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<h2> CHAPTER 16 </h2>
<p>It had been Captain Guy's original intention, after satisfying himself
about the Auroras, to proceed through the Strait of Magellan, and up along
the western coast of Patagonia; but information received at Tristan
d'Acunha induced him to steer to the southward, in the hope of falling in
with some small islands said to lie about the parallel of 60 degrees S.,
longitude 41 degrees 20' W. In the event of his not discovering these
lands, he designed, should the season prove favourable, to push on toward
the pole. Accordingly, on the twelfth of December, we made sail in that
direction. On the eighteenth we found ourselves about the station
indicated by Glass, and cruised for three days in that neighborhood
without finding any traces of the islands he had mentioned. On the
twenty-first, the weather being unusually pleasant, we again made sail to
the southward, with the resolution of penetrating in that course as far as
possible. Before entering upon this portion of my narrative, it may be as
well, for the information of those readers who have paid little attention
to the progress of discovery in these regions, to give some brief account
of the very few attempts at reaching the southern pole which have hitherto
been made.</p>
<p>That of Captain Cook was the first of which we have any distinct account.
In 1772 he sailed to the south in the Resolution, accompanied by
Lieutenant Furneaux in the Adventure. In December he found himself as far
as the fifty-eighth parallel of south latitude, and in longitude 26
degrees 57' E. Here he met with narrow fields of ice, about eight or ten
inches thick, and running northwest and southeast. This ice was in large
cakes, and usually it was packed so closely that the vessel had great
difficulty in forcing a passage. At this period Captain Cook supposed,
from the vast number of birds to be seen, and from other indications, that
he was in the near vicinity of land. He kept on to the southward, the
weather being exceedingly cold, until he reached the sixty-fourth
parallel, in longitude 38 degrees 14' E.. Here he had mild weather, with
gentle breezes, for five days, the thermometer being at thirty-six. In
January, 1773, the vessels crossed the Antarctic circle, but did not
succeed in penetrating much farther; for upon reaching latitude 67 degrees
15' they found all farther progress impeded by an immense body of ice,
extending all along the southern horizon as far as the eye could reach.
This ice was of every variety—and some large floes of it, miles in
extent, formed a compact mass, rising eighteen or twenty feet above the
water. It being late in the season, and no hope entertained of rounding
these obstructions, Captain Cook now reluctantly turned to the northward.</p>
<p>In the November following he renewed his search in the Antarctic. In
latitude 59 degrees 40' he met with a strong current setting to the
southward. In December, when the vessels were in latitude 67 degrees 31',
longitude 142 degrees 54' W., the cold was excessive, with heavy gales and
fog. Here also birds were abundant; the albatross, the penguin, and the
peterel especially. In latitude 70 degrees 23' some large islands of ice
were encountered, and shortly afterward the clouds to the southward were
observed to be of a snowy whiteness, indicating the vicinity of field ice.
In latitude 71 degrees 10', longitude 106 degrees 54' W., the navigators
were stopped, as before, by an immense frozen expanse, which filled the
whole area of the southern horizon. The northern edge of this expanse was
ragged and broken, so firmly wedged together as to be utterly impassible,
and extending about a mile to the southward. Behind it the frozen surface
was comparatively smooth for some distance, until terminated in the
extreme background by gigantic ranges of ice mountains, the one towering
above the other. Captain Cook concluded that this vast field reached the
southern pole or was joined to a continent. Mr. J. N. Reynolds, whose
great exertions and perseverance have at length succeeded in getting set
on foot a national expedition, partly for the purpose of exploring these
regions, thus speaks of the attempt of the Resolution. "We are not
surprised that Captain Cook was unable to go beyond 71 degrees 10', but we
are astonished that he did attain that point on the meridian of 106
degrees 54' west longitude. Palmer's Land lies south of the Shetland,
latitude sixty-four degrees, and tends to the southward and westward
farther than any navigator has yet penetrated. Cook was standing for this
land when his progress was arrested by the ice; which, we apprehend, must
always be the case in that point, and so early in the season as the sixth
of January—and we should not be surprised if a portion of the icy
mountains described was attached to the main body of Palmer's Land, or to
some other portions of land lying farther to the southward and westward."</p>
<p>In 1803, Captains Kreutzenstern and Lisiausky were dispatched by Alexander
of Russia for the purpose of circumnavigating the globe. In endeavouring
to get south, they made no farther than 59 degrees 58', in longitude 70
degrees 15' W. They here met with strong currents setting eastwardly.
Whales were abundant, but they saw no ice. In regard to this voyage, Mr.
