"Mysteries at the Museum" Race to the Antarctic: Special
ID | 13179403 |
---|---|
Movie Name | "Mysteries at the Museum" Race to the Antarctic: Special |
Release Name | Mysteries.at.the.Museum.S17E28.Race.to.the.Antarctic.1080p.Travel.WEB-DL.AAC2.0.H.264-Absinth |
Year | 2017 |
Kind | tv |
Language | English |
IMDB ID | 37493251 |
Format | srt |
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Watch Online Movies and Series for FREE
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I'm going back in time to an era
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when world exploration was fueled by competition
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and the thirst for glory,
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when dying could stand in the way of success
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and perseverance is king.
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My mission? To understand
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a man who is hailed as one of the greatest
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polar explorers in history.
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His name is Sir Ernest Shackleton.
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Shackleton wanted to be the first person
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to travel across the entire ice-bound continent of Antarctica.
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Very steep gradient--wow.
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It was one of the most dangerous expeditions ever attempted.
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That is deadly!
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My heart is going a million miles an hour right now.
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Oh, my God.
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But when his ship became trapped in ice,
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his mission transformed from a feat of polar exploration
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to history's greatest story of survival.
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To me, everything about this seems impossible.
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I'm Don Wildman.
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I've explored the world's greatest mysteries,
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examined rare artifacts and epic monuments.
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That is unbelievable.
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Now, I'm digging deeper into some of the most
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perplexing and famous cases in history.
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My goal? To get closer to the truth.
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Let's burn this place down. Let's burn it down.
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On this special episode of "Mysteries at the Museum"...
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Race to the Antarctic.
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Of all the explorers of the 20th century,
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Sir Ernest Shackleton stands out as one of the world's most famous.
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When he and his men set sail from Britain in 1914,
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they had no idea what they would encounter.
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Their goal was to reach Antarctica,
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but Mother Nature had made other plans.
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What began as an epic adventure
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quickly brought Shackleton and his 27 crewmen
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face to face with almost certain death.
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So why would Shackleton
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even attempt to conquer the Antarctic?
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What was the prize?
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To find out, I'm starting where the journey began,
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right here in England.
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First stop is ground zero for polar exploration--
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the Scott Polar Research Institute.
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Their collection features ship models,
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clothes, and artifacts from Shackleton's past expeditions.
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By the turn of the 20th century, the age of polar exploration
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was in full swing.
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The race to reach the furthest corners of the globe was on.
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By 1909,
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Frederick Cook and Robert Peary had both led expeditions
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to the North Pole.
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So the attention of the world's greatest explorers,
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men like Roald Amundsen, Robert Falcon Scott,
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and Ernest Shackleton, turned to the last unconquered
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place on Earth-- the South Pole.
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Whoever reached the South Pole first would go down in history.
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In 1912,
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after two failed attempts, Shackleton was planning
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his third expedition to the South Pole
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when the devastating word arrived that he had
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already been beaten there by fellow explorer, Amundsen.
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But Shackleton wasn't going
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to give up on his lust for glory.
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He set his sights on a new goal.
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Although explorers had visited different sections
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of Antarctica, no one had ever
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trekked across the entire continent.
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The idea was bold and dangerous.
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Shackleton named the adventure "The Imperial
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Trans-Antarctic Expedition."
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So who was Sir Ernest Shackleton?
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What drove him to risk his life and the lives of others?
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Why did he want to be first?
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To find out, I'm here at the institute archives
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to meet with a woman who knows the Shackleton legend
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better than anyone...
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his granddaughter.
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Alexandra--hello, Don. Nice to meet you.
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Oh, it's lovely to see you. It is an honor to meet you.
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WILDMAN: Alexandra's father was Shackleton's son.
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Although she never met her famous grandfather,
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she works tirelessly to preserve his legacy.
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Today, she's sharing
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some of his most cherished items with me,
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including his own personal journal and an original
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brochure from the expedition.
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Oh, look at that.
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This was an enormous undertaking
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just to organize, nevermind to accomplish.
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It was very ambitious.
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I mean, after Ernie Shackleton failed to get to the Pole,
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he regarded this as the last great adventure,
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to cross the Antarctic.
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WILDMAN: While some explorers were independently wealthy,
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Shackleton was not, so he raised his money
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from rich donors who wanted to be associated
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with a history-making feat.
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It took almost four years to put together
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the 80,000 pounds needed for the trip.
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That's about $10 million today.
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Why the Antarctic? Because the Antarctic
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was unknown, beautiful, romantic, exciting,
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offered better possibilities for adventure and discovery
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than probably any other part of the world.
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And the point of the expedition is that no one had ever
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crossed the continent. No one had done it before.
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WILDMAN: Unlike earlier explorers, who stood to make
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money from discovering new trade routes,
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polar adventurers were driven by competition and glory.
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So he buys a ship called the Polaris , Yes.
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renames it the Endurance . Where did that name come from? SHACKLETON: Renames her.
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It's called Endurance 'cause it's a Shackleton family motto,
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"By endurance we conquer." By endurance we conquer.
