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Ice Coffee: the history of human activity in Antarctica
156 episodes - English - Latest episode: 4 months ago - ★★★★★ - 28 ratingsA history of human activity in Antarctica
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Episodes
056_Into_the_Weddell_Sea
February 20, 2018 12:46 - 50 minutes - 44.5 MBSir Ernest Shackleton returns to Antarctica, this time in the Weddell Sea, where the two preceding voyages got stuck. Guess what happens. Go on, guess.
055_Geologists
January 03, 2018 10:36 - 12 minutes - 10.9 MBPresent day geologists offer their perspectives on the Antarctic Peninsula and I record lots of the bow pushing through loose pack because it's mesmerising.
054_Ross_Sea_Party_Part_Two
January 01, 2018 12:26 - 48 minutes - 36.8 MBThe Ross Ice Barrier claims its final victim of the Heroic Age as Joyce, Richards and Wild struggle to get the depot party back to safety, then McMurdo Sound takes two more lives when a gamble on the weather goes against Mackintosh and Hayward.
053_Ross_Sea_Party_Part_one
December 27, 2017 10:07 - 55 minutes - 48.7 MBShackleton's depot laying party head to the Ross Sea and fight to get food and fuel to the foot of the Beardmore. Part one of a two parter recounting one of the most harrowing chapters to arise in the heroic era.
052_Mixed_Bag
November 27, 2017 12:45 - 55 minutes - 43.3 MBHubert Wilkins makes his first appearance in the Ice Coffee narrative, albeit as a supporting character in someone else's nightmare in the Arctic, and I give you the good oil on sticking to tablets and behavioural responses to motion mediated nausea. The first episode recorded in Antarctica. Muy excitamento. Many spanglish.
051_AAE_Wind_up
October 24, 2017 13:51 - 50 minutes - 46.3 MBI've got a few tidbits left to add about the Australasian Antarctic Expedition, and Mawson will be back in the narrative before you know it, but this ties up some loose ends and resolves the cliff hanger from the end of episode 050.
050 The far east party
September 29, 2017 13:03 - 44 minutes - 40.5 MBThe Cape Denison denizens get their science on and prepare for the spring sledging carnival. The brown stuff gets closer to the whizzy-bladey thing.
049_Mawson_Macquarie
August 27, 2017 08:06 - 53 minutes - 49.2 MBDouglas Mawson gets a lot done in just twelve months.
048_Falling_Southward_Fund
July 27, 2017 11:05 - 3 minutes - 3.26 MBI've been offered work in Antarctica and urgently need to renew some certs and get my teeth fixed and get a seafarer's medical and plane tickets and some coffee. If you've paid all your bills and put some money aside for a rainy day and donated to some charities and had your fill of the caviar and lobster, please consider flicking a few bucks my way. Music, soundscapes and broad horizons lie in the offing, so take care and appreciate your coffee. https://www.indiegogo.com/projects/fall...
047_Filchner
July 15, 2017 13:28 - 50 minutes - 46.5 MBPrussian Army lieutenant Wilhelm Filchner led Germany's second expedition in the early 20th century. While the government stayed largely hands off the expedition committee put their oar in enough to see der Deutschland sail under a syphilitic commander whose antics placed everyone's lives in danger and gave us a really good example of the sort of problems split leadership can cause in a high latitudes project. Suspected suicide, suspected fake appendicitis and very definite mania and toas...
046_Laborastory_William_Speirs_Bruce
June 06, 2017 02:25 - 15 minutes - 14.2 MBIn April 2017 I reprised my take on William Speirs Bruce's role in our present day understanding of Antarctica at the Spotted Mallard. The audience were teh awesomes so I let them eat cake.
045_The_Norwegian_and_the_Pole
June 06, 2017 00:41 - 35 minutes - 32.4 MBDogs make all the difference in getting to the South Pole and back. With Amundsen's triumph, no-one would ever bother going to the Pole agai... Hey. Wait. Why are people still heading overland to the pole? Have they not heard of aircraft? Do they not heed the reports that the pole is cold and that the view is boring? Turns out being first at the pole was only the first in a long string of polar firsts to follow in the next century, and I'm expecting a pogo-stick based expedition to be...
044_Amundsen
May 31, 2017 19:14 - 50 minutes - 46.4 MBRoald Amundsen returns to the narrative and takes pole position, showing the world what you can achieve if you don't give a stuff about science or people.
043_What_not_to_not_wear
April 03, 2017 12:44 - 14 minutes - 12.9 MBWhat's this? Three episodes in quick succession? Blame the hosting service download counter. I'm now obsessed with topping last month's total downloads. This was easy when I only had two and a dog listening but now I have to release more episodes to scratch that itch. Expect shorter and shorter episodes until I'm editing single words and releasing them. Anyhoo, this one explains some clothing terms and concepts which warranted more attention than I was giving them.
