Archaeological Excavation and Artefact Conservation at the Heroic-era Expedition Bases, Ross Island, Antarctica

Authors

  • Lucy-Anne Skinner Buffalo State College, State University of New York

DOI:

https://doi.org/10.1558/jga.v1i1.51

Keywords:

Heroic Era, archaeological excavation, polar exploration, Conservation

Abstract

Four expedition bases built during the Heroic Era (1897–1922) of polar exploration remain standing in the Ross Sea region in Antarctica. Conservation work and archaeological excavation carried out by the Antarctic Heritage Trust on two of these huts, Captain Robert Falcon Scott’s 1910 base at Cape Evans, and Sir Ernest Shackleton’s 1907 base at Cape Royds is the focus of this article. A combined estimate of 14,000 artifacts are contained within these base buildings and in their immediate environs. The buildings and their contents provide unique connections and insights into life, expeditions and science in Antarctica 100 years ago. Many artifacts which lie outside the huts remain buried in permafrost or frozen in ice. These are often well preserved in this frozen state. However, artifacts can become exposed during periods of low snowfall, the summer melt period, and during any excavation work that forms part of the building conservation programme. Exposed artifacts can be subjected to increased UV, wind and wind-blown gravel erosion, freezethaw cycles, melt-water, wildlife and human visitor damage. This article will describe the logistical challenges faced by working on conservation at these historic bases in Antarctica. Antarctic archaeological process and decision making by the Antarctic Heritage Trust will be discussed, as developed following earlier work by Dr Neville Ritchie. Strategies for mitigating future degradation will also be explored.

Author Biography

  • Lucy-Anne Skinner, Buffalo State College, State University of New York

    Lucy-Anne Skinner is the A.W. Mellon Teaching Resident in Conservation Education at the Art Conservation Department, Buffalo State College, New York.

References

Antarctic Heritage Trust. 2011. Antarctic Heritage Trust Annual report and financial statement.

———. 2004. Conservation Plan for Terra Nova Hut, Cape Evans. Christchurch, NZ: Antarctic Heritage Trust.

ASPA Management Plan for Cape Evans. http://www.ats.aq/documents/recatt%5Catt396_e.pdf

ASPA Management plan for Cape Royds. http://www.nsf.gov/od/opp/antarct/aca/nsf01151/ aca2_spa121.pdf

Ashley, G. and R. Mackay. 2004. “Mawson’s hut historic site, Antarctica: The conservation management plan as a decision making tool.” In Cultural Heritage in the Arctic and Antarctic Regions, 44–52. Oslo: International Council on Monuments and Sites, International Polar Heritage Committee.

Bickel, L. 2001. Shackleton’s Forgotten Men: The Untold Tale of an Antarctic Tragedy. London: Pimlico Press.

Bickersteth, J., S. Clayton and F. Tennant. 2008. “Conserving the historic huts of Antarctica.” In Conservation and Access: Contributions to the London Congress, 15–19th September 2008, edited by David Saunders, Joyce H. Townsend and Sally Woodcock, 218–223. Oxford: Archetype Publications.

Blanchette, R. and B. Held. 2002. “Defibration of wood in the expedition huts of Antarctica: an unusual deterioration process occurring in the polar environment.” Polar record. 38(207): 313–322. http://dx.doi.org/10.1017/S0032247400018003

———., B. Held and J. Jurgens. 2004. “Environmental pollutants from the Scott and Shackleton expeditions during the ‘Heroic Age’ of Antarctic exploration.” Polar Record 40(213): 143–151. http://dx.doi.org/10.1017/S0032247403003334

Canadian Conservation Institute. 2012. Notes on freeze drying. http://www.cci-icc.gc.ca/publications/notes/4-2-eng.aspx

Chaplin, P. 2004. “Polar heritage sites at risk: politics, principles and practical problems.” In Cultural Heritage in the Arctic and Antarctic Regions, 24–28. Oslo: International Council on Monuments and Sites, International Polar Heritage Committee.

———. and S. Barr. 2004 “An overview of Polar Heritage Sites.” In Cultural Heritage in the Arctic and Antarctic Regions, 9–18. Oslo: International Council on Monuments and Sites, International Polar Heritage Committee.

Cherry Garrard, A. 1989 (1922). The Worst Journey in the World. London: Carroll and Graf.