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WILDMAN: One of ten children born into a middle class family,
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Shackleton joined the merchant navy at the age of 16
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and soon acquired a taste for adventure.
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His first experience in Antarctica
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was in 1901 as part of a failed attempt
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to trek to the South Pole.
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There, he fell ill with scurvy, snow blindness,
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and frostbite and only just made it back alive,
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but despite the defeat, the trip cemented
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his desire to unlock the secrets of the frozen continent.
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By the time he came to assemble the crew
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for the Imperial Trans-Antarctic Expedition,
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his qualities as a leader
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were well established.
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Shackleton was not a typical leader of those times.
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He took great trouble to get to know his men.
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He was, um... very, very practical.
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He would do any odd job on an expedition,
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however menial, which was quite unusual
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for 100 years ago, but he was also a very
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romantic man who wrote poetry and love literature.
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WILDMAN: Very disciplined person? SHACKLETON: Very disciplined.
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Also, very pragmatic. Mm.
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He didn't look back-- that was one of his most important qualities.
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WILDMAN: Crewing up for the dangerous adventure
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proved easier than he thought.
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More than 5,000 people applied, each sharing
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in Shackleton's desire to be part of a momentous,
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history-making journey.
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He once listed the qualities he required of a polar explorer,
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and the first one was optimism.
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WILDMAN: With his pick of the litter,
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Shackleton was able to select the best of the best
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and put together a robust and skilled crew.
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Of the 27 men on board, there were not only
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professional seamen but scientists,
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engineers, surgeons, and even a photographer
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and an artist--in fact, with help from one of
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the wealthy donors, the expedition was outfitted
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with both still and motion cameras,
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and the incredible footage still exists today.
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The Endurance was loaded with dried food
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and drinking water and more than 60 sled dogs
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to drag them across the continent.
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On August 1, 1914,
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Shackleton bid farewell to his family,
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and the ship set sail for Antarctica.
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Shackleton was confident he would succeed.
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Five months later, as the Endurance
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made its way through the ice-packed Southern Ocean,
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they had their first
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spotting of the continent.
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The expedition was going well.
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But in mid-January,
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all that changed.
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One hundred miles from the coast of Antarctica,
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they found themselves gridlocked in ice.
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The majestic vessel could no longer move.
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So describe for me exactly what happens when the Endurance
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first gets, uh, stranded.
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Well, they tried to pull her out of it.
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They heaved her and then took ropes
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and made a path through the ice,
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but it was hopeless-- the ice was too heavy.
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WILDMAN: January 18, 1915.
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Shackleton and his men were stranded in the middle
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of the Weddell Sea, inside the Antarctic Circle.
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So Ernest Shackleton decides they have to abandon
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the ship and live on the ice. Yes, beside her.
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WILDMAN: The men unloaded their supplies of food
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and fresh water from the ship and set up camp
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on the ice.
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The plan was to wait for the weather to warm up
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so the ice would melt and allow them to sail on.
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SHACKLETON: But Ernest Shackleton was very aware
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that people living in difficult and dangerous circumstances
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on the ice, routine was the key.
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Breakfast was at nine, the jobs are shared out.
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There were football matches, there were amateur theatricals.
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There were dog races, birthdays were celebrated Mmhm.
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to keep everyone busy.
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And he was beloved by his men. Yes.
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WILDMAN: Nicknamed "The Boss,"
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Shackleton was dedicated to his crew's wellbeing.
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How did they eat-- what were they eating?
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Well, there was a cook-- he would make bread,
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biscuits, stew--originally beef, but then it would be
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penguin stew, whatever he could do.
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WILDMAN: Every morning, Shackleton would parse out
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the rations to all 27 men, making hot milk
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and hand-delivering it to the tents.
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Still, conditions were brutal,
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and living on a slab of ice in the middle of the ocean
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was incredibly dangerous.
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As the sea surged beneath,
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the ice constantly shifted and cracked open unexpectedly.
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The men had to be vigilant so as not to end up
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in the frigid water.
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Did he have regrets about this, having put himself
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and his men in this situation? I don't think so.
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Nobody had to come. They were all volunteers. Mmhm. Right.
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WILDMAN: As days and weeks ticked by, they tried to free
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their ship from the ice, but to no avail.
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On November 21st, eleven months
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after becoming trapped, the unthinkable happened.
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The shifting ice crushed the Endurance .
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The men watched as the masts crumbled under the strain,
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and their beloved ship sank to the bottom of the ocean.
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Shackleton recorded the moment in this very diary.
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"She went today, I was standing, ran up to the front.
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At 5pm, she went down by the head."
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They abandon the ship. Yes.
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And, in essence, abandon the expedition,
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and it turns into a... Fight for survival.
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...a fight for survival. That's amazing.
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Their ship was gone, and with the expedition
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not due back in England for another two years,
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no one back home would have any idea they were in trouble.
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There would be no one coming to their rescue.
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How could they survive such a cold and desolate place?
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What were Shackleton and his men going to do now?
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WILDMAN: Polar explorer, Sir Ernest Shackleton,
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and his 27 men were stranded near the Antarctic continent
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after their ship was crushed by ice and sank
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to the bottom of the sea.
