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I Can’t Find My Grocery Store As Well As Frank Worsley Guided Shackleton
When Shackleton’s lost ship, The Endurance, was found earlier this month, it was astonishing. Not just because it was lost for more than a century and is an enduring icon of heroism in expeditionary history, but because it was just a few miles from where the ship’s captain and navigator, Frank Worsley, said it would be. 10,000 feet below shifting sea ice, in a position calculated by a man trapped on an ice floe fearing a brutal death, that Worsley pinpointed the ship’s presumed final resting place so closely is as astonishing as anything else about that voyage. This piece, from The Conversation, explores how Worsley managed the feat, long before people would even dream up fanciful things like satellite positioning devices. Enjoy. – Ed.
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When the wreck of Ernest Shackletonโs ship Endurance was found nearly 10,000 feet below the surface of Antarcticaโs Weddell Sea in March 2022, it was located just 4 miles from its last known position, as recorded by the Enduranceโs captain and navigator, Frank Worsley, in November 1915.
Thatโs an astonishing degree of accuracy for a position determined with mechanical tools, book-length tables of reference numbers, and pen and paper.
The expedition looking for the ship had been searching an undersea area of 150 square miles โ a circle 14 miles across. Nobody knew how precise Worsleyโs position calculation had been, or how far the ship might have traveled while sinking.
But as a historian of Antarctic exploration, I was not surprised to find out how accurate Worsley was, and I imagine those searching for the wreck werenโt either.
Navigation was key
The Endurance had left England in August 1914, with the Irishman Shackleton hoping to become the first to cross the Antarctic continent from one side to the other.
But they never even landed on Antarctica. The ship got stuck in sea ice in the Weddell Sea in January 1915, forcing the men off the ship into tents pitched on the frozen ocean nearby. The force of the ice slowly crushed the Endurance, sinking it 10 months later, and kicking off what would become an incredible โ and almost unbelievable โ saga of survival and navigation by Shackleton and his crew.
Shackletonโs own leadership has become the stuff of legend, as has his commitment to ensuring that not a man was lost from the group under his command โ though three members of the expeditionโs 10-man group in the Ross Sea did perish.
Lesser known is the importance of the navigational skills of the 42-year-old Worsley, a New Zealander who had spent decades in the British Merchant Navy and the Royal Navy Reserve. Without him, the story of Shackletonโs survival would likely have been very different.
Marking time
Navigation requires determining a shipโs location in latitude and longitude. Latitude is easy to find from the angle of the Sun above the horizon at noon.
Longitude required comparing the local noon โ the moment when the Sun was at its highest point โ with the actual time at another location where the longitude was already known. The key was making sure the time measurement for that other location was accurate.
Making these astronomical observations and doing the resulting calculations was difficult enough on land. On the ocean, with few fixed land points visible, amid foul weather, it was nearly impossible.
So navigation largely depended on โdead reckoning.โ This was the process of calculating a vesselโs position using a previously determined position and incorporating estimates of how fast and which way the ship was moving. Worsley called it โthe seamanโs calculation of courses and distance.โ
Aiming for land
When the Endurance was crushed, the crew had to get themselves to safety, or die on an ice floe adrift somewhere in the Southern Ocean. In April 1916, six months after the Endurance sank, the sea ice on which they had camped began to break up. The 28 men and their remaining gear and supplies loaded into three lifeboats โ the James Caird, Dudley Docker and Stancomb Wills โ each named for major donors to the expedition.
Worsley was in charge of getting them to land. As the journey began, Shackleton โsaw Worsley, as navigating officer, balancing himself on the gunwale of the Dudley Docker with his arm around the mast, ready to snap the sun. He got his observation and we waited eagerly while he worked out the sight.โ
To do that, he compared his measurement with the time on his chronometer and written tables of calculations.
Conditions on Elephant Island were harsh, the men were exhausted. Shackleton knew that they needed to seek help, and decided to head for a whaling station on South Georgia. Much relied on the navigational skills of Frank Worsley (seen here earlier in the expedition) pic.twitter.com/Jxmtexj8Mp
— Dr Claire Warrior (@ClaireWarrior1) March 9, 2022
A last hope of survival
Once they managed to arrive on a little rocky strip called Elephant Island, off the coast of the Antarctic Peninsula, they still faced starvation. Shackleton believed that the only hope of survival lay in fetching help from elsewhere.
Worsley was ready. Before the Endurance was crushed, he had โworked out the courses and distances from the South Orkneys to South Georgia, the Falklands and Cape Horn, respectively, and from Elephant Island to the same places,โ he recalled in his memoir.
The men used parts of the other lifeboats to reinforce the James Caird for a long sea journey. Every day, Worsley โwatched closely for the sun or stars to appear, to correct my chronometer, on the accuracy of which our lives and the success of the journey would depend.โ
On April 24, 1916, Worsley got โThe first sunny day with a clear enough horizon to get a sight for rating my chronometer.โ That same day, he, Shackleton and four other men set off under sail in the 22.5-foot James Caird, carrying Worsleyโs chronometer, navigational books and two sextants, used for fixing the position of the Sun and stars.
The boat journey
These men, in this tiny boat, were going from one pinpoint of rock in the Southern Ocean to another, facing high winds, massive currents and choppy waters that could push them wildly astray or even sink them. The success of this voyage depended on Worsleyโs absolute accuracy, based on observations and estimations he made in the worst possible environmental conditions, while sleep-deprived and frostbitten.
They spent 16 days of โsupreme strife amid heaving waters,โ as the boat sailed through some of the most dangerous sea conditions in the world, experiencing โmountainousโ swells, rain, snow, sleet and hail. During that time, Worsley was able to get just four solid fixes on the boatโs position. The rest was โa merry jest of guessworkโ to determine where the wind and waves had taken them, and adjusting the steering accordingly.
The stakes were enormous โ if he missed South Georgia, the next land was South Africa, 3,000 miles farther across more open ocean.
As Worsley wrote later:
โNavigation is an art, but words fail to give my efforts a correct name. โฆ Once, perhaps twice, a week the sun smiled a sudden wintry flicker, through storm-torn cloud. If ready for it, and smart, I caught it. The procedure was: I peered out from our burrow โ precious sextant cuddled under my chest to prevent seas from falling on it. Sir Ernest stood by under the canvas with chronometer, pencil, and book. I shouted โStand by,โ and knelt on the thwart โ two men holding me up on either side. I brought the sun down to where the horizon ought to be and as the boat leaped frantically upward on the crest of a wave, snapped a good guess at the altitude and yelled โStop.โ Sir Ernest took the time and I worked out the result. Then the fun started! Our fingers were so cold that he had to interpret his wobbly figures โ my own so illegible that I had to recognize them by feats of memory.โ
On May 8, they saw floating seaweed and birds, and then spotted land. But they had arrived at South Georgia amid a hurricane, and for two days had to fight being driven by wind onto an island they had spent weeks desperately trying to reach.
Finally, they came ashore. Three of the six men, including Worsley, hiked across unmapped mountains and glaciers to reach a small settlement. Worsley joined a rescue boat back to get the other three. Shackleton later arranged a ship to collect the rest of the men from Elephant Island, all of whom had survived their own unimaginable hardships.
But the key to all of it, and indeed the recent discovery of the Enduranceโs wreck, was how Worsley had fought desperate conditions and still repeatedly managed to figure out where they were, where they were going and how to get there.
Daniella McCahey, Assistant Professor of History, Texas Tech University
This article is republished from The Conversation under a Creative Commons license. Read the original article.