professionals who will find it useful to advance the state of science and inform the rehabilitative care of others with similar needs, according to an announcement from the group.
Among the climbers will be U.S. Navy SEAL Platoon Commander LT Justin Legg who, in July 2010, underwent a double lung transplant for complications related to treatment of leukemia. He has been rehabilitating to take on new challenges as he prepares for the rarified air of Kilimanjaro. Dr. David Zaas, Chief Medical Officer for the Private Diagnostic Clinic at Duke University, will conduct medical research involving pulmonary vascular response to high altitudes encountered by LT Legg. Additional sponsorship is being sought.
(For more information: www.combatwounded.org, 727 942 8415).
Life Discovered in Bitter Antarctic Brine
Where there’s water there’s life – even in brine beneath 60 feet of Antarctic ice, in permanent darkness and subzero temperatures.
While Lake Vida, located in the northernmost of the McMurdo Dry Valleys of East Antarctica, will never be a vacation destination, it is home to some newly discovered hearty microbes. In the current issue of the Proceedings of the National Academy of Science, Nathaniel Ostrom, Michigan State University zoologist, has co-authored “Microbial Life at -13º C in the Brine of an Ice-Sealed Antarctic Lake."
Ostrom was part of a team that discovered an ancient thriving colony, which is estimated to have been isolated for more than 2,800 years. They live in a brine of more than 20 percent salinity that has high concentrations of ammonia, nitrogen, sulfur and supersaturated nitrous oxide – the highest ever measured in a natural aquatic environment.
“It’s an extreme environment – the thickest lake ice on the planet, and the coldest, most stable cryo-environment on Earth,” Ostrom said. “The discovery of this ecosystem gives us insight into other isolated, frozen environments on Earth, but it also gives us a potential model for life on other icy planets that harbor saline deposits and subsurface oceans, such as Jupiter’s moon Europa.”
The research team comprised scientists from the Desert Research Institute, the University of Illinois-Chicago, NASA, the University of Colorado, the Jet Propulsion Laboratory, Montana State University, the University of Georgia, the University of Tasmania and Indiana University.
Gold Rush Steamboats Catalogued
John Pollack, a research associate with the Institute of Nautical Archaeology at Texas A&M University, has posted a comprehensive update for the Yukon River Steamboat Survey. Pollack and his colleague, Dr. Robyn Woodward of Vancouver, have been working in the north since 2005, and in that time they have catalogued the remains of 24 historic stern wheel steamboats dating back to the Klondike Gold Rush. A well-illustrated website with the chronology of their work, findings and publications is located at:
http://inadiscover.com/projects/all/north_america/yukon_gold_rush_steamboat_survey_canada/introduction/
Pollack’s next project is now located at Halong Bay and Bach Dang, Vietnam. He is the sidescanning and mapping leader for a multinational team. Participants will include archaeologists from Vietnam, Australia, Japan and Canada. One of the team’s goals is to locate remains of a Mongol invasion fleet destroyed by Vietnamese forces on the Bach Dang River in 1288 AD.
AAC Speaker Warns of Toxic Chemicals
The 33rd annual dinner of the New York section of the American Alpine Club on Nov. 10 almost didn’t happen this year, coming so soon on the heels of superstorm Sandy. But New York chairman Philip Erard reasoned that if any group could weather a storm like Sandy, it would be a group of risk-taking climbers. Keynote speaker was American mountaineer and environmental health scientist Arlene Blum, Berkeley, Calif., who explained that when she started climbing in the early 1970s, women were not considered strong enough or mentally stable enough to climb.
Her group of so-called “Denali Damsels” was the first all-women team to summit Denali (1970). Perhaps her greatest achievement was the successful American Women’s Expedition to Annapurna in 1978. Until then, only eight climbers had summited that most dangerous of Himalayan peaks, none American. She showed her resourcefulness in helping to finance this expedition, in the face of heavy male skepticism, through the sale of cheeky t-shirts reading, “A Woman’s Place is on Top.”
Later in her career, as a biophysical chemist, she launched a crusade against the use of Tris fire retardant in infant pajamas. In the 1970s, the CPSC banned brominated Tris and removed chlorinated Tris from use on children’s pajamas after they were found to mutate DNA and were identified as probable human carcinogens.
Blum, the subject of a New York Times Magazine profile (Sept. 9), warns, “most chemicals are not effectively regulated in the U.S. and we are not protected against toxic chemicals.” She explained that while Tris is now banned from sleepwear, furniture still contains one to two pounds of the chemical, which is known to migrate to household dust. (For more information: www.greensciencepolicy.org, www.arleneblum.com)
Sea Stories Reveal Deep Mysteries
On Nov. 10, The Explorers Club hosted a full-day slate of presentations focused on the sea, with representatives from the Nautilus Exploration Program, Woods Hole Oceanographic Institution, the Women Divers Hall of Fame, and elsewhere.
• Explorers Club member and attorney David Concannon, an advisor to eight Titanic expeditions and participant on three, explained that visiting the 12,500-ft. deep wreck site in a submersible is something relatively few people have experienced. He reports only 130 people have made dives to the fabled ship versus 534 who have flown in space, and over 5,000 who have visited Everest’s summit.