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For a year, they lived on the unstable ice floe
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as the water surged beneath them,
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their supplies and food running out.
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Death was drawing near.
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What started as a rough adventure had become
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a daily fight for survival.
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As the men burned through their supplies,
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battled the elements, and struggled to stay sane,
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Shackleton made a decision.
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The only way to survive was to leave the ice in search of land,
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but how in the world would they do that with a sunken ship?
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Before the Endurance sank, Shackleton had the foresight
255
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to retrieve three small lifeboats from the vessel.
256
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One of them, the James Caird , is on display here
257
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at Shackleton's former school in London.
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Oh, hey, look at that.
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00:13:56,169 --> 00:13:58,302
Pretty.
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These three tiny boats were their only hope
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of returning to civilization.
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But before they could even attempt to reach solid land,
263
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the boats would have to be transported more than
264
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ten miles across the ice to the open sea.
265
00:14:21,261 --> 00:14:23,261
The men loaded the boats onto sledge runners,
266
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and along with a team of dogs, dragged them the vast
267
00:14:25,932 --> 00:14:28,400
distance to the water's edge.
268
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They had to be alert-- at any moment,
269
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the shifting ice beneath them could crack,
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and they'd be swallowed up by the bitter, cold sea.
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It was a miracle they had survived this long,
272
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but finally, they reached open water.
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But not everything or everyone
274
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could fit into these tiny boats.
275
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Shackleton had to make a difficult decision.
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In order to save his entire crew of men,
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he'd have to sacrifice the team of dogs and use the meat
278
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for sustenance on the near impossible journey to come.
279
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With the boats packed, Shackleton set his sights
280
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on the closest piece of land approximately 100 miles away,
281
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a bleak outcrop of rock known as Elephant Island.
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And led by the James Caird, they set out
283
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in search of land-- what was it like
284
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for Shackleton and his men to sail in boats this size?
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00:15:30,063 --> 00:15:32,530
There's one person I know who can give me some answers.
286
00:15:32,566 --> 00:15:35,934
I'm up here in the coastal highlands of Scotland
287
00:15:35,936 --> 00:15:37,869
to meet with Seb Coulthard.
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00:15:38,004 --> 00:15:40,539
Seb's a sailor, engineer, and adventurer with a unique
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00:15:40,674 --> 00:15:42,874
insight into the Shackleton story.
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00:15:42,943 --> 00:15:44,810
He knows a few things about the lifeboats
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00:15:44,945 --> 00:15:46,578
and the men who sail those.
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He's actually retraced Shackleton's journey
293
00:15:52,186 --> 00:15:54,352
in the waters surrounding Antarctica,
294
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and he's built an exact replica of Shackleton's famous
295
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lifeboat, the James Caird .
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00:15:59,626 --> 00:16:02,961
How you doing? Very well, thank you.
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00:16:03,096 --> 00:16:05,063
How are you? Don, nice to meet you.
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00:16:07,100 --> 00:16:09,501
Ah, it is an honor and a privilege to be aboard this.
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00:16:09,636 --> 00:16:12,570
Ha ha, it's a pleasure to have you on board. WILDMAN: Let's go sailin'.
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00:16:12,606 --> 00:16:14,973
COULTHARD: Hand over hand, please.
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00:16:15,108 --> 00:16:18,109
Watch your head, yard going up.
302
00:16:18,112 --> 00:16:20,979
I mean, this is all very basic rigging, isn't it? It is.
303
00:16:21,114 --> 00:16:23,482
Oh, keep going. That's it. Yeah.
304
00:16:27,654 --> 00:16:29,988
WILDMAN: Tell me how exact is this boat?
305
00:16:30,057 --> 00:16:33,391
This is the most accurate replica, uh,
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00:16:33,527 --> 00:16:35,393
sea-worthy replica in the world.
307
00:16:35,529 --> 00:16:38,129
You know, these fittings, they were all made
308
00:16:38,131 --> 00:16:40,265
by the same company that produced the original fittings
309
00:16:40,267 --> 00:16:42,333
for the original boat. That's so cool!
310
00:16:42,369 --> 00:16:44,936
And I imagine underneath, same story, right?
311
00:16:44,938 --> 00:16:47,506
Everything down below is as authentic as we can get it.
312
00:16:52,746 --> 00:16:55,279
Every single item here has a story behind it,
313
00:16:55,315 --> 00:16:56,882
a function, at least, yeah? Yeah.
314
00:16:57,017 --> 00:16:58,884
Every piece was brought on board the boat
315
00:16:59,019 --> 00:17:02,554
for a very practical reason. Yeah.
316
00:17:04,925 --> 00:17:06,892
So they would be sleeping right on these--
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00:17:07,027 --> 00:17:09,094
this bed of rocks. Yeah.
318
00:17:09,096 --> 00:17:12,964
In what? Um, they used reindeer-skin sleeping bags.
319
00:17:13,033 --> 00:17:15,166
Okay.
320
00:17:15,302 --> 00:17:17,569
COULTHARD: Theirs were rotting. WILDMAN: Right.
