Hostname: page-component-7479d7b7d-jwnkl Total loading time: 0 Render date: 2024-07-12T16:54:37.211Z Has data issue: false hasContentIssue false

The Scottish National Antarctic Expedition 1902–04

Published online by Cambridge University Press:  27 October 2009

Ralph E. Bernstein
Affiliation:
Medical School, University of the Witwatersrand, York Road 2193 Parktown, Johannesburg, South Africa

Extract

On 21 July 1904, just over 80 years ago, the barque-rigged, Norwegian-built auxiliary steamship Scotia sailed home up the Clyde with members of the Scottish National Antarctic Expedition (SNAE), concluding one of the most successful expeditions of the heroic period of Antarctic exploration. Contemporaneous with the more spectacular British Antarctic Expedition (1901–03) commanded by Robert Falcon Scott, the Scotia party under William Spiers Bruce had overwintered on Laurie Island (60° 44ʹ S, 44° 50ʹ W) in the South Orkney Islands, explored for the first time the oceanography of the Weddell Sea, assembled an important collection of scientific material, and discovered Coats Land, an icebound stretch of the East Antarctica coast.

While Scott's Discovery expedition had emphasized geographical exploration inland from the Ross Sea sector of Antarctica, Bruce in the Scotia had concentrated more on scientific discovery in the Weddell Sea sector. On 12 November 1904 in Edinburgh, members of the Scotia and Discovery expeditions were guests at the 20th anniversary dinner of the Royal Scottish Geographical Society, Bruce and Scott together responding to a presidential toast that honoured the success of both.

Type
Articles
Copyright
Copyright © Cambridge University Press 1985

Access options

Get access to the full version of this content by using one of the access options below. (Log in options will check for institutional or personal access. Content may require purchase if you do not have access.)