042_Shirase
April 03, 2017 12:26 - 36 minutes - 33.3 MBJapan comes in out of the cold and heads back out into the cold again. Nobu Shirase - an explorer of honour and determination, now available in ship form.
041_Pemmican_WTF?
March 31, 2017 12:21 - 7 minutes - 6.46 MBPemmican and sledging biscuit have received several mentions in the series and it's high time I let you in on what I'm on about.
040_The_BAE_comes_to_an_end
March 01, 2017 12:08 - 47 minutes - 43.3 MBThe Eastern Party make their dogged way back to Cape Evans while Atkinson led teams onto the barrier to look for evidence of the pole party. The Terra Nova arrives and the BAE heads home.
039_BAE_Eastern_Party
February 11, 2017 02:02 - 54 minutes - 49.9 MBScott's 3IC, Lt. Victor Campbell, fares poorly on every front except the important one. Little came of the BAE's Eastern Party's efforts in terms of geology, geography, biology, but everyone survived the challenging circumstances that British decorum and crook weather placed them in. Oops. Spoilers. Don't read this until you've listened to episode 040.
038_Terra_Nova_Southern_Party
January 28, 2017 11:50 - 47 minutes - 43.3 MBDammit - it happened again. This story always ends the same way. All of the driving forces behind Scott's polar ambition push him to his death. Poor weather, broken tractors, crap ponies, leaky fuel cans, crevasse fields - lots of things contributed to the tragedy in the physical sense but the expectations placed on Captain Robert Falcon Scott by his nation, his mentors and his peers did their part, too.
037_Terra_Nova_Depot
December 28, 2016 12:18 - 48 minutes - 44 MBScott leads his team south while Amundsen and Mawson keep his clockwork wound up tight. Stormy seas, pack ice and a four way split in the transport preparations frustrate efforts to meld scientific, geographic and historical goals.
036_Ice_Diving
November 30, 2016 11:57 - 33 minutes - 30.7 MBI'm sick of 2016. A friend just died for stupid reasons and my extended family and many friends are facing life in the USA under president Donald Trump and his cabinet of elite racists. I really have not been in the mood to read about noble suffering under the Victorian model of manliness and my notes about Scott's death on his return from the pole came to a grinding halt about two weeks ago. Here's a Frankenstein's episode stop gap comprising essays from the past about ice diving and co...
035_Terra_Nova_BAE_2
October 18, 2016 19:48 - 34 minutes - 31.7 MBA dark clockwork comprising duty, ambition and hurt pride winds up Captain Scott and sets him on his path back to Antarctica.
034_I_am_whaling
October 02, 2016 09:55 - 15 minutes - 14.2 MBAt the start of the twentieth century whaling in the Southern Ocean was on the uptick. The players and mechanisms in play held considerable sway in geographic outcomes, with claims and counter claims taking on a new urgency once the parties operating in the south had some oil in the game.
033_Upstairs_Downstairs
September 28, 2016 13:05 - 7 minutes - 6.53 MBWith just seven minutes up my data storage sleeve and some expeditions featuring weird relationships between officers and men in the offing, this seems an opportune time to map the boundary between the commissioned and the other ranks in the Victorian era and its immediate aftermath.
032_Charcot_Pourqouis_Pas?
September 13, 2016 02:24 - 46 minutes - 42.7 MBCharcot leads his second Antarctic expedition aboard a new ship with a new engine. What could possibly go wrong? More groundings, more whimsy and more coastline explored. Well done those Frenchmen.
031_Shackleton_Nimrod_BAE_Philip_Samartzis
August 31, 2016 12:58 - 1 hour - 84.1 MBErnest Shackleton heads south in a dodgy ship, short on funds and with a flea in his ear from Scott, but manages to get a lot done and get everyone home safely. Lots of firsts but the south pole remains unclaimed and, with two teams alleging they made it to the north pole, becomes even more alluring. Douglas Mawson, Aenaes Mackintosh and John King Davis make their Antarctic entrances while Frank Wild and Ernest Joyce make their second forays south. Professor Philip Samartzis of the ...
030_Photography_Sledging_Maladies_Jacinda_Amey
August 31, 2016 12:38 - 43 minutes - 39.5 MBPhotography, sledging, hypothermia, frostbite and snow blindness have been getting a lot of mentions in episodes addressing the heroic age and I thought it high time these things be given some attention, as they’re not leaving the narrative anytime soon and I don’t want anyone left in the dark regarding photo-keratitis. Dr Jacinda Amey is one of New Zealand’s hardest case people and I was privileged to spend time with her at Scott Base in 2005. Another Radio Tuna interview that never we...