“In 1912, the Titanic was the largest manmade moveable object in the world. It took 14,000 people four years to build and one man (the captain) just five hours to sink it.”
He continues, “Today, the Titanic is a magnet for exploration, dollars and technological development.” Concannon said over 30 new species of new marine life have been found in the vicinity of the wreck. Bacteria is eating away over a half-ton of steel every day. “It’s melting like a candle from the top down.”
Traveling to the site involves a 12-15 hour dive in a submersible the size of an SUV with no heat and no bathroom. “It’s 32 degrees inside, you’re dehydrated, you haven’t gone to the bathroom in 12 hours, and there’s nothing to drink or eat.”
There is a one liter pee bottle available just in case, but the first one to use it loses a $50 bet, he told the group.
• Underwater photographer Stephen Frink, publisher of Alert Diver, bemoaned the fact that the oceans are changing due to acidification and overfishing. “The water I jumped into 30 years ago is not what new photographers are seeing today.”
He also warned that the population of invasive lionfish is exploding on the eastern seaboard. “We can’t eat our way out of this problem. You don’t get much meat off them. The only chance the ocean has is to figure out how to kill them in the embryonic stage.”
QUOTE OF THE MONTH
“In wilderness is the preservation of the world.”
– Henry David Thoreau, American writer (1817-1862)
CLIMBING FOR DOLLARS
Light My Fire Competition
Light My Fire, Swedish maker of outdoor accessories, is seeking seven different adventurers in 2013 with one finalist to be named “The Light My Fire Adventurer of the Year.”
Seven finalists will be chosen to blog about their outdoor adventure on the Light My Fire Adventure blog and will receive a gift package of Light My Fire products. One winner will be awarded the title, “The Light My Fire Adventurer of the Year” and win approximately $3,890. The adventure does not have to be extreme in nature to be selected as a finalist, but must take place outdoors in 2013.
The prize money will be a scholarship for the winner to plan their next great adventure for 2014. Deadline is Dec. 31, 2012.
(For more information: http://www.lightmyfire.com/sponsorship-2013.aspx#how_to_apply)
MEDIA MATTERS
Trees Offer a Natural High
Tree climbing is no longer kids’ stuff according to William L. Hamilton’s story in the Wall Street Journal (Nov. 5-6, 2012). Recreational tree climbing is now largely “technical tree climbing,” or climbing with ropes. “Free climbing” – what you did as a kid – is discouraged as a sport, because of the danger it represents to the tree.
“A good climbing tree has fairly simple access and lots of relatively evenly spaced branches,” says Zev Reuter of the New York Botanical Garden in the Bronx (www.nybg.org).
Tree Climbers International is an Atlanta-based organization that offers a variety of classes for beginners and advanced climbers (www.treeclimbing.org).
On The Rocks
Several rocks taken from humankind's first lunar landing have been unearthed once again, with the moon rocks this time turning up on the dark side of a Minnesota storage area.
The Minneapolis Star Tribune (Nov. 26) reports that the pebble-sized samples collected by the Apollo 11 voyage in 1969 somehow ended up in a government storage area in St. Paul.
"The Apollo 11 moon rocks were found amongst military artifacts in a storage area at the Veterans Service Building in St. Paul," Army Maj. Blane Iffert, the former state historian for the Minnesota National Guard, told the newspaper. "When I searched the Internet to find additional information about the moon rocks, I knew we had to find a better means to display this artifact."
Each state was given a sample of the moon rocks after Apollo 11's successful voyage.
Even if Iffert had wanted to sell the rocks, rather than donate them, he wouldn't have had much of a choice. Moon rocks are considered a national treasure and selling them is illegal.
Reportedly, 180 of the 270 Goodwill Moon Rock samples former President Nixon gave to the 50 states after the Apollo 11 and 17 missions are currently unaccounted for.
Read the complete story here:
http://www.startribune.com/local/stpaul/180864731.html?refer=y
Carl Sagan’s Plea
Carl Sagan’s impassionate 1981 plea to the The Explorers Club to (finally) admit women was praised in Emily Lakdawalla’s blog for The Planetary Society (Nov. 13). Sagan writes in part, "If membership is restricted to men, the loss will be ours."
Sagan wrote in 1981, “women had played a significant but unheralded role in the history of exploration.... There are several women astronauts. The earliest footprints – 3.6 million years old – made by a member of the human family, have been found in a volcanic ash flow in Tanzania by Mary Leakey. Trailblazing studies of the behavior of primates in the wild have been performed by dozens of young women, each spending years with a different primate species. Jane Goodall's studies of the chimpanzee are the best known of the investigations which illuminate human origins.”
Sagan continues, “The undersea depth record is held by Sylvia Earle. The solar wind was first measured in situ by Marcia Neugebauer, using the Mariner 2 spacecraft. The first active volcanoes beyond the Earth were discovered on the Jovian moon Io by Linda Morabito, using the Voyager 1 spacecraft. These examples of modern exploration and discovery could be multiplied a hundredfold.”
Later that year, The Explorers Club started admitting women. Today, women make up approximately 22 percent of its 2,900-person international membership.
(Read it here: http://www.planetary.org/blogs/emily-lakdawalla/2012/11122301-sagan-explorers-club-letter.html)
WEB WATCH
You Want to Go Where on a Balsa Wood Raft?