Reynolds observes that, if Kreutzenstern had arrived where he did earlier
in the season, he must have encountered ice—it was March when he
reached the latitude specified. The winds, prevailing, as they do, from
the southward and westward, had carried the floes, aided by currents, into
that icy region bounded on the north by Georgia, east by Sandwich Land and
the South Orkneys, and west by the South Shetland islands.</p>
<p>In 1822, Captain James Weddell, of the British navy, with two very small
vessels, penetrated farther to the south than any previous navigator, and
this, too, without encountering extraordinary difficulties. He states that
although he was frequently hemmed in by ice before reaching the
seventy-second parallel, yet, upon attaining it, not a particle was to be
discovered, and that, upon arriving at the latitude of 74 degrees 15', no
fields, and only three islands of ice were visible. It is somewhat
remarkable that, although vast flocks of birds were seen, and other usual
indications of land, and although, south of the Shetlands, unknown coasts
were observed from the masthead tending southwardly, Weddell discourages
the idea of land existing in the polar regions of the south.</p>
<p>On the 11th of January, 1823, Captain Benjamin Morrell, of the American
schooner Wasp, sailed from Kerguelen's Land with a view of penetrating as
far south as possible. On the first of February he found himself in
latitude 64 degrees 52' S., longitude 118 degrees 27' E. The following
passage is extracted from his journal of that date. "The wind soon
freshened to an eleven-knot breeze, and we embraced this opportunity of
making to the west; being however convinced that the farther we went south
beyond latitude sixty-four degrees, the less ice was to be apprehended, we
steered a little to the southward, until we crossed the Antarctic circle,
and were in latitude 69 degrees 15' E. In this latitude there was no field
ice, and very few ice islands in sight."</p>
<p>Under the date of March fourteenth I find also this entry. "The sea was
now entirely free of field ice, and there were not more than a dozen ice
islands in sight. At the same time the temperature of the air and water
was at least thirteen degrees higher (more mild) than we had ever found it
between the parallels of sixty and sixty-two south. We were now in
latitude 70 degrees 14' S., and the temperature of the air was
forty-seven, and that of the water forty-four. In this situation I found
the variation to be 14 degrees 27' easterly, per azimuth.... I have
several times passed within the Antarctic circle, on different meridians,
and have uniformly found the temperature, both of the air and the water,
to become more and more mild the farther I advanced beyond the sixty-fifth
degree of south latitude, and that the variation decreases in the same
proportion. While north of this latitude, say between sixty and sixty-five
south, we frequently had great difficulty in finding a passage for the
vessel between the immense and almost innumerable ice islands, some of
which were from one to two miles in circumference, and more than five
hundred feet above the surface of the water."</p>
<p>Being nearly destitute of fuel and water, and without proper instruments,
it being also late in the season, Captain Morrell was now obliged to put
back, without attempting any further progress to the westward, although an
entirely open, sea lay before him. He expresses the opinion that, had not
these overruling considerations obliged him to retreat, he could have
penetrated, if not to the pole itself, at least to the eighty-fifth
parallel. I have given his ideas respecting these matters somewhat at
length, that the reader may have an opportunity of seeing how far they
were borne out by my own subsequent experience.</p>
<p>In 1831, Captain Briscoe, in the employ of the Messieurs Enderby,
whale-ship owners of London, sailed in the brig Lively for the South Seas,
accompanied by the cutter Tula. On the twenty-eighth of February, being in
latitude 66 degrees 30' S., longitude 47 degrees 31' E., he descried land,
and "clearly discovered through the snow the black peaks of a range of
mountains running E. S. E." He remained in this neighbourhood during the
whole of the following month, but was unable to approach the coast nearer
than within ten leagues, owing to the boisterous state of the weather.
Finding it impossible to make further discovery during this season, he
returned northward to winter in Van Diemen's Land.</p>
<p>In the beginning of 1832 he again proceeded southwardly, and on the fourth
of February was seen to the southeast in latitude 67 degrees 15' longitude
69 degrees 29' W. This was soon found to be an island near the headland of
the country he had first discovered. On the twenty-first of the month he
succeeded in landing on the latter, and took possession of it in the name
of William IV, calling it Adelaide's Island, in honour of the English
queen. These particulars being made known to the Royal Geographical
Society of London, the conclusion was drawn by that body "that there is a
continuous tract of land extending from 47 degrees 30' E. to 69 degrees
29' W. longitude, running the parallel of from sixty-six to sixty-seven
degrees south latitude." In respect to this conclusion Mr. Reynolds
observes: "In the correctness of it we by no means concur; nor do the
discoveries of Briscoe warrant any such indifference. It was within these
limits that Weddel proceeded south on a meridian to the east of Georgia,
Sandwich Land, and the South Orkney and Shetland islands." My own
experience will be found to testify most directly to the falsity of the
conclusion arrived at by the society.</p>
<p>These are the principal attempts which have been made at penetrating to a
high southern latitude, and it will now be seen that there remained,
previous to the voyage of the Jane, nearly three hundred degrees of
longitude in which the Antarctic circle had not been crossed at all. Of
course a wide field lay before us for discovery, and it was with feelings
of most intense interest that I heard Captain Guy express his resolution
of pushing boldly to the southward.</p>
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