"SEG Press books." Includes bibliographical references (pages 311-312) and index.
Contents:
The opportunity -- Getting ready -- By ship to Casey -- Getting ready for the field -- The autumn field trip -- Winter and the winter field trip -- The spring field trip -- Summer and the summer field trips -- Returning to Australia -- Scientific impact -- The Casey 1970 wintering party -- Appendix A. The astrocompass -- Appendix B. Glossary.
Summary:
A rare personal account of a scientific journey, this memoir details one year of field operations in 1970-71, acquiring ice thickness data with radar, gravity measurements, and magnetometer measurements in Antarctica. Compiled from official logs, personal papers, and memories, Blizzards and Broken Grousers reminds us of the pioneering spirit of geophysics in the time when field operations reached the ends of the earth and exploration was not confined to offices and computer processing systems. This book provides a detailed account of the author's Antarctic experience in a time before GPS, satellite communications, internet, and even links to Antarctica by air. Moreover, although it was not obvious at the time, the data collected from this work provide the underpinnings of the currently accepted theory on the movement of glacial icecaps, including models of ice behavior and the interaction of ice and climate that have been used extensively in assessments of future climate change.
This resource is supported by the Institute of Museum and Library Services under the provisions of the Library Services and Technology Act as administered by State Library of Iowa.