The ‘Quest,’ Sir Ernest Shackleton’s Last Ship, Has Been Found Off Eastern Canada
The ‘Quest’ was the ship on which Sir Ernest Shackleton carried out his final, uncompleted voyage to Antarctica.
The ‘Quest’ was the ship on which Sir Ernest Shackleton carried out his final, uncompleted voyage to Antarctica.
From the Founding Father who stuck whalebone where he shouldn’t have to the only known woman to have given herself a C-section.
“Polar exploration is at once the cleanest and most isolated way of having a bad time which has been devised,” he later wrote.
Ginnie and Ranulph Fiennes's Transglobe Expedition circled the globe—just not the normal way.
Roald Amundsen was the first person to reach the South Pole—and that's not all.
A 2019 study of scientists over-wintering in Antarctica revealed subtle but measurable changes in the participants’ speech.
Scientists and cruise operators are fighting the impacts of tourism in Antarctica—with the help of tourists themselves.
Ernest Shackleton’s ill-fated ‘Endurance’ sunk 107 years ago near Antarctica, kicking off one of the most thrilling survival stories of all time.
The 68-million-year-old fossil egg’s mystery mother may have been one of the fiercest marine predators from the Late Cretaceous period.
When it breaks down, poop from king penguins releases nitrous oxide—a gas that affects both the environment and the scientists who study it.
In 2000, Rodney Marks died suddenly from methanol poisoning in a remote research station in Antarctica. Nearly 20 years later, the circumstances surrounding his death remain a mystery.
Antarctica is one of the last pristine places on Earth. The only problem? The scientists and tourists who travel there keep defecating.
The sound was impossible to hear until recently.
Mummified penguins occasionally turn up, too.
Don't expect emergency surgery in Villa Las Estrellas.
It was stored under a TV for 40 years.
You could call it a Pride march with the penguins.
Data from the South Pole may show how the continent will respond to climate change.
Scientists just discovered 1.5 million penguins living on a chain of remote Antarctic islands, thanks to satellite images of their telltale poop.
A new study shows the species is in serious trouble.
Read an excerpt from 'The Stowaway,' the amazing story of Billy Gawronski, who was determined to join Richard E. Byrd's 1928 expedition—no matter how many times he had to sneak aboard.
Old measurements were off by over 1200 feet.
Check out just how massive iceberg A-68, which made its long-expected break from the Larsen C ice shelf this summer, looks from the air.
Conducting scientific research in Earth's most inhospitable environment requires warm clothes, scotch, and a penchant for horror movies.