An archaeological study of the Solglimt shipwreck survivor camp on sub-Antarctic Marion Island

In a tale of survival, dubbed that of the “South Seas Crusoes”, a group of men overcame the odds by setting up camp on a deserted volcanic sub-Antarctic island in the middle of the Southern Indian Ocean. This group of men formed the crew of the Norwegian SS Solglimt sealing vessel which had wrecked...

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Bibliographic Details
Main Author: Van Niekerk, Tara Rae
Other Authors: Swanepoel, Natalie
Format: Doctoral or Postdoctoral Thesis
Language:English
Published: 2016
Subjects:
Online Access:http://hdl.handle.net/10500/22072
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author Van Niekerk, Tara Rae
author2 Swanepoel, Natalie
author_facet Van Niekerk, Tara Rae
author_sort Van Niekerk, Tara Rae
collection University of South Africa: UNISA Institutional Repository
description In a tale of survival, dubbed that of the “South Seas Crusoes”, a group of men overcame the odds by setting up camp on a deserted volcanic sub-Antarctic island in the middle of the Southern Indian Ocean. This group of men formed the crew of the Norwegian SS Solglimt sealing vessel which had wrecked on the sub-Antarctic Marion Island in October 1908. More than a century later remains of the shipwreck of the SS Solglimt can still be found lying exposed below the water in the bay of Ships Cove. In the valley north of the bay, the remnants of the shipwreck survivor camp associated with the wreck holds hidden stories of a terrestrial maritime landscape formed out of tragedy and the need to survive. It is mainly the remains of this camp which forms the basis of the research and discussion for this dissertation. The following study is not only an attempt to add to our knowledge and understanding of the archaeological remains on Marion Island, it is also to add to an existing body of knowledge involving shipwreck survivor camps. The remains on Marion Island have produced the perfect opportunity to fill gaps within the discipline of Maritime Archaeology, especially in South Africa where too often emphasis is placed on shipwreck studies and not enough on the events taking place before or after the crisis event. The following dissertation uses archaeological techniques alongside historical documents as a way to better understand the socio-cultural behaviour of survivors during events of disaster, isolation and the necessity to survive. The study will be used as a comparison to similar studies around the world and hopes to add to an existing body of knowledge involving survivor camps and disaster-response studies from an archaeological and anthropological perspective. Anthropology and Archaeology M.A. (Archaeology)
format Doctoral or Postdoctoral Thesis
genre Antarc*
Antarctic
Marion Island
Prince Edward Islands
genre_facet Antarc*
Antarctic
Marion Island
Prince Edward Islands
geographic Antarctic
Indian
geographic_facet Antarctic
Indian
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institution Open Polar
language English
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op_relation Van Niekerk, Tara Rae (2016) An archaeological study of the Solglimt shipwreck survivor camp on sub-Antarctic Marion Island, University of South Africa, Pretoria, <http://hdl.handle.net/10500/22072>
http://hdl.handle.net/10500/22072
publishDate 2016
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spelling ftunivsafrica:oai:uir.unisa.ac.za:10500/22072 2025-01-16T19:19:28+00:00 An archaeological study of the Solglimt shipwreck survivor camp on sub-Antarctic Marion Island Van Niekerk, Tara Rae Swanepoel, Natalie 2016-10 1 online resource (viii, 133 leaves) : illustrations (some color), color maps, portraits (mainly color) application/pdf http://hdl.handle.net/10500/22072 en eng Van Niekerk, Tara Rae (2016) An archaeological study of the Solglimt shipwreck survivor camp on sub-Antarctic Marion Island, University of South Africa, Pretoria, <http://hdl.handle.net/10500/22072> http://hdl.handle.net/10500/22072 910.45309699 Solglimt (Norwegian ship) Shipwreck survival -- Prince Edward Islands -- Marion Island Shipwrecks -- Prince Edward Islands -- Marion Island Castaways -- Prince Edward Islands -- Marion Island Survival at sea -- Prince Edward Islands -- Marion Island Dissertation 2016 ftunivsafrica 2021-12-30T07:10:10Z In a tale of survival, dubbed that of the “South Seas Crusoes”, a group of men overcame the odds by setting up camp on a deserted volcanic sub-Antarctic island in the middle of the Southern Indian Ocean. This group of men formed the crew of the Norwegian SS Solglimt sealing vessel which had wrecked on the sub-Antarctic Marion Island in October 1908. More than a century later remains of the shipwreck of the SS Solglimt can still be found lying exposed below the water in the bay of Ships Cove. In the valley north of the bay, the remnants of the shipwreck survivor camp associated with the wreck holds hidden stories of a terrestrial maritime landscape formed out of tragedy and the need to survive. It is mainly the remains of this camp which forms the basis of the research and discussion for this dissertation. The following study is not only an attempt to add to our knowledge and understanding of the archaeological remains on Marion Island, it is also to add to an existing body of knowledge involving shipwreck survivor camps. The remains on Marion Island have produced the perfect opportunity to fill gaps within the discipline of Maritime Archaeology, especially in South Africa where too often emphasis is placed on shipwreck studies and not enough on the events taking place before or after the crisis event. The following dissertation uses archaeological techniques alongside historical documents as a way to better understand the socio-cultural behaviour of survivors during events of disaster, isolation and the necessity to survive. The study will be used as a comparison to similar studies around the world and hopes to add to an existing body of knowledge involving survivor camps and disaster-response studies from an archaeological and anthropological perspective. Anthropology and Archaeology M.A. (Archaeology) Doctoral or Postdoctoral Thesis Antarc* Antarctic Marion Island Prince Edward Islands University of South Africa: UNISA Institutional Repository Antarctic Indian
spellingShingle 910.45309699
Solglimt (Norwegian ship)
Shipwreck survival -- Prince Edward Islands -- Marion Island
Shipwrecks -- Prince Edward Islands -- Marion Island
Castaways -- Prince Edward Islands -- Marion Island
Survival at sea -- Prince Edward Islands -- Marion Island
Van Niekerk, Tara Rae
An archaeological study of the Solglimt shipwreck survivor camp on sub-Antarctic Marion Island
title An archaeological study of the Solglimt shipwreck survivor camp on sub-Antarctic Marion Island
title_full An archaeological study of the Solglimt shipwreck survivor camp on sub-Antarctic Marion Island
title_fullStr An archaeological study of the Solglimt shipwreck survivor camp on sub-Antarctic Marion Island
title_full_unstemmed An archaeological study of the Solglimt shipwreck survivor camp on sub-Antarctic Marion Island
title_short An archaeological study of the Solglimt shipwreck survivor camp on sub-Antarctic Marion Island
title_sort archaeological study of the solglimt shipwreck survivor camp on sub-antarctic marion island
topic 910.45309699
Solglimt (Norwegian ship)
Shipwreck survival -- Prince Edward Islands -- Marion Island
Shipwrecks -- Prince Edward Islands -- Marion Island
Castaways -- Prince Edward Islands -- Marion Island
Survival at sea -- Prince Edward Islands -- Marion Island
topic_facet 910.45309699
Solglimt (Norwegian ship)
Shipwreck survival -- Prince Edward Islands -- Marion Island
Shipwrecks -- Prince Edward Islands -- Marion Island
Castaways -- Prince Edward Islands -- Marion Island
Survival at sea -- Prince Edward Islands -- Marion Island
url http://hdl.handle.net/10500/22072