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While
beset, Shackleton’s ship “Endurance”
drifted over 2000 miles (3200 km) in
the pack ice of the Weddell Sea.
On the way a huge mass of ice was
encountered that they dubbed the “Rampart
Berg.” Shackleton estimated
the grounded iceberg to be 200 feet
(60m) high, twice the height of the
crow’s nest on the Endurance’s
mast.
Shackleton
wrote in his diary on April 14, 1915:
“A new berg that was going to give
us some cause for anxiety made its
appearance...”
The
ship was at the mercy of the currents
controlling the pack ice and was in
grave danger of being crushed against
the iceberg. As time passed, the
Endurance drifted past the Rampart
Berg and left it behind as the ship
drifted west and north. Frank
Hurley made this rarely published
photograph with a telephoto lens to
compress the foreground and
background. Photography
by: Frank Hurley
Image Source: National Library of
Australia
Dimensions: 19.5" X 27" (49.5
cm X 68.6 cm)
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