The 2012 trailer from the true story about legendary explorer Thor Heyerdahl and his epic crossing of the Pacific in 1947 is fascinating, making us want to see the actual movie. Starring Paal Sverre Hagen and directed by Joachim Roenning and Espen Sandberg, it highlights the skepticism Heyerdahl first encountered when he proposed to sail from Peru to Polynesia on a balsa wood raft, “further than from Chicago to Moscow, 5,000 miles.” The $16 million film, which premiered in August, is the most expensive ever made in Norway.
See the trailer here: http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=e4DZ7svBw7I
EN HOLIDAY GIFT GUIDE
We can imagine Christmas morning last year. There you were sitting in flannel pajamas with your nuclear family around the tree, feigning excitement for soap on a rope, a preppy tie decorated with spouting whales, or a food basket full of figs and artichokes. Make this holiday season different. Drop a few gift-giving hints about receiving these outdoor products for explorers that are worth jonesing for.
Torment Your Teen with Paul Bunyan Approved Headwear
The legendary and extremely hirsute lumberjack knew a thing or two about staying warm in cold weather, especially with that bird’s nest on his chin. BeardHead.com offers knit beard caps that combine the comfort and warmth of a traditional knit cap with the styling of having a simulated beard and moustache on your face. Yeah, it looks ridiculous, but it’s warm. Be sure to wear it around your teenager, especially when his or her friends are around. ($24.99, beardhead.com)
Da Brim is Da Bomb for Brain Buckets
The sun at high altitudes is a formidable foe. We get that. But it still takes an especially secure outdoor enthusiast to wear this flexible fabric brim that fits around outdoor sports helmets. The interchangeable hubcap-sized fabric “donut” pulls down over your brain bucket while still allowing air to flow through the vents. It looks weird, but not so weird as your sorry melanomic face without a nose. ($36.95 to $39.95, dabrim.com)
Shower Yourself With This Gift
As we all know, explorers have a certain scent about them, especially after being away so long that their chest hairs grow through their long underwear tops (it’s been known to happen). The late Col. Norman D. Vaughan used to brag about how many days he and his teammates, including Admiral Richard E. Byrd, wore their long johns in Antarctica in 1928-30. They wore the same underwear for 10 days, switched to new pairs, wore those for 20 days, then went back to the old pairs. “Boy, they felt good,” Vaughan told us shortly before he died in 2005.
Too bad they didn’t have the Klenz XXL Shower in a Towel. Use it to remove dirt, perspiration, odors, suntan oil, insect repellant, even sled dog slobber. Each 2-ft. by 4-ft. pre-moistened disposable towel is 20 times larger than baby wipes, but whoever gives this to you may be crying about the cost – about 5.49 each. (klenztowel.com).
O’s to Go
Truth be told, we get splitting headaches in Denver, the Mile High City. That’s why we like to travel with a personal can of oxygen-enriched air. But we’re wimps; we’re sure you’ll appreciate a gift of TruO2 Personal Oxygen the morning after a wild night celebrating at Everest base camp. A starter size containing 95% O2 by volume, provides 50 inhalations of oxygen per can. (29.85, www.truo2.com)
Humdinger
Explorers are nothing if not nature lovers. Now for the holidays, convince someone to gift you the Wearable Hummingbird Feeder. This nifty item, proudly Made in USA, uses a full-face face shield with a miniaturized hummingbird feeding tube built into it on the inside. Hummingbirds feed right in front of your eyes, right between your eyes, about an inch above your nose. Online videos at www.heatstick.com actually prove it works. Yet another way to embarrass your teenager.
ON THE HORIZON
Moonwalker Charles Duke Interview at The Explorers Club, Jan. 11, 2012
General Charles Duke, one of only 12 humans to have walked on the moon, will be interviewed at The Explorers Club on Jan. 11, 2013. Duke became the youngest man to step onto the lunar surface on April 20, 1972, as part of Apollo 16. The live interview session, led by Jim Clash, is part of the Club’s new Exploring Legends series. The interview begins at 7 p.m. and is open to Club members and guests. Location: 46 E. 70th Street, New York. (For more information: 212 628 8383, www.explorers.org)
DEPARTMENT OF CORRECTIONS
Drone On
We ran an incorrect web link for last month’s story about the peaceful use of drones by Dedicam at the Trango Towers in Pakistan. You can see the correct link here:
http://www.mammut.ch/basecamp/en/basecamp-news/dedicam_trangotower?iframe=1
EXPEDITION CLASSIFIEDS
Yosemite Housing
Stay at Hans Florine's home in Yosemite: http://www.hansbasecamp.com. Mention you saw the listing in the Expedition News and receive 10% off.
New York-area Housesitter Available
New Yorker Maura Kinney is looking for an explorer’s apartment or home to house sit or sublet while the owner is away on an expedition. She’s available in New York and southern Connecticut. A travel marketing expert working in Manhattan, Kinney is also an avid equestrian. Reach her at maurakinney@hotmail.com, 917 488 4755.
Advertise in Expedition News
For just 50 cents a word, you can reach an estimated 10,000 readers of America’s only monthly newsletter celebrating the world of expeditions on land, in space, and beneath the sea. Join us as we take a sometimes irreverent look at the people and projects making Expedition News. Frequency discounts are available. (For more information: blumassoc@aol.com).
