Nansen’s Fram expedition of 1893–1896 was an attempt by the Norwegian explorer Fridtjof Nansen to reach the geographical North Pole. Nansen took his ship Fram to the New Siberian Islands in the eastern Arctic Ocean, froze her into the pack ice, and waited for the drift to carry her towards the pole. After 18 months Nansen and a chosen companion, Hjalmar Johansen, left the ship with a team of dogs and sledges and made for the Pole. They did not reach it, but they achieved a record Farthest North latitude of 86°13. 6′N before a long retreat over ice and water to reach safety in Franz Josef Land. Meanwhile, Fram continued to drift west
About Nansen’s Fram expedition in brief

Nansen supervised the construction of a vessel with a rounded hull and other features designed to withstand prolonged pressure from ice. The ship was rarely threatened during her long imprisonment, and emerged unscathed after three years. The expedition proved conclusively that there were no significant land masses between the Eurasian continents and the North Pole, and confirmed the general character of the north polar region as a deep, ice-covered sea. In a lecture given in 1884 to the Norwegian Academy of Science and Letters, one of the founders of modern meteorology, Dr. Henrik. Mohn argued that the finding of the Jeannettes relics indicated the existence of an ocean current flowing from east to west across the entire Arctic Ocean. The Danish governor of Julianehaab, writing of the find, surmised that an expedition frozen into the Siberian sea might, if its ship were to prove strong enough, cross the polar ocean and land in South Greenland. In February 1890 Nansen addressed a meeting of the Norwegian Geographical Society in Oslo. After drawing attention to the failures of the many expeditions which had approached the north pole, he announced his plans to return from Greenland shortly after his return from Alaska. In 1888 Nansen remembered the east–west Arctic drift theory and its inherent possibilities for further exploration, and shortly after he was ready to announce his plans for the first crossing of the Greenland ice cap, an objective which he achieved in 1888–89.
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