References

Bagshawe, R. W. 1947. Postal history of the Falkland Islands Dependencies. Polar Record, 5(33): 4559.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Brooks, C. E. P. 1920. Climate and weather of the Falkland Islands. London, John Murray.Google Scholar
Brown, R. N. R. 1905. Argentine Antarctic Station. Scottish Geographical Magazine, 21(4): 207–10.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Brown, R. N. R. 1905a. Diego Alvarez, or Gough Island. Scottish Geographical Magazine, 21(8): 430–40.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Brown, R. N. R. 1906. Antarctic plant life. Scottish Geographical Magazine, 22(9): 473–83.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Brown, R. N. R. 1912. The problems of Antarctic plant life; the botany of the South Orkneys. Snae Reports, 3(1 and 2): 329.Google Scholar
Brown, R. N. R. 1923. A naturalist at the Poles: the life, work and voyages of Dr W. S. Bruce, the Polar explorer. London, Seeley Service.Google Scholar
Brown, R. N. R., Mossman, R. C. and Pirie, J. H. H. 1906. Voyage of the Scotia. Edinburgh, Blackwood. Reprinted 1977.Google Scholar
Browne, E. T. 1909. The Medusae of the Scottish National Antarctic Expedition. Snae Reports, 5(11): 169–88.Google Scholar
Bruce, W. S. 1903. The Scotia's voyage to the Falkland Islands. Scottish Geographical Magazine, 19(4): 169–73.Google Scholar
Bruce, W. S. 1904. First Antarctic voyage of the ‘Scotia’. Scottish Geographical Magazine, 20(2): 5766.Google Scholar
Bruce, W. S. 1905a. Outline map of Laurie Island, South Orkneys. Scottish Geographical Magazine, 21(6): 322–23.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Bruce, W. S. 1905b. Bathymetrical survey of the South Atlantic Ocean and Weddell Sea. Scottish Geographical Magazine, 21(8): 402–12.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Bruce, W. S. 1910. The new Scottish National Antarctic Expedition, 1911. Scottish Geographical Magazine, 26(4): 192–95.Google Scholar
Bruce, W. S. 1911. Polar exploration. London, Williams and Norgate.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Bruce, W. S. 1914. Shackleton's Transantarctic Expedition, 1914. Nature, 92: 533–34.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Bruce, W. S. and Wilton, D. W. 1904. First Antarctic voyage of the ‘Scotia’. III. Zoology. Scottish Geographical Magazine, 20(3): 121–29.Google Scholar
Clarke, W. E. 1905. On the birds of Gough Island, South Atlantic Ocean. Ibis, 5 (8th series), (18): 247–68.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Clarke, W. E. 1906. On the birds of the South Orkney Islands. Ibis, 6 (8th series), (21): 145–87.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Clarke, W. E., Ramsay, L. N. G., Brown, R. N. R. and Bruce, W. S. 1915. Ornithology of the Scottish National Antarctic Expedition Snae Reports, 4(14): 199306.Google Scholar
Comerci, S. M. 1974. Islas Orcadas, 70 anos despues. Antartida, 5(1): 3241.Google Scholar
Darwin, G. H. 1907. Tidal observations made during the voyage of the ‘Scotia’. SNAE Reports, 2(3): 321–24.Google Scholar
John, D. D. 1933. The work of RRS Discovery II. Polar Record, 1: 128–31.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Melvill, J. C. and Standen, R. 1909. The marine molluscs of the Scottish National Antarctic Expedition. Snae Reports, 5(8): 89128.Google Scholar
Moneta, J. M. 1954. Quatro anos en las Orcadas del Sur. Buenos Aires, Peuser.Google Scholar
Mossman, R. C. 1904. First Antarctic voyage of the ‘Scotia’. II. Meteorology. Scottish Geographical Magazine, 20(3): 113–20.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Mossman, R. C. 1905. The recent voyage of the Uruguay. Scottish Geographical Magazine, 21(6): 323–28.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Mossman, R. C. 1905a. Some results of the Scottish National Antarctic Expedition. 4. Meteorology. Scottish Geographical Magazine, 21(8): 417–29.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Mossman, R. C. 1907. Meteorology. Snae Reports, 2(1): 1306.Google Scholar
Mossman, R. C. 1909. Meteorology at the South Orkneys and South Georgia in 1908. Scottish Geographical Magazine, 25(8): 408–13.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Mossman, R. C. 1910. Meteorology in the Weddell Quadrant during 1909. Scottish Geographical Magazine, 26(8): 407–17.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Mossman, R. C. 1916. Physical conditions in the Weddell Sea. Geographical Journal, 47(61): 479500.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Murdoch, W. G. B. 1894. From Edinburgh to the Antarctic: an artist's notes and sketches during the Dundee Antarctic Expedition of 1892–93. London, Longman, Green.Google Scholar
Nordenskjöld, O. and Andersson, J. G. 1905. Antarctica. London, Hurst and Blacken.Google Scholar
Pearcey, F. G. 1920. Foraminifera of the Scottish National Antarctic Expedition. Snae Reports, 7(7): 117–70.Google Scholar
Pirie, J. H. H. 1905. On the Graptolite-bearing rocks of the South Orkneys. Proceedings of the Royal Society of Edinburgh, 25(1): 463–70.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Pirie, J. H. H. 1905a. Deep sea deposits. Scottish Geographical Magazine, 21(8): 413–17, 456.Google Scholar
Pirie, J. H. H. 1948. Antarctic Posts. London, Stamp Collecting.Google Scholar
Pirie, J. H. H. and Brown, R. N. R. 1905. Second voyage of the Scotia. Scottish Geographical Magazine, 21(1): 2433.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Regan, C. T. 1915. The Antarctic fishes of the Scottish National Antarctic Expedition. Snae Reports, 4(15): 307–74.Google Scholar
Ross, J. C. 1847. A voyage of discovery and research in the Southern and Antarctic regions during the years 1839–1843; London, John Murray.Google Scholar
Scottish Geographical Magazine. 1903. Scottish National Antarctic Expedition. Scottish Geographical Magazine, 19(11): 589–95.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Scott, R. F. 1905. The voyage of the ‘Discovery’. London, Smith Elder, 2 vols.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Seaver, G. 1933. Edward Wilson of the Antarctic. London, John Murray.Google Scholar
Shackleton, E. 1919. South: the story of Shackleton's 1914–1917 expedition. London, Heinemann. Reissued 1970.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Weddell, J. 1825. A voyage towards the South Pole performed in the years 1822–24, containing an examination of the Antarctic Sea to the seventy-fourth degree of latitude. London, Longman and others. Reprinted 1970, London, David and Charles.Google Scholar
Wilton, D. W., Pirie, J. H. H. and Brown, R. N. R.. 1908. Zoological log. Snae Reports, 4(1): 1103.Google Scholar