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|_/-\ST P|_/-\CE 0N E/-\RT|-| EPISODE3 LEADING MEN 5

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Uploaded by on Jun 14, 2009

Episode 3: "Leading Men"
Scott arrives in New Zealand in May, 1910 and inspects the ponies brought to there from Siberia by Meares and declares
them first-rate, while horse expert Titus Oates, whom Scott did not approach about going to Siberia in 1909 due to Oates'
South Africa location at that time, does not believe that any of the ponies are fit for the expedition. Oates confronts
Scott about this in front of a group, and Scott resents it. While still in New Zealand, a drunk and disorderly P.O. Edgar
Evans falls off of the docked Terra Nova, but when Lt. Teddy Evans orders the P.O.'s discharge, Scott overrides him on
the basis that Edgar Evans' size and strength are vital to the expedition. Teddy Evans argues with Scott, threatening to
publicize his allegations of incompetence unless Scott guarantees to him a place in the final polar party. Scott
patronizes his Number One officer with a vague, oral promise to this effect. The Terra Nova leaves New Zealand for
Antarctica via the Ross Sea but becomes caught in pack ice from the previous Antarctic winter and loses several vital
weeks. Amundsen's crew arrive in the Fram at the Ross Sea coast with no obstruction and establish their base, Framheim, in
the Bay of Whales on a frozen-over island along the sea rim of the Great Ice Barrier. A hut is built at McMurdo Sound by
Scott's expedition, and an exploration team led by Lt. Victor Campbell is dispatched along the coast while a depot-laying
party led by Scott travels south into the Great Ice Barrier. Campbell's team encounters Amundsen's base, and, as
Amundsen's guests, they view Amundsen's huge number of sled-dogs and learn that Amundsen's base is 50 miles nearer to the
Pole than is Scott's. Scott opts to halt his depot-laying mission 11 miles short of target, a decision that will haunt
him, and return to McMurdo base for the winter. He receives word from Campbell about Amundsen and is furious. Amundsen and
his men embark on their own depot-laying trip into the Ice Barrier, and they penetrate much deeper into the Ice Barrier
than Scott did, setting marker flags two miles away from the depots, on both sides. "This is not the place to take
chances," says Amundsen. He and his companions return to Framheim for the winter.

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All Comments (7)

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  • @cdb2000 Once more, Scott thoroughly respected Wilson even if he did not share his faith, and Wilson was a devotee of Darwin's theories! Look up the "Winter Journey" to Cape Crozier that Wilson risked his life for, to try to find evidence of the evolution of birds from dinosaurs! No; the idea of Scott "taunting" his best friend is unbelievable, as is the idea of Wilson passively accepting insults. Why would Huntford print a story in his book that makes absolutely no sense at all?

  • @VanDee2008 I'm pretty sure I was reading Roland Huntford's book "Scott and Amundsen" on which much of this TV series is based. I haven't just made this all up to make Wilson look bad!

  • @campgalley Well spotted - when you posted, it was the 100-year-anniversary of that depot-laying trip! (I'm adding this comment since someone wrongly flagged your comment as spam).

  • @cdb2000 Where on earth did you get the information that Scott "taunted" Wilson? He and Wilson were great friends, he would never have been nasty to him. Also, where do you get the idea that Wilson was a spineless doormat who could be "made" to do anything he found distasteful? Finally, Wilson was comfortable balancing his faith with new scientific discoveries: this is why he went on the "Winter Journey", to prove a theory about evolution!! Please stop spreading misinformation. Thank you.

  • Scott wasn't even a Christian. During the Discovery expedition he took Darwin's Origin of the Species with him on his "furthest south" trip. He almost taunted Wilson by making him read from it (Wilson was religious)

  • "Regret it or not Oates, I've made up my mind like a Christian" So Scott, in the face of all evidence to the contrary, refuses to change his way of thinking to hold on to some fairytale to answer the unknowable.

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