Cronyn, J. 1990. The Elements of Archaeological Conservation. London: Routledge. http://dx.doi. org/10.4324/9780203169223

Emrich, W. 1985. Handbook of Charcoal Making: The Traditional and Industrial Methods. Hingham, MA: Kiuwer Academic Publishers. http://dx.doi.org/10.1007/978-94-017-0450-2

Farrell, R., S. Duncan, R. Blanchette, B. Held, J. Jurgens and B. Arenz. 2008. “Scientific evaluation of deterioration of historic huts of Ross Island, Antarctica.” In Historic Polar Bases

—Preservation and Management, 59–75. Oslo: International Council on Monuments and Sites, International Polar Heritage Committee.

Grieve, S., N. Watson and A. Fastier. 2009. “‘To strive, to seek, to find, and not to yield’: Preservation of the Early Explorers Bases in the Ross Sea Region of Antarctica.” Society of Historical Archaeology, Electronic Symposia, SHA Conference 2009. Symposium 1: Places of Meaning, Meaning in Place: Tangibility, Controversy, and Conscience at Historic Sites. Toronto, ON, Canada.

Harrowfield, D. 2005. “Archaeology on Ice. A review of historic archaeology in Antarctica.” New Zealand Journal of Archaeology 26.

Held, B., J. Jurgens, B. Arenz, S. Duncan, R. Farrell and R. Blanchette. 2005. “Environmental factors influencing microbial growth inside the historic expedition huts of Ross Island, Antarctica.” International Biodeterioration and Biodegradation 55(1): 45–53. http://dx.doi. org/10.1016/j.ibiod.2004.06.011

Headland, R. 2010. Historic Huts of Antarctica from the Heroic Age. Nimrod Athy Heritage Museum magazine.

Hughes, J. 2000. “Conservation investigation for preservation of a historic timber hut in Antarctica.” Wood Structures: A Global Forum on the Treatment, Conservation, and Repair of Cultural Heritage. Astm Special Technical Publication 1351, edited by J. R. Loferski, A. J. Salonikovich, E. G. Stern, S. J. Kelley, 268–296. West Conshohocken, PA: ASTM International

———. 2004. “Deterioration of Antarctic historic sites: Effects of Antarctic climates on materials and implication for preservation.” In In Cultural Heritage in the Arctic and Antarctic Regions, 29–32. Oslo: International Council on Monuments and Sites, International Polar Heritage Committee.

Janes, R. R. 1982. “The preservation and ethnohistory of a frozen historic site in the Canadian Arctic.” Arctic 35(3): 358–385. http://dx.doi.org/10.14430/arctic2339

Maxwell, P. and A. Viduka. 2004. “Antarctic Observations: On metal corrosion at three historic historic huts on Ross Island.” Proceedings of Metal 2004 National Museum of Australia Canberra ACT 4–8 October 2004. Canberra: National Museum of Australia.

McGowan, A., 1987. “Historical archaeology at Cape Denison, Commonwealth Bay, Antarctica.” Polar Record 24(149): 101–110. http://dx.doi.org/10.1017/S003224740000872X

Newton, C. and J. Logan. 1992. “On-site conservation with the Canadian Conservation Institute.” In Retrieval of objects from archaeological sites, edited by R. Payton, 127–132. Oxford: Archetype Publications. New Zealand Antarctic Heritage Trust Website. http://www.nzaht.org

Pearson, M. 2004. “Artefact or rubbish: A dilemma for Antarctic managers.” In Cultural Heritage in the Arctic and Antarctic Regions, 39–43. Oslo: International Council on Monuments and Sites, International Polar Heritage Committee.

Richie, N. 1990a. Archaeological techniques and technology on Ross Island, Antarctica. Polar Record 26 (159) 257–264. http://dx.doi.org/10.1017/S0032247400011761

———. 1990b. “78 South, 166 East: archaeology in Ross Dependency, Antarctica.” Australian Historic Archaeology 8: 23–27.

Rowe, S. and C. Rozeik. 2008. “The uses of Cyclododecane in Conservation.” Reviews in Conservation 9: 17–31.

Spindler, K. 2001. The Man in the Ice: The Preserved Body of a Neolithic Man Reveals the Secrets of the Stone Age. Translated by E. Osers. London: Phoenix.

Watkinson, D. and V. Neal. 1998. First Aid for Finds. LONDON: Rescue – The British Archaeological Trust.

World Monuments Fund website. http://www.wmf.org/project/scotts-hut-and-explorersheritage-antarctica.

Published

2014-11-06

Issue

Section

Articles

How to Cite

Skinner, L.-A. (2014). Archaeological Excavation and Artefact Conservation at the Heroic-era Expedition Bases, Ross Island, Antarctica. Journal of Glacial Archaeology, 1, 51-77. https://doi.org/10.1558/jga.v1i1.51