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00:17:17,704 --> 00:17:19,637
COULTHARD: They were festering-- the hide was literally
322
00:17:19,706 --> 00:17:22,908
dissolving, so you can imagine the smell. WILDMAN: Yeah, awful.
323
00:17:23,043 --> 00:17:25,177
WILDMAN: As the men sailed towards Elephant Island,
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00:17:25,312 --> 00:17:27,645
the rough seas pummeled their boats.
325
00:17:27,714 --> 00:17:29,647
Everything was wet-- they were wet.
326
00:17:29,716 --> 00:17:33,084
Every wave would come in and just submerge people down here.
327
00:17:36,122 --> 00:17:38,290
I think the best way to describe it-- it was horrific.
328
00:17:44,264 --> 00:17:46,197
WILDMAN: But the wild waters were just the beginning
329
00:17:46,266 --> 00:17:48,532
of their problems-- once darkness fell,
330
00:17:48,568 --> 00:17:51,068
it was almost impossible for the three boats
331
00:17:51,104 --> 00:17:53,538
to stay in contact with each other.
332
00:17:53,607 --> 00:17:55,473
COULTHARD: Their biggest fear was the dark, WILDMAN: Hm.
333
00:17:55,509 --> 00:17:57,408
because you can't see the icebergs coming.
334
00:17:57,477 --> 00:17:59,343
WILDMAN: So Shackleton instructed the men
335
00:17:59,379 --> 00:18:01,079
to pull the boats out of the water
336
00:18:01,214 --> 00:18:04,215
and camp on an ice floe for the night.
337
00:18:04,284 --> 00:18:06,817
On top of all the other challenges,
338
00:18:06,853 --> 00:18:10,155
the freezing cold temperatures were a deadly threat.
339
00:18:10,290 --> 00:18:14,025
It could be a hundred degrees below zero Fahrenheit.
340
00:18:14,061 --> 00:18:16,761
Yeah, easily. What does that even feel like?
341
00:18:16,830 --> 00:18:19,564
It's horrifically painful. How did they stay warm?
342
00:18:19,566 --> 00:18:23,435
They had to wear a very complex layer system of clothing. Mmhm.
343
00:18:23,437 --> 00:18:26,104
Which, to be honest, is very comparable
344
00:18:26,106 --> 00:18:28,506
to the, sort of, layering system that we use today.
345
00:18:28,508 --> 00:18:32,043
WILDMAN: So you got four layers, is that right?
346
00:18:32,079 --> 00:18:35,179
You got the... Four layers, so there's your underwear.
347
00:18:35,248 --> 00:18:37,982
That's your Jaeger wool underwear.
348
00:18:38,051 --> 00:18:41,186
This is the mid layer, which goes on top. Yeah.
349
00:18:41,188 --> 00:18:43,455
Then you have your insulating layer,
350
00:18:43,457 --> 00:18:46,658
that's your woolly jumper. There you go.
351
00:18:46,660 --> 00:18:50,662
And then you have the Gabardine cotton blouse. Ah. Ah.
352
00:18:50,664 --> 00:18:52,730
WILDMAN: The cotton outer layer was oiled
353
00:18:52,766 --> 00:18:54,766
but not waterproof.
354
00:19:00,440 --> 00:19:03,408
The footwear, believe it or not, they didn't have enough leather
355
00:19:03,543 --> 00:19:05,410
boots to go around for everybody,
356
00:19:05,545 --> 00:19:09,680
so they used reindeer hide as reindeer hide socks
357
00:19:09,716 --> 00:19:11,950
and just pulled them on, and they were latched on
358
00:19:12,085 --> 00:19:15,353
around their ankles. Every part of their body had to be covered,
359
00:19:15,355 --> 00:19:17,955
or it would've gotten frostbite. Yeah.
360
00:19:17,991 --> 00:19:20,758
Every part, hands, head,
361
00:19:20,794 --> 00:19:22,560
face, had to be covered.
362
00:19:22,562 --> 00:19:26,164
Too much exposure to the cold will lead to hypothermia
363
00:19:26,166 --> 00:19:29,067
Sure. and frostbite and eventually death.
364
00:19:34,041 --> 00:19:36,041
WILDMAN: Being on this replica gives me a real
365
00:19:36,043 --> 00:19:38,509
appreciation for what Shackleton and his men were up against
366
00:19:38,545 --> 00:19:41,445
in their hundred-mile passage to Elephant Island.
367
00:19:41,481 --> 00:19:44,849
COULTHARD: The Southern Ocean doesn't differentiate
368
00:19:44,918 --> 00:19:47,786
between a professional sailor or somebody who's
369
00:19:47,788 --> 00:19:49,788
just taken up sailing. Sure.
370
00:19:49,790 --> 00:19:51,389
It will kill you if you're not careful.
371
00:19:51,391 --> 00:19:54,125
WILDMAN: It's one of the most unpredictable bodies of water in the world.
372
00:19:54,161 --> 00:19:56,661
There are huge swells,
373
00:19:56,796 --> 00:19:59,530
strong currents, and powerful tides,
374
00:19:59,599 --> 00:20:02,133
and that's not all-- if the crashing waves
375
00:20:02,169 --> 00:20:04,668
and subzero temperatures didn't kill them,
376
00:20:04,705 --> 00:20:07,405
something even more fearsome might.
