Survival course instructor pulls a person from a crevasse as part of a rescue demonstration, Antarctica, December 1984

Photographed by Lynn Johnson for February 1985 LIFE magazine article, "LIFE Visits Wright Valley, Antarctica: Investigating the World's Coldest Desert," with text written by Jeff Wheelwright. Article summary from Black Star (photo agency) caption sheet “Wright Valley, Antarctica – The...

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Bibliographic Details
Main Author: Johnson, Lynn
Format: Still Image
Language:unknown
Published: Mahn Center for Archives and Special Collections, Ohio University Libraries 1984
Subjects:
Ice
Online Access:http://media.library.ohio.edu/cdm/ref/collection/lynnjohnson/id/2272
Description
Summary:Photographed by Lynn Johnson for February 1985 LIFE magazine article, "LIFE Visits Wright Valley, Antarctica: Investigating the World's Coldest Desert," with text written by Jeff Wheelwright. Article summary from Black Star (photo agency) caption sheet “Wright Valley, Antarctica – The World’s Coldest Desert”: "Antarctica is one area of the world which encourages international scientific cooperation. For eighty years this unusual and fascinating area has served as a laboratory for scientists from many countries of the world probing Antarctica’s geological mysteries. In December 1984 a group of international scientists including Japanese , New Zealanders, Chinese, Peruvian, German and American scientists descended on Wright Valley, considered the world’s coldest desert. These biologists, geologists, ecologists and scientists of other persuasions explored the valley so as to add to the cumulative scientific knowledge about Lake Vanda and the forty mile Wright Valley. Survival training for the scientists is an absolute essential for living in this hostile environment, even in the Antarctic summer. This arid frozen wasteland requires dedicated and hardy personnel whose desire for personal comfort becomes secondary to their scientific curiosity and explorations.” Caption from caption sheet “Wright Valley, Antarctica – The World’s Coldest Desert”: "He and his colleague are demonstrating a crevasse rescue. One man with the proper gear and training can extricate the victim in less than one half hour. This day, a record time of 21 minutes was set by the New Zealander instructor. Crevasse areas present one of the greatest hazards to scientists working in the field. Blowing snow often hides the signs of cracks in the ice that can be hundreds of feet deep." Text on slide mount: "©1984 Lynn Johnson Black Star 1-85-9147 50' Drop Crevasse Rescue 113490 2199"