On January 18, 1912, Captain Robert Falcon Scott and four of his men reached ... an excruciating and torturous journey that resulted in all of their deaths. The first to perish was Edgar Evans.
An explorer who went to the South Pole, Robert Falcon Scott ... alone on all that ice? OLLIE: And you had no way to call anyone? No radio, nothing? ROBERT SCOTT: That’s right, we had no way ...
Captain Robert Falcon Scott and four of his men reached the geographic South Pole on January 18, 1912, only to meet with disappointment in the form of a tent and a Norwegian flag.
Scott didn't like skis! These skis were used for depot runs. The expedition party travelled to the South Pole by foot.Robert Falcon Scott (1868-1912) was born in Plymouth and is nowadays referred ...
Members of the British Services Antarctic Expedition 2012 on Tuesday marked the 100th anniversary of the day Captain Robert Falcon Scott's ill ... but by March all had died. The British Services ...
Captain Scott's expedition team reached the South Pole five weeks after a rival Norwegian group led by Roald Amundsen An ice pick owned by a member of Captain Scott's ill-fated Antarctic ...
The true story of the British explorer Robert Falcon Scott and his ill-fated expedition to try to be the first man to discover the South Pole, only to find that the murderously cold weather and a ...
By Phil Hebblethwaite The most famous sentence in exploration literature was penned by Captain Robert Falcon Scott as his final journal entry on 29 March 1912, the presumed day of his death: “For ...
Outside the huts of the British Antarctic Expedition of 191012 stand the smiling figures of Captain Robert Falcon Scott and Dr Edward Wilson Wilson is holding Nobby one of the Siberian ponies ...