Gobineau's introspection
INTERIOR OF THE PRIMAEVAL FOREST OF THE AMAZONS
Pira-tapuya
A luna esta sahindo
Silas's Watson Camera
The exterior of Pointing's Ice Cave
Edward "Marie" Nelson digging out the hut after a…
Pointing's Ice Cave
San Juan del Sur
San Juan del Sur
San Juan del Sur
San Juan del Sur
Everyday man & job
Humming-bird and Humming-bird Hawk-moth
FLAT-TOPPED MOUNTAINS OF PARAUA-QUARA, LOWER AMAZO…
Sunrise
HMS Discovery in the Ross Sea on the Great Ice Bar…
Terra Nova stuck in the pack ice, December 1920
The Seasons of the Year
Mosiac Portrait of Alcibiades
Mirador de Catarina, Laguna de Apoyo
Man.....
Fence
William James
THE ORIGIN OF SPECIES
Voltaire
A UNIQUE LOCATION IN SPACE AND TIME
SILENT THOUGHTS AND FEELINGS
VERIFIABLE STATEMENTS
THE POWER OF BELIEF
TO DO IS TO KNOW
VOTES FOR WOMEN
NATURE'S LEADERS
RUSSIAN DISSIDENTS
Einstein
KARL POPPER
See also...
Keywords
Authorizations, license
-
Visible by: Everyone -
All rights reserved
-
58 visits
- Keyboard shortcuts:
Jump to top
RSS feed- Latest comments - Subscribe to the comment feeds of this photo
- ipernity © 2007-2025
- Help & Contact
|
Club news
|
About ipernity
|
History |
ipernity Club & Prices |
Guide of good conduct
Donate | Group guidelines | Privacy policy | Terms of use | Statutes | In memoria -
Facebook
Twitter
The earliest record of there already being anything at the southern end of the planet is from Polynesian explorer Ut-te-Rangiora en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Ui-te-Rangiora who described an ice-strewn ocean circa AD 650. His mates back at the luau put it down to an overindulgence of kava and ignored him.
Fast Forward one thousand years.
In 1772, French explorer Yes-Joseph de Kerguelen-Tremaree en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Yves-Joseph_de_Kerguelen-Tr%C3%A9marec bumped into a large island at latitude 50 degree south. Assuming it was the rumoured souther continent, he named it after himself and went home or brandy and prostitutes. He was wrong, it was only a pile of guano-covered rocks situated halfway between Australia and South Africa and not the southern continent, which was just as well, as “de Kerguelen-Tremarecica” just doesn’t roll off the tongue as easily as “Antarctica” and besides, not one could have spelled it anyway.
The Spanish taking a break from burning heretics, were the next to turn up, sailing around Isle de San Pedro, 1,500 miles from the Antarctic land mass, and claiming it for Spain. Unfortunately, no sooner had they left for home then Captain James Cook en.wikipedia.org/wiki/James_Cook also discovered it, renamed it South Georgia Island and claimed it for England
British cartographers wee convinced there was a large land mass in the Southern Hemisphere and James Cook had been dispatched by the Admiralty to locate it and annex it to Britain. ~ Page 3
Sign-in to write a comment.