1 00:00:06,480 --> 00:00:11,430 Roald Amundsen had spent nearly two years preparing his Arctic expedition. 2 00:00:11,430 --> 00:00:16,210 He had secured funding from the Norwegian Crown and hand-picked a trusted crew. 3 00:00:16,210 --> 00:00:20,470 He’d even received the blessing of the famed explorer Fridtjof Nansen, 4 00:00:20,470 --> 00:00:25,950 along with the use of his ship, Fram, specially constructed to withstand the ice. 5 00:00:25,950 --> 00:00:31,280 Now, with the voyage departing, he had one final announcement to his shipmates: 6 00:00:31,280 --> 00:00:35,300 They were going to head in the opposite direction. 7 00:00:35,300 --> 00:00:36,840 By the early 20th century, 8 00:00:36,840 --> 00:00:40,270 nearly every region of the globe had been visited and mapped, 9 00:00:40,270 --> 00:00:43,190 with only two key locations remaining: 10 00:00:43,190 --> 00:00:46,880 the North Pole, deep in the frozen waters of the Arctic region, 11 00:00:46,880 --> 00:00:51,170 and the South Pole, nestled within a recently discovered icy continent 12 00:00:51,170 --> 00:00:53,680 in the vast Antarctic Ocean. 13 00:00:53,680 --> 00:00:56,050 A veteran of several expeditions, 14 00:00:56,050 --> 00:00:59,630 Amundsen had long dreamed of reaching the North Pole. 15 00:00:59,630 --> 00:01:02,570 But in 1909, amidst his preparations, 16 00:01:02,570 --> 00:01:07,240 news came that the American explorers Frederick Cook and Robert Peary 17 00:01:07,240 --> 00:01:10,570 had staked rival claims to the achievement. 18 00:01:10,570 --> 00:01:13,090 Instead of abandoning the planned voyage, 19 00:01:13,090 --> 00:01:19,690 Amundsen decided to alter its course to what he called “the last great problem.” 20 00:01:19,690 --> 00:01:22,930 But Amundsen’s crew weren’t the only ones kept in the dark. 21 00:01:22,930 --> 00:01:27,190 British naval officer Robert F. Scott had already visited the Antarctic, 22 00:01:27,190 --> 00:01:31,090 and was leading his own South Pole expedition. 23 00:01:31,090 --> 00:01:36,120 Now, as Scott’s ship Terra Nova reached Melbourne in 1910, 24 00:01:36,120 --> 00:01:40,860 he was greeted with the news that Amundsen was also heading south. 25 00:01:40,860 --> 00:01:44,640 Reluctantly, Scott found himself pitted against the Norwegian 26 00:01:44,640 --> 00:01:48,540 in what the newspapers called a ‘race to the Pole.’ 27 00:01:48,540 --> 00:01:51,910 Yet if it was a race, it was a strange one. 28 00:01:51,910 --> 00:01:56,130 The expeditions left at different times from different locations, 29 00:01:56,130 --> 00:01:59,750 and they had very different plans for the journey. 30 00:01:59,750 --> 00:02:03,010 Amundsen was focused solely on reaching the Pole. 31 00:02:03,010 --> 00:02:05,100 Informed by his Arctic exploration, 32 00:02:05,100 --> 00:02:08,310 he drew on both Inuit and Norwegian experience, 33 00:02:08,310 --> 00:02:12,360 arriving with a small team of men and more than a hundred dogs. 34 00:02:12,360 --> 00:02:15,570 His explorers were clothed in sealskin and furs, 35 00:02:15,570 --> 00:02:18,728 as well as specially designed skis and boots. 36 00:02:18,728 --> 00:02:21,348 But Scott's venture was more complicated. 37 00:02:21,348 --> 00:02:24,898 Launching an extensive scientific research expedition, 38 00:02:24,898 --> 00:02:28,118 he traveled with over three times more men than Amundsen, 39 00:02:28,119 --> 00:02:32,619 alongside over 30 dogs, 19 Siberian ponies, 40 00:02:32,619 --> 00:02:36,109 and three state-of-the-art motorized sledges. 41 00:02:36,109 --> 00:02:37,979 But these additional tools and bodies 42 00:02:37,979 --> 00:02:41,699 weighed down the ship as it battled the storms of the southern ocean. 43 00:02:41,699 --> 00:02:44,449 And as they finally began to lay supplies, 44 00:02:44,449 --> 00:02:47,989 they found both their ponies and motor-sledges ineffective 45 00:02:47,989 --> 00:02:50,809 in the harsh ice and snow. 46 00:02:50,809 --> 00:02:55,189 In the spring of 1911, after waiting out the long polar night, 47 00:02:55,189 --> 00:02:57,569 both parties began the journey south. 48 00:02:57,569 --> 00:03:00,709 Scott’s team traveled over the Beardmore Glacier, 49 00:03:00,709 --> 00:03:04,799 following the path of Ernest Shackleton's earlier attempt to reach the pole. 50 00:03:04,799 --> 00:03:09,549 But although this course had been documented, it proved slow and laborious. 51 00:03:09,549 --> 00:03:12,149 Meanwhile, despite an initial false start, 52 00:03:12,149 --> 00:03:17,119 Amundsen’s five-man team made good time using a previously uncharted route 53 00:03:17,119 --> 00:03:20,139 through the same Transantarctic Mountains. 54 00:03:20,139 --> 00:03:21,939 They stayed ahead of Scott’s team, 55 00:03:21,939 --> 00:03:26,669 and on December 14, arrived first at their desolate destination. 56 00:03:26,669 --> 00:03:30,669 To avoid the ambiguity that surrounded Cook and Peary’s North Pole claims, 57 00:03:30,669 --> 00:03:33,579 Amundsen’s team traversed the area in a grid 58 00:03:33,579 --> 00:03:36,699 to make sure they covered the Pole’s location. 59 00:03:36,699 --> 00:03:38,609 Along with flags and a tent marker, 60 00:03:38,609 --> 00:03:44,029 they left a letter for Scott, which would not be found until over a month later. 61 00:03:44,029 --> 00:03:46,301 But when Scott’s party finally reached the pole, 62 00:03:46,301 --> 00:03:49,161 losing the ‘race’ was the least of their problems. 63 00:03:49,161 --> 00:03:53,901 On the way back towards the camp, two of the five men succumbed to frostbite 64 00:03:53,901 --> 00:03:56,101 starvation, and exhaustion. 65 00:03:56,101 --> 00:03:59,341 The remaining explorers hoped for a prearranged rendezvous 66 00:03:59,341 --> 00:04:01,111 with a team sent from their base, 67 00:04:01,111 --> 00:04:05,471 but due to a series of mishaps, misjudgements and miscommunications, 68 00:04:05,471 --> 00:04:07,571 their rescue never arrived. 69 00:04:07,571 --> 00:04:12,851 Their remains, along with Scott’s diary, would not be found until spring. 70 00:04:12,851 --> 00:04:15,612 Today, scientists from various countries 71 00:04:15,612 --> 00:04:18,732 live and work at Antarctic research stations. 72 00:04:18,732 --> 00:04:22,092 But the journeys of these early explorers are not forgotten. 73 00:04:22,092 --> 00:04:25,892 Despite their divergent fates, they are forever joined in history, 74 00:04:25,892 --> 00:04:29,550 and in the name of the research base that marks the South Pole.