Stamps from a deep-frozen desert
The discovery of Antarctica was a protracted affair, as whalers and sealers probed ever southwards, discovering unknown islands and stopping there to process their cargoes of whale blubber or to slaughter seals for their oil and skins. However, this was a competitive business, so they often kept their discoveries to themselves.
Scientific interest waxed and waned as periods of intense activity were followed by extended hiatuses. Von Bellingshausen and Lazarev sailed around Antarctica in 1819-21, becoming the first Europeans to see it. In 1840, Charles Wilkes, a Lieutenant in the US Navy, discovered Victoria Land and christened the volcanoes Mt Erebus and Mt Terror. Another American, Mercator Cooper, made the first documented landing on the mainland in 1853 on what is now called the Oates Coast. Then, the world lost interest again until the Heroic Age of Antarctic Exploration. This began in the 1890s and lasted until after the First World War, giving place to the Mechanical Age. The generally accepted boundary between them is Shackleton’s last expedition of 1921-22.
During the Heroic Age, nine countries launched seventeen
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