With his companions, he lived in
Antarctica for more than a year, conducting explorations and
scientific investigations. On December 14, 1911, he reached
the South Pole, becoming the first person known to have accomplished
this feat. He had favorable weather conditions during the
voyages, but his success was due primarily to his knowledge
of polar conditions, his attention to minute details, and
his ability to endure great physical stress.
Amundsen's plans for an expedition
into the north polar regions were interrupted by the outbreak
of World War I; in 1918, however, he sailed from Norway in
an attempt to drift eastward across the North Pole with the
ice currents of the Arctic Ocean. The currents proved too
variable to permit a crossing of the pole, and he was forced
to follow a more southerly route through the Northeast Passage
along the northern coast of Europe and Asia. The voyage ended
in 1920, when he arrived in Nome, Alaska. In 1922 another
attempt to reach the pole by both ship and airplane failed,
and in 1924 Amundsen came to the United States to raise funds
for further expeditions. In May 1926 he succeeded in crossing
the North Pole during a flight of more than 70 hours from
Spitsbergen, Norway, to Teller, Alaska; he was accompanied
by the American explorer Lincoln Ellsworth and the Italian
explorer and engineer Umberto Nobile. This flight was made
in the dirigible Norge, designed and built by Nobile
with the support of the Italian government. Nobile and Amundsen
subsequently quarreled, each claiming that the credit for
the flight belonged to his respective country. In 1928, however,
when Nobile's airship Italia was wrecked during a polar
flight, Amundsen, who had retired, volunteered to search for
him. Nobile was eventually rescued, but Amundsen was last
heard from June 28, 1928, a few hours after he and five others
had left Tromsø, Norway, by airplane. The remains of his airplane
were found near Tromsø on August 31.
For most of his life Amundsen
was a well-known lecturer and magazine writer. His books include
North West Passage (1908), The South Pole (1912),
The North East Passage (1918-1920), Our Polar Flight
(with Lincoln Ellsworth, 1925), First Crossing of the Polar
Sea (with Lincoln Ellsworth, 1927), and My Life as
an Explorer (1927).
"Amundsen, Roald," Microsoft®
Encarta® Online Encyclopedia 2001
http://encarta.msn.com
© 1997-2001 Microsoft Corporation. All rights reserved.
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