377
00:20:07,474 --> 00:20:10,275
Sure enough, as they made their way across the sea,
378
00:20:10,410 --> 00:20:13,811
a pod of killer whales swam dangerously close to them,
379
00:20:13,913 --> 00:20:16,948
and the wake threatened to capsize the three boats.
380
00:20:17,083 --> 00:20:20,752
To me, everything about this seems impossible.
381
00:20:25,091 --> 00:20:29,160
Finally, overcoming seemingly insurmountable odds,
382
00:20:29,229 --> 00:20:33,298
Shackleton and his men and all three boats reach land.
383
00:20:33,300 --> 00:20:36,434
On April 16, 1916,
384
00:20:36,569 --> 00:20:39,237
after seven grueling days of sailing,
385
00:20:39,372 --> 00:20:42,040
the haggard group finally made it to Elephant Island.
386
00:20:42,175 --> 00:20:44,776
It was the first time they'd set foot
387
00:20:44,845 --> 00:20:47,979
on physical land in nearly 500 days.
388
00:20:47,981 --> 00:20:50,181
Shackleton and his men made camp,
389
00:20:50,316 --> 00:20:52,851
but without anyone else knowing where they were,
390
00:20:52,986 --> 00:20:55,319
how are they gonna be rescued,
391
00:20:55,389 --> 00:20:58,423
and how long could they actually survive here?
392
00:21:12,539 --> 00:21:14,672
WILDMAN: In 1914, polar explorer,
393
00:21:14,674 --> 00:21:16,607
Sir Ernest Shackleton, and his crew
394
00:21:16,643 --> 00:21:18,810
set out to conquer Antarctica.
395
00:21:18,812 --> 00:21:21,345
But what started
396
00:21:21,415 --> 00:21:24,215
as a landmark expedition turned into an impossible
397
00:21:24,350 --> 00:21:26,317
quest for survival.
398
00:21:28,355 --> 00:21:31,021
After living from 15 months on the shifting ice
399
00:21:31,058 --> 00:21:33,691
and sailing for seven harrowing days,
400
00:21:33,827 --> 00:21:37,028
Shackleton and his 27 men successfully made it
401
00:21:37,163 --> 00:21:40,765
to the shores of Elephant Island and set up camp.
402
00:21:40,900 --> 00:21:43,168
To simulate their experience,
403
00:21:43,303 --> 00:21:45,436
I'm in Jungfrau, Switzerland.
404
00:21:45,572 --> 00:21:47,572
This place has
405
00:21:47,707 --> 00:21:50,508
a very similar terrain to islands in that region,
406
00:21:50,544 --> 00:21:52,510
including Elephant Island.
407
00:21:52,546 --> 00:21:54,913
I mean, being here gives me a real sense of what--
408
00:21:55,048 --> 00:21:57,682
these harsh conditions the men were up against.
409
00:21:59,786 --> 00:22:02,320
I'm with adventurer and Shackleton expert, Seb Coulthard,
410
00:22:02,389 --> 00:22:05,256
and we're racing against time and battling the elements
411
00:22:05,258 --> 00:22:07,191
setting up for the night.
412
00:22:07,227 --> 00:22:09,461
That's a strong wind. It's what you're really dealing with here.
413
00:22:09,596 --> 00:22:10,995
Man, look at that strength of that wind.
414
00:22:11,064 --> 00:22:13,131
It's unbelievable when you're in these conditions.
415
00:22:13,200 --> 00:22:16,534
Elephant Island was uninhabited,
416
00:22:16,570 --> 00:22:19,204
and no one else knew where they were,
417
00:22:19,339 --> 00:22:23,141
so...should they just wait here and hope
418
00:22:23,143 --> 00:22:25,543
or come up with a new plan?
419
00:22:36,356 --> 00:22:38,890
These guys have been-- have been living on ice
420
00:22:38,959 --> 00:22:41,025
for a long time.
421
00:22:41,094 --> 00:22:43,894
Now they're on land-- are there other challenges to that?
422
00:22:43,930 --> 00:22:47,832
Yes, the main challenge was finding, um,
423
00:22:47,901 --> 00:22:50,902
a supply of food to supplement Yeah.
424
00:22:50,971 --> 00:22:54,238
The dried provisions that they had managed to save.
425
00:22:54,241 --> 00:22:56,307
The trouble is is that when winter comes,
426
00:22:56,343 --> 00:22:58,575
the animals retreat, you know, they go to the feeding grounds
427
00:22:58,612 --> 00:23:01,646
in the warmer areas, so they had to kill
428
00:23:01,781 --> 00:23:04,715
as many penguins and as many seals as they could. Right.
429
00:23:04,751 --> 00:23:08,186
Then you need fire to keep them warm and fed. Right.
430
00:23:08,321 --> 00:23:11,189
How do they make a fire? I mean, we've done this...
431
00:23:11,191 --> 00:23:14,191
They actually run out of the supply of wood. Right.