Ripped From the Pages of EN
Read the book that was spawned by Expedition News. Autographed copies of You Want to Go Where? – How to Get Someone to Pay for the Trip of Your Dreams (Skyhorse Publishing) – are available to readers for the discounted price of $14.99 plus $2.89 s & h (international orders add $9.95 s & h). If you have a project that is bigger than yourself – a trip with a purpose – learn how it’s possible to generate cash or in-kind (gear) support. Written by EN editor Jeff Blumenfeld, it is based upon three decades helping sponsors select the right exploration projects to support. Payable by PayPal to blumassoc@aol.com, or by check to Expedition News, 1281 East Main Street – Box 10, Stamford, CT 06902
EXPEDITION NEWS is published by Blumenfeld and Associates, Inc., 1281 East Main Street – Box 10, Stamford, CT 06902 USA. Tel. 203 655 1600, editor@expeditionnews.com. Editor/publisher: Jeff Blumenfeld. Assistant editor: Jamie Gribbon. Research editor: Lee Kovel. ©2012 Blumenfeld and Associates, Inc. All rights reserved. ISSN: 1526-8977. Subscriptions: US$36/yr. available by e-mail only. Credit card payments accepted through www.paypal.com. Read EXPEDITION NEWS at www.expeditionnews.com. Enjoy the EN blog at www.expeditionnews.blogspot.com.
Public Invited to Will Steger Explorers Club Talk, Dec. 5
Will Steger, world renowned polar explorer, educator, photographer, writer and lecturer will present a retrospective of a life in the arctic regions of the world, Dec. 5 at The Union Club in New York.
He has logged thousands of miles of travel by dogsled and has become a voice calling for understanding and the preservation of the arctic. The presentation “Eyewitness to Global Warming,” is his vivid account of the changes that he’s witnessed firsthand, caused by global warming pollutants, in Arctic regions over four decades of polar exploration.
Steger shares stunning photographs from his expeditions along with compelling data and satellite imagery to document the deterioration in the polar ice caps. While the issue is critical, and the presentation is dramatic, Steger’s message is one of hope and empowerment.
An understanding of our role in the causes and effects of global warming make this personal. But as Steger explains, solutions are readily available and by making economically and environmentally smart choices people can make a difference.=
***NOTICE: This event will take place at The Union Club, on 69th and Park Ave -- a one block walk from The Explorers Club Headquarters -- and as such attendance will require a coat and tie.
6pm Reception, 7pm Dinner, 8pm Presentation
Member Ticket price: $65
Guest Ticket Price: $70
Reservation Notes:
Dinners are open to Members and their guests.
Non-members are welcome to attend as nominal guests of Daryl Hawk MN'98, organizing chair of Explorers Club Members Dinners.
To make a reservation please email: reservations@explorers.orgor call the Club at 212-628-8383
Sunday, November 4, 2012
Expedition News - November 2012
CROSSING THE COLDEST PLACE, AT THE COLDEST TIME OF YEAR
British explorer Sir Ranulph Fiennes, 68, announced last month plans to lead the first team on foot and motorized vehicle across Antarctica during the southern winter. The Coldest Journey expedition starts from the Russian base of Novolazareskaya (“Novo”) to Captain Robert F. Scott’s base at McMurdo Sound via the South Pole. The expedition will take six months and span 2,485-mi./4000 km, mostly in complete darkness. This is reportedly the first-ever attempt at a trans-Antarctic winter expedition.
On the equinox, March 21, 2013, the six expedition members will begin their journey to reach the Ross Sea. One hundred years ago on the same ice shelf, Capt. Scott and his polar team died on their return from the South Pole.
The Coldest Journey team will be entirely self-sufficient and there will be no search and rescue facility available, as aircraft cannot penetrate inland during winter, due to darkness and risk of fuel freezing.
Sir Ranulph and his skiing partner will lead on foot, pulling a ground-penetrating radar system which will help them avoid crevasses up to 200 feet deep.
The rest of the team will follow closely behind in a Mobile Vehicle Landtrain (MVL). The MVL will be made up of two Caterpillar D6N track-type tractors which will pull two specially designed cabooses for scientific work, accommodations and storage, including fuel designed not to freeze.
During the traverse, the expedition team will live in the main living caboose, which will consist of two 28-ft. insulated containers locked together to create four heated areas.
Described by Guinness World Records as the world's greatest living explorer, Sir Ranulph has run seven marathons on seven continents in seven days, and at the age of 65, climbed Everest. Of the Antarctic traverse, Sir Ranulph said, “This will be my greatest challenge to date. We will stretch the limits of human endurance. Britain and the Commonwealth have a strong heritage of exploration, from Captain Cook 300 years ago to the present day.”
The Coldest Journey team is also attempting to raise an impressive US $10 million for Seeing is Believing, a global initiative to prevent and treat avoidable blindness (www.seeingisbelieving.org.uk/).
During the sea voyage to the Antarctic coast, the team will carry out scientific tasks to provide data on marine life, oceanography and meteorology. While crossing Antarctica they will also help scientists who are compiling information about changes to the ice shelf and the effect of climate change upon the poles.
