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Women Begin Trek Across Antarctica
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Photograph courtesy of yourexpedition.com |
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The following article was published on the day of the teams departure: November 16, 2000. They are scheduled to complete their journey sometime in February. One of the first things they did was cut their hair. Now its easier for American Ann Bancroft and Norwegian Liv Arnesen to keep it tucked away and unfrozen as they attempt to become the first women to cross Antarctica. Bancroft, 45, and Arnesen, 47, skied off November 14 in fair weather on the Fimbul Ice Shelf bordering the coast of Queen Maud Land. They expect to encounter wind gusts as high as 100 miles (160 kilometers) an hour before reaching McMurdo Station on the Ross Ice Shelf by ski and windsail in about 100 days. Their journey will cover 2,400 miles (3,840 kilometers) across a frozen continentthe worlds fifth largestthat in terms of area could easily contain both the United States and Mexico.
I still have this longing for the great wide open spaces, said Arnesen, who as a child acquired that taste while spending winters and Easter holidays in the Norwegian mountains. As a 12-year-old child, Bancroft first dreamed of trekking in Antarctica while reading about explorer Ernest Shackleton. I am also living my dream and doing what I feel I was meant to do, she said. Both women are veteran cold-weather adventurers. Arnesen led the first unsupported womens expedition across the Greenland ice cap in 1992. In 1994 she became the first woman to ski solo to the South Pole. INSPIRED BY SHACKLETON Bancroft, who has been inducted into the National Womens Hall of Fame as a result of previous exploits, grew up in rural Minnesota with a learning disability. A self-admitted poor reader, she was drawn to the photographs in Endurance, a book by Alfred Lansing about explorer Ernest Shackleton. She said the tale inspired her curiosity with Antarctica and the dream of one day crossing it. She graduated from St. Paul Academy and became a gym teacher, coach and wilderness instructor. In 1986 she resigned her job to participate in the Steger International North Pole Expedition. After 56 days she and five others reached the North Pole by dogsled without being resupplied. Bancroft was the first woman to do so. Bancroft also was the first woman to ski across Greenland, and in 1992-93, after climbing Alaskas Mount McKinley, led the first womens team to reach the South Pole on skis.
>A team led by Norwegian seaman Roald Amundsen first reached the South Pole on December 14, 1911. Robert Falcon Scotts British crew arrived a month later, only to discover that they had been bested. Scott and his mates perished on the return trip. Another British team made the first land crossing of the continent in 1957-58. >After a 50-day trip, Norways Erling Kagge became the first person to reach the South Pole alone and without resupply in 1993. Countryman Boerge Ousland became the first person to solo across the continent without support, performing the feat in 64 days. Robert Swan led a three-man Footsteps of Scott expedition that reached the South Pole in January 1986, thus becoming the first person to walk to both Poles. WOMEN ON THE ICE For most of the 20th century, women in the polar regions have been more notable for their absence. In 1935, Caroline Mikkelsen, the wife of a Norwegian whaleboat captain, became the first woman known to have stepped onto the continent. Two American women lived there for a year in 1947. But it wasnt until the 1990s that women became seriously involved in Antarctic trekking. An American Womens Antarctic Expedition arrived at the South Pole on skis in January 1993, covering 700 miles (1,100 kilometers) in 67 days. Afterwards, team member Anne Dal Vera of Colorado said she wanted to prove to herself that she could, and forever demolish the idea that you have to be a big burly man to do it. In January 2000, a team of six British women became the first all-female expedition to walk to both the North and South Poles. Caroline Hamilton, Zoe Hudson, Pom Oliver, Rosie Stancer, Ann Daniels and Jan McCormac had reached the North Pole in 1997. One handicap that women continue to suffer is their difficulty in attracting funding for such ventures. Norwegian-born Sunniva Sorby and Uiloq Slettemark of Greenland recently had to cancel their planned Antarctic crossing after a sponsor dropped out, leaving them $200,000 short of their budget. Slettemark and Sorby, who had considered themselves friendly competitors with the Bancroft Arnesen Expeditions, threw their moral support to their rivals.
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