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May 12, 1931: Alfred Wegener's last Journey

This article was published in Scientific American’s former blog network and reflects the views of the author, not necessarily those of Scientific American


March 1929 the German meteorologists Alfred Wegener, Johannes Georgi (1888-1972), Fritz Loewe (1895-1974) and Ernst Sorge (1899-1946) arrived to Greenland, searching a site for a coastal base camp - a starting point for an ambitious expedition to the inner ice sheet - they found it in the Kamarujuk Fjord.

One year later 18 scientists, 25 Icelandic ponies and 98 tons of material were unload onto the unusual thick ice of the fjord - as the expedition couldn't reach the shore they had to wait 38 days, loosing precious time in the short Arctic summer. Only in July 1930 the coastal base camp, named "Western Camp", was completed.

The expedition's most ambitious goal was to establish a base 400km farther inland, in the center of the ice cap itself, named appropriately "Mid-Ice". In late autumn the station Mid-Ice was ready, manned by Georgi and Sorge, however both men were unsure if the supplies would last for the entire winter. September 22, Wegener and Loewe organized an expedition to bring the necessary supplies to Mid-Ice, temperatures were dropping fast and the first winter storms approaching - soon only one young Inuit - Rasmus Villumsen - was willing to continue with Wegener and Loewe. The three men were ably only to transport a limited amount of material and so left back the radio - as they arrived to Mid-Ice on October 30, they knew that the supplies would never be sufficient for five persons. Only Loewe remained, as he had suffered a severe frostbite on his toes, which had to be amputated by Georgi with a pocket knife, he was not able to walk.


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November 1, 1930 the men celebrated Wegener's 50th birthday with some dried fruit and chocolate (a rare luxury during Arctic expeditions) and after some hours Wegener and Villumsen left for their long journey back to the safe coast. Whit no radio aviable, Georgi, Sorge and Loewe couldn't inform the Western Camp of Wegener's and Villumsen´s departure and had to wait until the Arctic spring for news.

Fig.1. Last photograph of Wegener and Villumsen taken on November 1, 1930, before they set out from Mid-Ice on their unsuccessful attempt to reach Western Camp, published in GEORGI (1935) "The Story of the Wegener Expedition to Greenland" (image in public domain).

April 23, 1931 another expedition was send to Mid-Ice, about halfway they found a pair of skis and ski pole in the snow, but continued until Mid-Ice, where they meet Sorge, who asked "Where´s Wegener?" Sorge and a part of the rescue team returned to the site , digging below the skis they found Wegener on May 12, 1931, carefully wrapped in two sleeping bag covers and laid on a sleeping bag and a reindeer skin. Karl Weiken, one member of the rescue team, wrote that Wegener's face appeared "relaxed, peaceful, almost smiling" and "looked more youthful than it had before." Villumsen had buried Wegener with great care, taken his diary and some personal effects with him, maybe hoping to make it until the Western Camp. Villumsen was never found.

The German government wanted to bring the body back to Germany for a state funeral, but Else Wegener, Wegener´s wife, knowing of Alfred´s love for the Arctic, refused and so Wegener was left where Villumsen buried him.

Today his grave is long vanished beneath the ice, slowly drifting west - not only carried by the flow of the ice towards the sea, but also by the westward movement of the North American Plate.

A tribute to Alfred Wegener by "The Amoeba People"

https://www.youtube.com/watch?feature=player_embedded&v=T1-cES1Ekto

Bibliography:

FRANKEL, H.R. (2012): The Continental Drift Controversy, Volume I: Wegener and the Early Debate. Cambridge University Press: 604

YOUNT, L. (2009): Alfred Wegener -Creator of the Continental Drift Theory. Makers of Modern Science Series, Chelsea House Publishers, New York: 160

My name is David Bressan and I'm a freelance geologist working mainly in the Austroalpine crystalline rocks and the South Alpine Palaeozoic and Mesozoic cover-sediments in the Eastern Alps. I graduated with a project on Rock Glaciers dynamics and hydrology, this phase left a special interest for quaternary deposits and modern glacial environments. During my research on glaciers, studying old maps, photography and reports on the former extent of these features, I became interested in history, especially the development of geomorphologic and geological concepts by naturalists and geologists. Living in one of the key area for the history of geology, I combine field trips with the historic research done in these regions, accompanied by historic maps and depictions. I discuss broadly also general geological concepts, especially in glaciology, seismology, volcanology, palaeontology and the relationship of society and geology.

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