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9. Amundsen–Scott South Pole Station. This research base was named after the two South Pole pioneers Roald Amundsen and Robert Falcon Scott and is located at an altitude of 2,835 m on the inland ice of Antarctica, a few hundred meters from the geographic South Pole
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Here's another wonderful picture of Mount Erebus in the long winter night. Erebus, from Greek Ἔρεβος, "place of darkness between earth and Hades". Mount Erebus was discovered on January 27, 1841, and namend by Sir James Clark Ross after his ship HMS Erebus
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12. The Neumayer Station III is a German polar research station located at Atka Bay on the Ekström Ice Shelf, which is about 200 metres thick. The station is drifting with the ice shelf ca. 157 metres per year towards the open sea
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14. 'At the Mountains of Madness' (1936) Just a reminder that H. P. Lovecraft was not only the 'dark and baroque prince' or the 'horror's pope', as China Miéville describes him, but also one of the great stylists of English prose
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18. 'Antarctica' (1985) by Irish Poet Derk Mahon, a poem (a villanelle) on Captain Lawrence 'Titus' Oates (17 March 1880 – 17 March 1912), a British Antarctic explorer, who died during the Terra Nova Expedition when he walked from his tent into a blizzard
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19. Gethen, or Winter, the snow-covered planet of Le Guin's 'The Left Hand of Darkness': 'I wrote TLHoD, in which a Black man from Earth and an androgynous extraterrestrial pull Scott’s sledge through Shackleton’s blizzards across a planet called Winter' [ill. by David Lupton]
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