IBTimes -
27 Oct 2014 20:34
Before regular air travel and state-of-the-art thermal wear, very few people had ever ventured to, let alone survived, Antarctica's South Pole. But the artifacts left behind by the region's first pioneers shed light on the early days of Antarctic exploration. Scientists recently uncovered the 100-year-old notebook of one of the first people to endure a journey to the coldest place on Earth. The diary contained the pencil notes of British explorer George Murray Levick, a member of Capt.
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