7/7/2023 0 Comments Erebus by michael palin![]() ![]() They believed the ships were like fortresses that had everything on board, and as long as they stayed on the ships, everything would be fine. ![]() ![]() The Erebus, along with its sister ship, HMS Terror, set off from Britain in 1845 to find a path through the Northwest Passage. "But Parks Canada have - wisely - not encouraged me to do that." "I've always wanted to go and scuba dive down to the wreck. I have this romantic notion of being able to touch the oak of which it was built - in 1825 or whenever it was - for myself," he told The Current's Anna Maria Tremonti. It lies ten metres down in the waters of Nunavut’s Queen Maud Gulf, where many secrets wait to be revealed.When comedian and broadcaster Michael Palin heard that the wreck of HMS Erebus had been discovered in northern Canada in 2014, the news awoke the adventurer in him. He examines the past by means of the extensive historical record and travels in the present day to those places where there is still an echo of Erebus herself, from the dockyard where she was built, to Tasmania where the Antarctic voyage began and the Falkland Islands, then on to the Canadian Arctic, to get a sense of what the conditions must have been like for the starving, stumbling sailors as they abandoned their ships to the ice. Palin looks at the Erebus story through the different motives of the two expeditions, one scientific and successful, the other nationalistic and disastrous. Then, on September 9th, 2014, came the almost unbelievable news: HMS Erebus had been discovered thirty feet below the Arctic waters, by a Parks Canada exploration ship. Over the years there were many attempts to discover what might have happened–and eventually the first bodies were discovered in shallow graves, confirming that it had been the dreadful fate of the explorers to die of hunger and scurvy as they abandoned the ships in the ice.įor generations, the mystery of what had happened to the ships endured. Provisioned for three winters in the Arctic, Erebus and Terror and the 129 men of the Franklin expedition were seen heading west by two whalers in late July. Nevertheless, he and his men confidently sailed away down the Thames in April 1845. But Antarctica never captured the national imagination what the British navy needed now was confirmation of its superiority by making the discovery, once and for all, of a route through the North-West Passage.Ĭhosen to lead the mission was Sir John Franklin, at 59 someone many considered too old for such a hazardous journey. Under the leadership of the charismatic James Clark Ross, she and HMS Terror sailed further south than anyone had been before. In 1839, Erebus was chosen as the flagship of an expedition to penetrate south to explore Antarctica. The solid, reinforced hulls of HMS Erebus, and another bomb ship, HMS Terror, made them suitable for discovering what lay at the coldest ends of the earth. ![]() The story of a ship begins after the defeat of Napoleon at Waterloo, when Great Britain had more bomb ships than it had enemies. Ntrepid voyager, writer and comedian Michael Palin follows the trail of two expeditions made by the Royal Navy’s HMS Erebus to opposite ends of the globe, reliving the voyages and investigating the ship itself, lost on the final Franklin expedition and discovered with the help of Inuit knowledge in 2014. ![]()
0 Comments
Leave a Reply. |