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Robert Falcon Scott Biography
Explorer
Robert Falcon Scott is remembered for his bravery in losing the race to the South Pole. His first expedition on the Discovery (1901-04, an attempt that included Ernest Shackleton) took him within 450 miles of the South Pole before he had to turn back. Scott later led the Terra Nova expedition, which reached the pole in January, 1912 -- only to discover that Norwegian Roald Amundsen had been there a month earlier. On the return trip Scott and his party of four all died of hunger and extreme cold. Their bodies were found 11 miles from a food and fuel depot.
Extra credit: Scott's only son, Peter Markham Scott, was a co-founder of the World Wildlife Fund and participated in the hunt for the Loch Ness Monster.
Scott stars with Evel Knievel in our loop More Audacity Than Cranial Capacity.
Four Good Links
Antarctic Philately: The Explorers
Terrific bio of Scott and others
Scott's Final Letter
Audio and text of his last letter to his wife
Robert Falcon Scott
A biography for kids
Robert Falcon Scott
His story and related features from History.Net
Vital Stats
Birth
Birthplace
Death
29 March 1912
(exposure, age 43)
Best Known As
The second man to reach the South Pole
