Front cover image for Below the convergence : voyages toward Antarctica, 1699-1839

Below the convergence : voyages toward Antarctica, 1699-1839

This wonderfully written book tells the story of British, American, and Russian expeditions, from the astronomer Edmond Halley's voyage in the Paramore in 1699 to the sealer John Balleny's 1839 voyage in the Eliza Scott, all in search of land, fur, or elephant seals. These were voyages for science, national prestige, and profit. Life was incredibly harsh: Crews had poor provisions and inadequate clothing and were constantly threatened by scurvy. Often they had to make their own charts as they sailed in the stormy waters of the Southern Ocean below the Convergence, that sea frontier marking the boundary between the freezing Antarctic waters and the warmer sub-Antarctic seas. These seamen were the first to discover and exploit a new continent, which was not the verdant southern land they imagined but an inhospitable expanse of rock and ice, ringed by pack ice and icebergs - Antarctica
Print Book, English, ©1997
Norton, New York, ©1997
315 pages : illustrations, maps ; 24 cm
9780393039498, 0393039498
34321610
I. Terra Australis Incognita
II. The Haven-Finding Art
III. The Plague of the Sea
IV. The Southern Ocean
V. Edmond Halley and the Pink Paramore
VI. Mr. James Cook
VII. The Voyage of the Resolution and Adventure
VIII. The Continent Discovered
IX. Weddell and Brisbane Sail South
X. Weddell and the Fuegians
XI. John Biscoe: The Third Circumnavigation
XII. Kemp and Balleny: The Last Discoveries by Sealers