029_Charcot_Francais_Craig_Franklin
August 16, 2016 06:48 - 32 minutes - 29.6 MBJean Baptiste Charcot heads south, in yet another ship named after a place, looking for adventure, science and Swedes. Good food, good wine and inadequate heating and propulsion characterised life aboard the Francais but the French got a lot done, showed their mettle in a miserable display of hard as nailsness, and came home with all hands. Professor Craig Franklin first came on my radar in an interview with Richard Fidler. His range of research interests includes but is far from limit...
028_Scott_Discovery
August 03, 2016 03:48 - 1 hour - 58.8 MBRobert Falcon Scott makes his first but far from his last appearance in the series and a two year voyage to McMurdo Sound. Much sledging. Very scurvy. Sir Clements Markham continues to kick downhill to have his way but the back of his bullying breaks when someone take his prophecies of doom at face value. Wilson, Shackleton, Crean, Frank Wild, Taffy Evans, Lashly and Joyce make their Ice Coffee debuts appearances while Louis Bernacchi is back for an encore. I struggled to keep this ...
027_Bruce_and_the_SNAE
July 14, 2016 03:49 - 27 minutes - 25 MBWilliam Spiers Bruce showed the world what a team could achieve if they ignored the south pole and got on with some science. Under his guidance the Scottish National Antarctic Expedition established the longest continually occupied meteorological station and discovered large numbers of Antarctic marine species but what I like most about the Scot is how much he got on Sir Clements Markhams' nerves.
026_Nordenskjold
July 01, 2016 03:33 - 25 minutes - 22.9 MBNever heard of Nordenskjold? You have now, and he's pretty darn spiffy. Likely the reason Nordenskjold isn't better known is that Shackleton and Mawson's later tales of survival against stacked odds drew attention away from the challenges faced and bettered by the Swedes who sailed to the Antarctic aboard the Antarctic. Carl Anton Larsen makes a repeat appearance, reprising his role as competent Norwegian ice pilot. I'm all outta coffee and counting down the minutes until resupp.
025_Drygalski_and_the_Gauss
June 25, 2016 23:54 - 25 minutes - 23.7 MBGermans winter in fast pack ice, make some geographic discoveries, fly, sledge, and science as much as they can, but it's the diving that sets the voyage of the Gauss apart, in my eyes. Willy Heinrich - die Achtung!
024_Borchgrevink
June 25, 2016 12:46 - 26 minutes - 24.5 MBCarsten Borchgrevink adds to his track record as a git and gets on everyone's nerves in the first winter spent ashore in Antarctica.
023_The_IGC_and_the_Belgica_and_Peter_Cleary_on_leopard_seals_and_dog_teams
May 31, 2016 10:26 - 53 minutes - 49.2 MBBritish pride is a'stirring and Germany hankers for some long, hard sciencing but it's the Belgians out in front, showing everyone how it's done if getting trapped in the pack and going mad is the goal. Some notes about navigation notes presage some future episodes about spurious claims on fruitless firsts but the real appeal of episode 023 is the interview with Peter Cleary, who discusses leopard seals and dog teams. The interview is another outing from the non-event that was Radio Tuna...
022_Bull_Rob_Robbins
April 30, 2016 14:22 - 29 minutes - 26.8 MBMore Norwegians head south seeking whales. A kerfuffle over who's on first marks the start of the Heroic Age. In 2005 I recorded an interview with Rob Robbins, head of the USAP diving programme. This was slated for a New Zealand radio programme that never came about, itself a rip off of RRR's "Radio Marinara" in Australia, and was captured using a badly battered Mini-Disc unit. It's not the best audio but I could have been using sticky tape and iron filings as a recording medium, for all...
021_Cooper_Dallman_Challenger_Dundee_Larsen
March 30, 2016 07:10 - 24 minutes - 22.8 MBLittle Antarctic exploration occurred in the decades immediately after the French, American and British race south that rounded out the 1830s. American, German, British, Scottish and Norwegian visitors did turn up looking for whales and in the course of the invention of oceanography. This episode takes the series up to the 1890s and sets the scene for the voyage that would kick off the Heroic Age of antarctic exploration in all its capitalised glory.
020_Ross_Crozier
March 01, 2016 11:16 - 28 minutes - 25.7 MBWith many Arctic winters and more Arctic summers under their belts, Ross and Crozier got a lot done and brought their crews home safely. Gongs all round.