432
00:23:14,227 --> 00:23:17,195
So they began to burn the seal skin, the blubber,
433
00:23:17,264 --> 00:23:20,999
the penguin skins from the animals that they were eating.
434
00:23:21,134 --> 00:23:23,434
I mean, these were despairing conditions,
435
00:23:23,436 --> 00:23:25,003
dire circumstances.
436
00:23:25,138 --> 00:23:27,338
The men were in very poor physical condition
437
00:23:27,407 --> 00:23:30,007
at this point-- Shackleton felt
438
00:23:30,076 --> 00:23:33,277
he had to find some form of rescue.
439
00:23:33,313 --> 00:23:35,412
I mean...wow.
440
00:23:35,448 --> 00:23:38,749
The wind is really kicking up up here.
441
00:23:38,785 --> 00:23:41,952
These lives, I mean, these guys' lives depended on Shackleton.
442
00:23:41,988 --> 00:23:43,955
He had that full responsibility.
443
00:23:44,090 --> 00:23:45,623
Yeah, and he felt it.
444
00:23:50,931 --> 00:23:53,297
WILDMAN: On Elephant Island, the men's food supplies
445
00:23:53,333 --> 00:23:55,767
were dwindling-- Shackleton realized that time
446
00:23:55,769 --> 00:23:57,702
was running out.
447
00:23:57,837 --> 00:23:59,838
If he didn't act quickly, he and his men
448
00:23:59,973 --> 00:24:03,508
would surely die-- Shackleton made a decision.
449
00:24:03,510 --> 00:24:06,711
He picked the five healthiest and strongest men
450
00:24:06,713 --> 00:24:09,180
and set off in the James Caird
451
00:24:09,315 --> 00:24:12,383
to South Georgia island, 800 miles away.
452
00:24:12,419 --> 00:24:16,253
There, they would find a whaling station
453
00:24:16,289 --> 00:24:18,589
and, more importantly, people.
454
00:24:18,591 --> 00:24:20,792
If they could make it,
455
00:24:20,927 --> 00:24:22,794
they had a chance to survive
456
00:24:22,929 --> 00:24:26,197
and save the 22 men they left behind.
457
00:24:26,199 --> 00:24:30,168
It would be the most difficult journey of their lives.
458
00:24:34,273 --> 00:24:36,340
Day after day, the men braved the elements
459
00:24:36,343 --> 00:24:38,743
as the violent sea threatened to capsize
460
00:24:38,812 --> 00:24:41,345
the small, wooden boat.
461
00:24:41,381 --> 00:24:44,281
On the twelfth day, it looked as though
462
00:24:44,317 --> 00:24:46,417
their journey was over.
463
00:24:50,056 --> 00:24:52,356
Shackleton was at the helm, and he can see
464
00:24:52,425 --> 00:24:54,759
this white line, and he thinks it's the horizon.
465
00:24:54,761 --> 00:24:56,160
It's not.
466
00:24:56,196 --> 00:24:59,430
It's the crest of an enormous wave starting to rise
467
00:24:59,432 --> 00:25:01,765
higher and higher and higher. WILDMAN: Ooh.
468
00:25:01,801 --> 00:25:03,567
COULTHARD: Almost 90 feet. Wow!
469
00:25:03,636 --> 00:25:05,303
And you can imagine the moment where he looks down
470
00:25:05,305 --> 00:25:07,372
at the skipper, and he looks him in the eye, and he goes,
471
00:25:07,507 --> 00:25:09,073
"Oh, my God, it's got us!"
472
00:25:12,078 --> 00:25:14,178
Everyone's freezing to death. It's frightening.
473
00:25:14,313 --> 00:25:17,048
Nobody knows precisely how is it that they manage to survive it.
474
00:25:23,056 --> 00:25:25,456
WILDMAN: Shackleton and his men survive the wave,
475
00:25:25,458 --> 00:25:27,859
but the James Caird did not fare as well.
476
00:25:27,861 --> 00:25:31,863
The boat was very badly damaged, and the planking
477
00:25:31,865 --> 00:25:33,798
began to open up, WILDMAN: Mmhm.
478
00:25:33,933 --> 00:25:36,801
uh, especially at the front of the boat where it met the wave head-on.
479
00:25:36,803 --> 00:25:39,203
And so they have to actually re--they had to
480
00:25:39,272 --> 00:25:40,938
repair the boat while they were sailing it.
481
00:25:40,940 --> 00:25:42,807
They tried, but it didn't work. Oh.
482
00:25:42,809 --> 00:25:44,942
They didn't have the materials necessary to fix it,
483
00:25:44,944 --> 00:25:46,944
um, so...
484
00:25:46,946 --> 00:25:49,147
They just keep on bailing. Keep on bailing.
485
00:25:49,282 --> 00:25:51,082
WILDMAN: Time was of the essence.
486
00:25:51,151 --> 00:25:53,551
If the boat filled with water, it would sink,
487
00:25:53,686 --> 00:25:56,287
and within minutes of being submerged, Shackleton
488
00:25:56,356 --> 00:25:58,256
and his men would die.
