It has to
be the most extreme place to work as a scientist: freezing temperatures, fierce
winds, treacherous ice, endless whiteness and often terrible visibility, shared
with few companions and the knowledge that civilisation is an awfully long way
away. For those who spend the long winter months there is also perpetual
darkness.
Award-winning science writer Rebecca Priestley introduces
her new book Dispatches from Continent Seven (Awa Press - $55) with her own experience of
Antarctica: ‘At minus 20°C I have hit my limit, I ache with the cold. I am
walking and talking more slowly. I am constantly out of breath.’
She is on a high plateau in the Transantarctic Mountains
but the geologists she’s with seem unconcerned about the testing conditions.
They are veterans who have spent many seasons in Antarctica – the last and
seventh major continent to be discovered, hence the title of this book. They
are investigating sediments and glacial deposits, part of a massive
international effort to try and understand why Antarctica was once covered with
luxuriant forests teeming with wildlife, how it became an icy wilderness, and
what will happen in the future. This is cutting-edge science: many scientists
dream of working on a polar team.
In a rave review of Dispatches from Continent Seven,
internationally acclaimed science writer and broadcaster Marcus Chown calls it
‘wonderful, sumptuous, a book which reminds us what an utterly extraordinary
planet we find ourselves on and how precarious is our continued existence on
it.’
Priestley’s enthralling collection of writings by Antarctic
explorers and scientists starts with Captain James Cook in 1773 on sailing
inside the Antarctic Circle, and ends with research biologist Kathryn Smith on
the ten-year invasion of predatory king crabs on to the Antarctic sea floor – a
warning sign, like so much else in Antarctica, that global warming is a threat
to the finely balanced ecosystems that sustain life on Earth.
In between we learn of
the numerous important and intriguing scientific discoveries that have been
made here over 200 years – from sexually depraved penguins and hermaphrodite
sea butterflies to fish full of anti-freeze, melting ice caps, expanding sea
ice and a mysterious plethora of meteorites.
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