The effort will be sponsored in part by Bridgedale WoolFusion Summit socks which the team tested in a cold chamber, and an impressive list of 160 other partners and sponsors including Microsoft and Panasonic. The Coldest Journey is an entirely independent venture said to be one of the U.K.’s largest non-governmental initiatives ever.
(For more information: www.thecoldestjourney.org)
EXPEDITION UPDATE
Bringing the Boys Home
Lou Sapienza, an explorer/polar archaeologist from North South Polar, Inc., East Hampton, N.Y., has returned from a successful mission to Køge Bugt, Greenland, for the U.S. Coast Guard to locate the debris field of a WWII amphibious U.S. Coast Guard biplane that crashed with three on board in 1942. The debris was found by ground penetrating radar (GPR) at a depth of 38 feet below the ice sheet surface. The project was titled “The Duck Hunt” and began in 2008. North South Polar (NSP) is a team of preeminent explorers, scientists and specialists, all global experts joining forces for the most difficult recovery missions in the most challenging environments on earth.
Sapienza’s team will return in 2013 to excavate and recover the crew to return them to their families through the US DoD Joint POW/MIA Accounting Command (JPAC). The team will also attempt to locate eight additional in-glacier aircraft this season (See EN, July 2011.
The forthcoming book, Frozen In Time by Mitch Zuckoff, due for release in spring 2013, is an account of the crash history of the three aircraft involved, the ordeals and fates of their crews, and the recovery effort thus far.
“The expedition was epic in its accomplishments. Sir Ernest Shackleton would have been proud,” Sapienza tells EN. “But what could go wrong did. Through sheer team determination and improvisation we overcame all obstacles and succeeded in our six-day mission just 45 minutes before the helicopters came in to evac us from the site. Adding to the drama – we even had a team member fall through an ice bridge into a crevasse – lucky we're always roped.”
Sapienza continues, “We now have 43 MIAs on our docket to locate and recover – from Greenland to Antarctica to the Philippines, Papua New Guinea and even California. We hope to provide closure to families that still long to have loved ones home after 70 years.”
(For more information: lousapienza@gmail.com, www.nspolar.us, www.favf.us)
EXPEDITION NOTES
Busy Week for Exploration in New York
Just a few weeks before Hurricane Sandy devastated the metropolitan New York region, the exploration world came together at The Explorers Club for the 2012 Lowell Thomas Awards weekend. Events included an entertaining “Exploring Legends” discussion with deep-sea explorer Don Walsh, an awards dinner in a renovated garage in Chelsea, and a three-quarter page photo essay featuring Club members in the New York Times one week later. Here are some highlights:
• One With Your Machine – The Exploring Legends event was covered by Megan Snedden of The Huffington Post (Oct. 15). James Clash, moderator, asked Don Walsh, who accomplished a record dive with Jacques Piccard to the Mariana Trench in 1960, whether he ever got scared.
Snedden reports Walsh’s reply, “No, you're on your game, you're very alert. Being scared and having fear zaps your mental acuity and you can't afford to do that because you have to stay very sharp. All these practice dives we had been making in Guam were exactly the same, so by the time you reach the deepest dive... you become, I don't want to say 'one with your machine,' but close to it.”
Walsh says he and Piccard checked their depth during the dive using TNT charges. “What we used were four-pound blocks of TNT... and we had someone with a stopwatch and we'd hear (the TNT) go, 'bang,' then we'd stop the stopwatch... and that gave us an indicator.”
Read the HuffPo story here: http://www.huffingtonpost.com/megan-snedden/explorers-club_b_1963206.html
• “Mindfulness” Dinner – Approximately 200 members and guests attended the black tie Lowell Thomas Awards fund-raiser on Oct. 13, many decked out in exploration medals, kilts, strapless cocktail dresses, and funky knit caps. While the New York Times photographed members in a makeshift studio alongside one wall, attendees bid on such diverse items as a phrenology hand-painted bicycle helmet from Belle Helmets, an autographed Sir Edmund Hillary dinner menu from 1985, a ride in the Goodyear Blimp, and a mini Explorers Club flag signed by astronauts James Lovell and Buzz Aldrin.
Here are some memorable quotes from three recipients of the Lowell Thomas Awards:
“There are still people in the Amazon living independently from our industrial world. This is one last frontier we must truly protect.”
– Scott Wallace, author and journalist
“There are ways to tell complex stories without dumbing them down. There’s not a square yard of earth not mapped by satellites which can show us where problems exist.”
– Sir David Attenborough, filmmaker
“I inherited the family business of envelope-pushing. … who better than explorers to lead the way in the 21st century?... Too many people live within a comfort zone. Exploration is the opposite. We need to step outside the comfort zone and outside certainties. As pioneers, we must fight against common assumptions … we need to get into the unknown and search for that moment of rapture which is magical … life has meaning and hope as soon as we try to explore it.
– Bertrand Piccard, keynote speaker, aeronaut
• Experiential Glint – Photographer Christopher Lane spent two days at Club events photographing over 1,500 images of dozens of members for a photo spread in the Oct. 21 edition of the Times. While some female members grumbled that only one woman was included – Thor Heyerdahl’s daughter Bettina Heyerdahl – the coverage was considered exceptional in terms of building awareness for an organization always in search of new members and financial support. Writes reporter Alan Feuer, “(the Club is) actually about the faces: some fresh, some craggy, but all bearing that experiential glint brought back from the planet’s farthest places.”