489
00:26:12,330 --> 00:26:14,864
WILDMAN: Polar explorer, Sir Ernest Shackleton,
490
00:26:14,866 --> 00:26:18,333
wanted to be the first person to cross the continent of Antarctica,
491
00:26:18,402 --> 00:26:22,003
but when his ship was crushed by ice and sank,
492
00:26:22,039 --> 00:26:25,608
his mission went from exploration to survival.
493
00:26:25,743 --> 00:26:30,412
Leaving 22 members of his crew on an uninhabited island,
494
00:26:30,548 --> 00:26:33,481
he and five others went in search of help.
495
00:26:33,518 --> 00:26:36,151
Their goal--
496
00:26:36,187 --> 00:26:39,154
to sail 800 miles in a small lifeboat
497
00:26:39,157 --> 00:26:41,891
in some of the harshest conditions in the world
498
00:26:42,026 --> 00:26:45,561
to a whaling station on South Georgia Island.
499
00:26:47,365 --> 00:26:50,299
Their rescue mission was almost cut short by a rogue wave.
500
00:26:53,905 --> 00:26:56,037
The boat was damaged, but they were able
501
00:26:56,073 --> 00:26:58,106
to bail out enough water to continue.
502
00:27:02,580 --> 00:27:04,446
As the journey wore on,
503
00:27:04,582 --> 00:27:06,982
the men's health began to fail, and seasickness,
504
00:27:07,117 --> 00:27:10,186
frostbite, and hypothermia took hold.
505
00:27:10,321 --> 00:27:13,122
They were struggling to eat, struggling to drink,
506
00:27:13,257 --> 00:27:15,324
struggling to sleep.
507
00:27:15,326 --> 00:27:17,526
Can you even sleep on a boat like this?
508
00:27:17,562 --> 00:27:19,862
Not really, um...
509
00:27:19,931 --> 00:27:21,530
with the size of the waves they were experiencing,
510
00:27:21,632 --> 00:27:25,267
every time the trough of the waves heads towards the boat,
511
00:27:25,303 --> 00:27:27,403
it will smash onto the side of the boat, Wow.
512
00:27:27,538 --> 00:27:29,505
and down below, it's like a gunshot.
513
00:27:34,745 --> 00:27:36,745
WILDMAN: For Shackleton and his men to succeed,
514
00:27:36,781 --> 00:27:40,683
they would need sustenance, but even the simple act of eating
515
00:27:40,685 --> 00:27:43,285
was a monumental challenge.
516
00:27:43,321 --> 00:27:47,556
We're gonna use this little implement here.
517
00:27:47,691 --> 00:27:51,026
Clamp it between our feet. So this collaboration is how they did it.
518
00:27:51,161 --> 00:27:53,429
It has to be-- you can't cook on your own.
519
00:27:53,564 --> 00:27:55,430
You have to have another person.
520
00:27:55,466 --> 00:27:58,033
So what was on their menu?
521
00:27:58,102 --> 00:28:01,637
They were eating, um, a substance called hoosh.
522
00:28:01,639 --> 00:28:05,040
It's beef fat and lean beef
523
00:28:05,175 --> 00:28:06,975
that's been blended together, fifty-fifty,
524
00:28:07,044 --> 00:28:10,445
and they would have eaten three of these a day.
525
00:28:10,515 --> 00:28:13,048
At the time, there's water comin' in here, there's wind,
526
00:28:13,183 --> 00:28:15,850
there's all this sort of thing-- this is not some easy-going experience.
527
00:28:15,887 --> 00:28:19,722
No, imagine the waves crashing in, as well. Yeah.
528
00:28:19,857 --> 00:28:23,125
Because of the danger that this presents,
529
00:28:23,194 --> 00:28:26,595
this would've been a very, very tricky operation
530
00:28:26,664 --> 00:28:28,997
to carry out-- you imagine the clothing
531
00:28:29,000 --> 00:28:31,400
that they were wearing-- it was covered in blubber
532
00:28:31,402 --> 00:28:33,602
and oil, which made it water repellant.
533
00:28:33,737 --> 00:28:35,738
It also makes it flammable.
534
00:28:35,873 --> 00:28:37,606
God, that's just incredible.
535
00:28:37,642 --> 00:28:40,609
The fumes are almost seasickness-inducing.
536
00:28:40,678 --> 00:28:43,345
So, flame off. Okay, all right.
537
00:28:43,381 --> 00:28:44,947
Flame's off.
538
00:28:45,082 --> 00:28:46,749
So at this point, Shackleton would've shouted out,
539
00:28:46,751 --> 00:28:49,351
"Hoosh!" and gone straight in with his spoon.
540
00:28:49,387 --> 00:28:51,486
And we'd all eat from the same thing? Everybody.
541
00:28:51,522 --> 00:28:53,155
All right.
542
00:28:53,224 --> 00:28:55,491
I am dreading this, I have to say.
543
00:28:59,897 --> 00:29:02,831
It's not bad. The food is the key.
544
00:29:02,967 --> 00:29:05,634
Without--without the fuel to keep the body going,
545
00:29:05,769 --> 00:29:08,103
there would have been no rescue attempt.
