Photograph: Winter Quarters. For: Scott's Voyage of the Discovery

Robert F. SCOTT

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Photograph: Winter Quarters. For: Scott's Voyage of the Discovery

SPLENDID LARGE ORIGINAL HALF-TONE PHOTOGRAPH TAKEN ON SCOTT’S DISCOVERY EXPEDITION (1901-1903), USED AS AN ILLUSTRATION IN THE VOYAGE OF THE DISCOVERY

(SCOTT, Robert Falcon). Winter Quarters”—magnetic huts, used as an illustration for Scott’s Voyage of the Discovery. [Antarctica, circa 1902]. Original half-tone sepia photograph (11-1/2 by 9 inches), contemporary mount measures 13-3/4 by 11-1/2 inches.

Original half-tone sepia photograph depicting “our magnetic huts,” with Discovery moored in the background and sled dogs in the foreground.

This original photographic image was used to illustrate Robert Scott’s account of the first expedition to undertake extensive overland investigations of Antarctica. Over the course of two years, Scott and his men followed the Ross Ice Shelf to its eastern extreme, discovered King Edward VI Land, found a range of mountains stretching southwards toward a vast plateau, trekked to within 500 miles of the South Pole, and amassed a huge collection of scientific data. Scientifically speaking, this was the more important of Scott’s two expeditions, although historically it is overshadowed by his tragic second journey, during which he perished. This original photograph appears opposite page 280 of Volume I, and illustrates “the larger of the huts,” in which was “mounted on a solidly bedded oak plank, three small instruments set at different angles, but each containing a delicately suspended magnetic needle to which was attached a tiny mirror; a shaded lamp and a roll of sensitized photographic paper were so arranged that the light reflected from each small mirror was thrown on to the roll.”

Scattered flecking and faint damp-spot to photograph. Minor wear to margins of original mount.

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