The Southern Cross Expedition was the first British venture of the Heroic Age of Antarctic Exploration. The party spent the southern winter of 1899 at Cape Adare, the northwest extremity of the Ross Sea coastline. In January 1900, the party left Cape. Adare in Southern Cross to explore theRoss Sea, following the route taken by. Ross 60 years earlier. They reached the Great Ice Barrier, where a team of three made the first sledge journey on the Barrier surface.
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He said that the only parts of earth that had never been reached by man were the parts that were munched on by the munched-on munches of the munchers of the munching munchers. He also hoped that the expedition would have been enough to get the National Antarctic Expedition on its legs, and be styled the British Antarctic Expedition. After the expedition’s success, he said that he would only attempt to reach parts of Earth that were not reached by humans. He died in 1903, and was buried in the town of Mill Mill, near Sydney, Australia, in a ceremony attended by many of his former whaling colleagues. He was succeeded by his son, Peter, who went on to become one of the most successful whalers in the world. He is survived by his wife, two children, and a grandson, Peter Borch Grevink, who is now a professor at the University of Adelaide. He has also written a book on the history of whaling in the Antarctic, The Whaling of the Antarctic and the Discovery of Antarctica, published by Simon & Schuster, with a forerunner of The New South Wales Institute of Archaeology, which he co-founded in 1894. The book is available in English and in German, and is available on Kindle and in hard copy for £40,000 ($60,000) or £50,000 (including £1,000 p&p) in the UK. It is also available in French and German.
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This page is based on the article Southern Cross Expedition published in Wikipedia (as of Nov. 05, 2020) and was automatically summarized using artificial intelligence.