View the Times story here: http://www.nytimes.com/slideshow/2012/10/21/nyregion/20121021EXPLORERS.html
Climbers Applaud Peaceful Use for Drones
Good to know there’s a peaceful use for drones, at least in the exploration field. Word comes about a climb last summer by Mammut pro David Lama who stood together with Peter Ortner and Corey Rich on the summit of the 20,509-ft./6,251m Nameless Tower in Pakistan, also known as Trango Tower. Starting from the sun terrace, it took them ten hours to complete the Eternal Flame route, long considered to be one of the toughest routes over 5,000 meters (16,404 feet).
There were three members in the rope team on the imposing face, but a fourth pair of eyes was following and watched their every move. Remo Masina from the Swiss company, Dedicam, controlled a backpack-sized camera drone, supported by four propellers, from the base of the face. Events on the rock were documented up close using a mounted camera. This resulted in breathtaking video and stills which had never been produced before in this area and at these heights.
"The outcome was completely uncertain," said Masina. "We were unable to test the drones under real conditions before the project." A completely new type of drone had to be constructed for the expedition to Karakorum in order to ensure that all requirements relating to height and range were met.
The joint project between Mammut and Dedicam achieved a milestone in the alpine photo and film world, and opens up new possibilities with so far unseen pictures of the largest mountains in the world.
View some of the drone images here: http://www.mammut.ch/basecamp/en/entries/basecamp-news?iframe=1
Eleven Months to Go Until Exploration Day
Seems not everyone is quite so thrilled with Christopher Columbus whose special day was first celebrated nationally in 1937. Columbus Day is, needless to say, viewed very differently by different groups of Americans. Some people forget it's a holiday at all. Some Italian Americans see it as a point of cultural pride. Other people — especially Native Americans — point out that Columbus personally oversaw the murder and enslavement of thousands and see the holiday as an intrinsically cruel celebration of the beginning of massive genocide and generations of oppression.
A campaign is underway to replace Columbus Day with Exploration Day. The logic is this: Columbus Day is about one man and the (actually untrue) claim that he was the first person to discover America. Inherently, that's Euro-centric, which is a big part of why it sits awkwardly in a pluralistic country. But exploration is inclusive. The ancestors of Native Hawaiians were explorers who crossed the ocean. The ancestors of Native Americans explored their way across the Bering land bridge and then explored
two continents.
Look at the history of America and you can see a history of exploration by many different people, from many different backgrounds. Sometimes we're talking about literal, physical exploration. Other times, the exploration is conducted in a lab. Or in space. But the point is clear: This country was built on explorers. And it needs explorers for the future, say organizers of Exploration Day.
Exploration Day would allow Americans to honor the importance of exploration – and
the pride taken in being explorers – without marginalizing some Americans and without perpetuating damaging myths about U.S. history. Bonus: Exploration Day could double as a holiday for science.
(Read more at www.ExplorationDayUSA.org).
Himalayan Stove Project Issues Commemorative Everest Poster
A poster commemorating the 50th anniversary of the first five U.S, mountaineers to reach the summit of Mount Everest in May 1963, has been created by the Himalayan Stove Project. The poster is being released in a numbered, limited first edition of only 250, and is available for a contribution of $250, exclusively on the website of the Himalayan Stove Project – http://www.himalayanstoveproject.org/. The group provides clean cookstoves to individuals and families living in the Himalayas who now cook with traditional, rudimentary cookstoves or over open fire pits inside their homes, consuming excessive amounts of precious fuel and polluting the indoor air to dangerously unhealthy levels.
Climber Braves Hurricane Sandy
Everest climber Sherman Bull was seen walking his dog Denali, a stocky long-haired Alaskan husky, down the streets of New Canaan, Conn., during the height of Hurricane Sandy. Bull tells the New Canaan News (Nov. 2), “I enjoy bad weather. I climb mountains. I get a rush from it. I’ve seen higher winds in Antarctica. I do watch for falling debris, though; that’s something you have to look out for.”
Bull appears in director Michael Brown’s new film, High Ground (2012), a documentary that follows a team of veterans returning from combat in Afghanistan and Iraq as they set out to climb a towering Himalayan peak in Nepal to overcome challenges and heal the mental and emotional ravages of war.
QUOTE OF THE MONTH
When we were young, we loved to climb, run, jump and swing: to play. It’s part of who we are, yet it’s often absent from our adult lives. We have evolved to expect, and to endure, a little physical hardship every now and then, but it’s often absent from our lives. But the fact is that we feel and act much better when we push ourselves – and play a little too.
– David Breashears, filmmaker, explorer, mountaineer, and author in the foreward to You’ll Know at the Finish Line: A Spartan Guide to The Sport of Obstacle Racing by Joe Desena and Andy Weinberg (Spartan Race, Inc., 2012). The e-book is free at Spartan race.com.
EXPEDITION FOCUS
Anti-Science Cynics Cannot Win
By Erden Eruç
Felix Baumgartner, 43, an Austrian skydiver and BASE jumper set the world record for skydiving an estimated 24-miles, reaching an approximate speed of 834 mph, or Mach 1.24. In doing so, he became the first person to break the sound barrier on a descent without vehicular power. Erden Eruç is founder of the nonprofit Around-n-Over with a mission to educate and inspire children. He has completed a human powered circumnavigation and holds records in ocean rowing. He’s particularly upset regarding one story about Baumgartner that aired on NBC.
