by JohnD » Mon May 10, 2021 2:57 pm
OK, ignore that, but insert search for the North and South Poles, in particular "The Worst Journey in the World" of Apsley Cherry-Garrard. This was a side trip to Scott's tragic South Pole attempt, that was to take Emperor penguin eggs, laid on the sea-ice in deepest Antarctic winter. No robot could recover them, but study of the embryos was considered essential to the science of the relative evolution of birds and reptiles. The expedition was indeed the "worst in the world" and the three men on it barely survived. Cherry-Garrad was still too ill to go with Scott the next summer. Lucky for him
That by the time the expedition returned to civilisation, theory had moved on and the penguin eggs were of no interest to laboratory scientists, has no influence on the value of the expedition, in human terms. It was as heroic, self-sacrificing and inspiring as any astronaut's, and I include Shepard and Apollo 13.
Do read Cherry-Gerrad's story if you haven't:
https://www.gutenberg.org/ebooks/14363 (it's also available as audio- and videobook)
Or watch this short video:
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=PdBT670 ... toryMuseum
If that doesn't make you think that human exploration is always worthwhile, then ... well you're still human, but you don't get something about us!
OK, ignore that, but insert search for the North and South Poles, in particular "The Worst Journey in the World" of Apsley Cherry-Garrard. This was a side trip to Scott's tragic South Pole attempt, that was to take Emperor penguin eggs, laid on the sea-ice in deepest Antarctic winter. No robot could recover them, but study of the embryos was considered essential to the science of the relative evolution of birds and reptiles. The expedition was indeed the "worst in the world" and the three men on it barely survived. Cherry-Garrad was still too ill to go with Scott the next summer. Lucky for him
That by the time the expedition returned to civilisation, theory had moved on and the penguin eggs were of no interest to laboratory scientists, has no influence on the value of the expedition, in human terms. It was as heroic, self-sacrificing and inspiring as any astronaut's, and I include Shepard and Apollo 13.
Do read Cherry-Gerrad's story if you haven't: https://www.gutenberg.org/ebooks/14363 (it's also available as audio- and videobook)
Or watch this short video: https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=PdBT670fiCQ&ab_channel=NaturalHistoryMuseum
If that doesn't make you think that human exploration is always worthwhile, then ... well you're still human, but you don't get something about us!