019_Scurvy
February 28, 2016 23:18 - 15 minutes - 13.7 MBIt's just a word sometimes employed by people pretending to be pirates to most modern ears but until recently scurvy stood as a perplexing and deadly problem for mariners and polar explorers. In this episode I discuss how sailors and scientists solved the scurvy riddle, screw up an attempt to say "very low levels," and make myself sad.
018_Wilkes
February 10, 2016 11:47 - 28 minutes - 26 MBFor my money, Charles Wilkes is the first of the Antarctic matinets. Drawn south by the opportunity to lead a large expedition and little else, his attempts to coordinate six poorly fitted out and ill matched ships crewed by people who largely thought little of him went every bit as well as that sentence presages.
017_Dumont_d_Urville
January 29, 2016 03:41 - 16 minutes - 15.3 MBFirst out of the blocks in the three way race south, Dumont d'Urville does a fair job with the resources France can throw at the project after much war and revolution and war and blockades and war. Often described as a nineteenth century analogue to the Space Race, I think of this period in Antarctic history as the nineteenth century race southward, of which the Space Race was a twentieth century analogue, because causality.
016 Reynolds, Ross, Wilkes, d'Urville and Balleny
January 01, 2016 00:34 - 33 minutes - 31 MBReynolds returns to the narrative but his efforts at getting the US a toehold in the cold see him get an even colder shoulder than his last outing. Ross earns his ice chops in the north. Dumont d'Urville, after wowing the crowds with an armless display of Greek marbility, languishes in Cholera riddled Toulon, until his big chance beckons. Balleny fulfills Enderby funded duties and adds information to the growing polynya of knowledge. I came here to podcast and to drink coffee, and I'm all ou...
015 Kemp Kimberley and Getting Toasty
December 29, 2015 11:51 - 41 minutes - 37.8 MBPeter Kemp isn't well recorded, so there's little to tell about him other than he sailed on the Magnet and saw a coast that's now named after him. Jason Kimberley traveled to Antarctica in 2005 and did the hauling and the crevasse fields that make up much of my nightmare material. On his return, in addition to writing one of the most accessible recent books about life on the ice, Jason established "Cool Australia," an online science education resource for school children. Finally, I giv...
014_Foster_Enderbys_Biscoe
October 02, 2015 10:03 - 17 minutes - 15.7 MBThe last gasps of British sealing efforts in the South and a brief profile of a dynasty of ship owners who paid for a lot of the exploitation of marine resources in the sealing and whaling boom times.
Morrell, Symmes, Reynolds and Sue
September 01, 2015 13:38 - 50 minutes - 46.4 MBMorrell was a liar, Symmes was a looper and Reynolds was a bona-fide genuine slick talker. Running to catch up in the claims stakes, US politics gets in the way and Morrell adds confusion. More on Reynolds later. Sue Haliwell, Antarcticartican makes what is hope will be the first of many appearances between her northern exposures. After switching to a new hosting plan to free up money for a second podcast series, this, the longest episode to date, ate up the space allocation for this mon...
012_Weddell
June 26, 2015 11:54 - 12 minutes - 11.8 MBHear me mix and match pronunciations as my brain fights it out between what it knows is correct and what it's accustomed to. James Weddell - the explorer who went sealing in an age of sealers going exploring. New record holders for southernmost expedition, the Beaufoy and the Jane sail into what we now know as the Weddell Sea and find vast expanses of no ice, leading to incredulity and ridicule. James Weddell didn't sign up for the standard early death in poverty deal, but that's what he g...
011_Powell
November 04, 2014 04:49 - 5 minutes - 5.41 MBPowell sets a new benchmark for "Who?" Sealer, navigator, measurer and cartographer, that's who.
010_Palmer
July 05, 2014 22:06 - 11 minutes - 10.9 MBConnnecticut sealer sails a tiny tender, finds fame.
009_Smith
July 04, 2014 13:32 - 9 minutes - 8.81 MBSmith - the competent, dutiful sealer who got the job done and got no reward, plaudits or even much of a mention in the history books. He should have taken the money and ran, but hindsight's not a lot of use without a time machine.
I am Sealing
January 28, 2014 18:46 - 23 minutes - 21.6 MBAn overview of the state of the art in maritime extraction industries at the start of the ice rush.
Pop Culture on Ice
January 28, 2014 18:35 - 12 minutes - 11.7 MBThe chronology gets thrown out early in the piece, as the case of the empty H4n case unravels and some temporal anomalies are narrowly prevented from becoming time travel paradoxes. Karl, I need the Delorean back last week. The Bellingshausen episode is in the editing suite as I type, and should be available last Sunday.