On Oct. 14, I was riveted in front of my computer to watch the live broadcast of the high altitude jump by Felix Baumgartner. It took me back to the day when as a middle school student I had watched astronauts walk on the moon live on a black and white television. Felix executed a controlled experiment, carried out methodically after seven years of well-defined preparations. The highest altitude and the fastest fall were among the firsts to explore for mankind.
There was no desire for an adventure, all had to remain under control, a complete checklist was carried out during the mission, the outcome was a successful landing. Of course there were unknowns to be explored, data to be collected, hence the experiment. A whole team of trained minds had been assembled to collaborate in making history, to design a variety of equipment ranging from the spacesuit to the balloon to sensors for scientific experiments to cameras, in order to see through that challenge.
Now retired Joe Kittinger, the distinguished USAF pilot who held the record for the highest jump since 1960, was his voice link at mission control. Dr. Jonathan Clark, the husband of the late Columbia shuttle astronaut Laurel Clark, was the medical director on the team. Dr. Clark had been on the SCSIIT (Spacecraft Crew Survival Integrated Investigation Team) assembled by NASA in 2004 to investigate the ways astronauts might survive a crippled spacecraft in the future. The least that a person on the street could have done was to have some humility, to shut up and to learn from the experiment.
However when I clicked haplessly on a news piece on the MSNBC website hoping for new information, I found NBC’s Mike Taibbi, categorizing Felix among “history’s other daredevils in search of fame, not heroes risking all for others or even for a noble idea.” In the same breath, Taibbi was juxtaposing Felix whose achievement he framed as a one shot wonder to be admired, with the space shuttle astronauts who were “the best of us, the hopes of mankind testing the limits of human achievement.” (See: http://video.msnbc.msn.com/nightly-news/49409925)
Taibbi was so off the mark and sounded so ignorant about how integrated and linked the two were, it was mind boggling. Neither this person, nor his producers, nor their minions who had assembled his contrarian statement probably days in advance of the jump for purposes of boosted ratings, could connect the dots. They had missed an opportunity to educate their audience.
Baumgartner had just jumped from the edge of space becoming the first skydiver to break the sound barrier. There was poetry in the fact that 65 years earlier on the same date in 1947, Chuck Yeager had piloted the Bell X-1 rocket plane to become the first person to achieve supersonic speed. Yet Taibbi was belittling Baumgartner as a daredevil who would be forgotten tomorrow. Thanks to what we learned from this mission by Baumgartner, the future astronauts will perhaps have a way to jump off a failed spaceship to survive and will not have to burn with such a ship upon reentry into the earth's atmosphere. Shouldn’t Taibbi be asking instead whether Baumgartner will be remembered along with John Glenn, a pioneer of space exploration, or with Chuck Yeager, a wizard of flight who was the first to break the sound barrier?
It is such deliberate cynicism, such closed-minded babble, such willful ignorance from his kind in the media that corrupts the social conscience about what is possible for mankind. These reporters and correspondents forget that their amplified voice on the public airwaves is a privilege to be handled responsibly. They act as kingmakers, they promote their own cronies, they categorize the public into winners and losers, and they insult our intelligence in doing so. If an accomplishment is so grand that it defies being ignored, they carry on to denigrate the same, becoming parasites to share the spotlight. They trip us, they stand in our way; they corrupt our minds about our limits as humanity, about our future.
It is our duty as explorers, as parents, as educators, as role models to combat this insidious anti-science venom with equal passion, to push back with all the power that we can muster. We cannot let the cynics clip our wings, shape our destiny, define our future, or deflate our desire to explore our boundaries, be it in space, or at the depths of oceans, or under miles of rock in a cave, or among mounds of encyclopedias in a library.
Erden Eruç
President
Around-n-Over
http://www.Around-n-Over.org
MEDIA MATTERS
Fishing for Meteorites? You Need a License Now
A fishing license for the sky. That’s what Leonard David of SPACE.com calls the Bureau of Land Management’s new policy governing the collection of meteorites found on public lands.
The policy, issued Sept. 10, provides guidance to the BLM’s field office managers for administering the collection of meteorites on public lands in three "use categories”: (1) casual collection of small quantities without a permit, (2) scientific and educational use by permit under the authority of the Antiquities Act, and (3) commercial collection of meteorites through the issuance of land-use permits.
As noted in the new policy, the extraterrestrial origin of meteorites, as well as their relative rarity, "has made them highly desirable to casual collectors, commercial collectors and scientific researchers."
In the world of meteorite collecting, the new rules have sparked a flurry of comment on the Internet and on a special mailing list dedicated to the topic, according to SPACE.com.
"I have mixed feelings about the new BLM guidelines," said Michael Gilmer of Galactic Stone and Ironworks, in Lutz, Fla. "I think this is all about money. Meteorites flew under the regulatory radar for a long time.”
The bottom line is that no one has any rights to collect meteorites on federal lands for profit or for science without permission from the BLM in the form of a permit, according to the federal agency.
For more information:
http://www.blm.gov/wo/st/en/info/regulations/Instruction_Memos_and_Bulletins/national_instruction/2012/IM_2012-182.html
CLIMBING FOR DOLLARS
New IMAX Award Announced for Aspiring Filmmakers
It can be tough to get a movie made if you don’t have a major studio backing you with gobs of cash. But soon, aspiring filmmakers will have another avenue to pursue their dreams.
Newsweek and The Daily Beast announced last month that the company is creating the IMAX Award, a new honor for filmmakers interested in creating movies around the theme of exploration. A $25,000 prize will be awarded either as a scholarship or given as a lump sum for production expenses.
The contest was designed to commemorate Newsweek’s Explorer issue, which will go on sale Jan. 6. It will also celebrate the 40th anniversary of IMAX, which revolutionized film production by providing a method to shoot larger images with greater resolution.
The deadline for submission of a maximum two-minute trailer is Nov. 30, 2012. A panel of judges will select 10 finalists, which will then be voted on by the public. The winner’s film will premiere at Newsweek and The Daily Beast’s Explorer event set to take place in January 2013.
(For more information: http://www.thedailybeast.com/sponsored/2012/10/imax-awards-contest-rules.html)
WEB WATCH
What Color is That Glacier?
It sounds like a simple question – what color is a glacier? Allen Pope, a glaciologist from Cambridge, UK, compiled a video from six field seasons around the Arctic and Antarctic, to show how complex that answer is, why it matters, and his role as a researcher to help answer that question. Pope is studying for a Ph.D. in Polar Studies at the Scott Polar Research Institute, University of Cambridge (Trinity College).
You can see his fascinating three-minute video here: http://vimeo.com/51589462
Explore Responsibly with iNeverSolo.com
Explorers and outdoor enthusiasts have a powerful new, and absolutely free tool literally at their fingertips when heading out for their next big project. The brainchild of an outdoorsman, pilot and engineer, iNeversolo allows you to create a plan for your outdoor activity so that, if you don’t make it back when you said you would, an email and text alert goes out to the people you designate and they can track you down.
Developed by Colorado engineer and licensed pilot, Jed Mitchell, iNeverSolo is built on the tried and true model of the pilot’s flight plan. “The simple goal,” according to Mitchell, “is to let others know where you’ve gone, in case you don’t make it back.” Outdoor users can enter and activate their plan with iNeverSolo for free; sponsors and advertisers cover the site’s costs. (For more information: iNeverSolo.com)
ON THE HORIZON
Exploring the Boundaries: the Science of the Extremes, May 28-29, 2013
Lorie Karnath, former president of The Explorers Club, is co-chairing along with Prof. Bengt Norden, chair of physical chemistry at Chalmers University and former Nobel Committee chair, a two-day symposium to be held May 28-29, 2013, at the prestigious Royal Swedish Academy of Sciences in Stockholm called Exploring the Boundaries: the Science of the Extremes.
The program will focus on planet earth, space, other planets and satellites and theoretical aspects of extreme exploration, while considering the convergence of physical forces and chemistry as well biotic prerequisites such as how life forms exist in extreme conditions.
The symposium will include a number of preeminent research and field scientists who will look into questions ranging from the beginnings of the universe and the possibilities that this holds, to prerequisites for survival under varied extreme conditions … and if life is found elsewhere could mankind communicate?
The program is hosted by The Molecular Frontiers Foundation and The Royal Academy of Sciences, which awards the Nobel Prizes each year for the sciences. The Foundation represents a global effort to promote the understanding of science. (For more information: www.molecularfrontiers.org, molecularfrontierssab@yahoo.com)
EXPEDITION CLASSIFIEDS
Advertise in Expedition News – For just 50 cents a word, you can reach an estimated 10,000 readers of America’s only monthly newsletter celebrating the world of expeditions on land, in space, and beneath the sea. Join us as we take a sometimes irreverent look at the people and projects making Expedition News. Frequency discounts are available. (For more information: blumassoc@aol.com).
Ripped From the Pages of EN – Read the book that was spawned by Expedition News. Autographed copies of You Want to Go Where? – How to Get Someone to Pay for the Trip of Your Dreams (Skyhorse Publishing) – are available to readers for the discounted price of $14.99 plus $2.89 s & h (international orders add $9.95 s & h). If you have a project that is bigger than yourself – a trip with a purpose – learn how it’s possible to generate cash or in-kind (gear) support. Written by EN editor Jeff Blumenfeld, it is based upon three decades helping sponsors select the right exploration projects to support. Payable by PayPal to blumassoc@aol.com, or by check to Expedition News, 1281 East Main Street – Box 10, Stamford, CT 06902
EXPEDITION NEWS is published by Blumenfeld and Associates, Inc., 1281 East Main Street – Box 10, Stamford, CT 06902 USA. Tel. 203 655 1600, editor@expeditionnews.com. Editor/publisher: Jeff Blumenfeld. Assistant editor: Jamie Gribbon. Research editor: Lee Kovel. ©2012 Blumenfeld and Associates, Inc. All rights reserved. ISSN: 1526-8977. Subscriptions: US$36/yr. available by e-mail only. Credit card payments accepted through www.paypal.com. Read EXPEDITION NEWS at www.expeditionnews.com. Enjoy the EN blog at www.expeditionnews.blogspot.com.
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