546
00:29:12,376 --> 00:29:14,376
WILDMAN: Back on Elephant Island, the men were
547
00:29:14,378 --> 00:29:16,579
all becoming dangerously weak.
548
00:29:16,714 --> 00:29:18,446
Depression was prevalent.
549
00:29:18,482 --> 00:29:20,849
Many of them were ill and frostbitten.
550
00:29:20,885 --> 00:29:23,519
Still, they fought to survive.
551
00:29:23,654 --> 00:29:26,322
To stave off starvation,
552
00:29:26,457 --> 00:29:28,924
they hunted for penguins and seals.
553
00:29:28,993 --> 00:29:32,595
They used the two remaining lifeboats to block the wind,
554
00:29:32,696 --> 00:29:36,131
but there was no telling how long they will last.
555
00:29:40,671 --> 00:29:43,739
Against all odds, Shackleton once more
556
00:29:43,741 --> 00:29:45,941
does the seemingly impossible.
557
00:29:53,017 --> 00:29:55,684
Seventeen long days after leaving his men behind
558
00:29:55,720 --> 00:29:58,821
on Elephant Island, Shackleton and his team
559
00:29:58,823 --> 00:30:00,823
reach the shores of South Georgia.
560
00:30:04,161 --> 00:30:06,762
Hungry, thirsty, and soaked to the bone,
561
00:30:06,897 --> 00:30:10,099
their journey was still not over.
562
00:30:10,234 --> 00:30:12,101
The wind and currents had forced them
563
00:30:12,236 --> 00:30:14,502
to land on the western side of the island,
564
00:30:14,538 --> 00:30:17,639
opposite from where they needed to be,
565
00:30:17,708 --> 00:30:21,643
but their boat was so badly damaged, it would never
566
00:30:21,646 --> 00:30:24,213
make the trip around the island.
567
00:30:30,387 --> 00:30:32,855
They were 30 miles from the nearest whaling village
568
00:30:32,857 --> 00:30:35,356
and civilization-- the only way to get there
569
00:30:35,393 --> 00:30:38,193
was to trek over the mountains, but some of the men
570
00:30:38,262 --> 00:30:42,331
were in no condition to hike, suffering from frost nip
571
00:30:42,333 --> 00:30:45,534
and trench foot-- what would Shackleton do?
572
00:30:45,536 --> 00:30:48,536
Would he be able to save the men he was with?
573
00:30:48,572 --> 00:30:51,607
And what about the 22 others now stranded
574
00:30:51,742 --> 00:30:53,909
on Elephant Island?
575
00:31:07,158 --> 00:31:10,225
WILDMAN: Having lost his ship to the icy waters of the Antarctic,
576
00:31:10,227 --> 00:31:13,228
then living on an ice floe for 15 months,
577
00:31:13,364 --> 00:31:16,365
Sir Ernest Shackleton set out with a crew of five
578
00:31:16,367 --> 00:31:19,301
on an 800-mile, 17-day journey
579
00:31:19,303 --> 00:31:21,837
to South Georgia Island to rescue
580
00:31:21,906 --> 00:31:24,839
the 22 men they'd left behind.
581
00:31:24,875 --> 00:31:27,309
His navigator, Frank Worsley, and the four others
582
00:31:27,378 --> 00:31:30,379
barely survive the agonizing passage.
583
00:31:30,381 --> 00:31:32,714
While they had made it to shore,
584
00:31:32,750 --> 00:31:35,484
salvation was still a long way off.
585
00:31:42,193 --> 00:31:44,659
To reach the whaling villages based on the island,
586
00:31:44,729 --> 00:31:47,195
Shackleton and his men would have to hike
587
00:31:47,264 --> 00:31:49,731
snow-covered mountains, avoiding the steep,
588
00:31:49,800 --> 00:31:52,668
dangerous crevasses that would mean instant death
589
00:31:52,737 --> 00:31:54,803
if they were to slip and fall.
590
00:31:54,872 --> 00:31:57,739
Realizing that Worsley and a naval petty officer
591
00:31:57,742 --> 00:32:00,542
named Tom Crean were the only two fit
592
00:32:00,544 --> 00:32:03,745
for the excursion, he instructed the other three men
593
00:32:03,814 --> 00:32:06,615
to stay behind, vowing to return for them.
594
00:32:12,490 --> 00:32:14,422
On top of being an expert sailor,
595
00:32:14,492 --> 00:32:16,758
my partner, Seb Coulthard, is also a certified
596
00:32:16,794 --> 00:32:18,894
mountaineering guide.
597
00:32:19,029 --> 00:32:22,431
I'm astonished, I mean, this is extreme terrain.
598
00:32:22,433 --> 00:32:25,367
This is what it was like for them? Yes, absolutely.
599
00:32:25,369 --> 00:32:29,170
I would say this is very comparable to that mountain range.
600
00:32:29,206 --> 00:32:30,839
WILDMAN: Shackleton and his men had landed
601
00:32:30,908 --> 00:32:33,175
on the western side of the island.
602
00:32:33,310 --> 00:32:35,577
To reach the whaling station on the other side,
603
00:32:35,712 --> 00:32:38,046
they would have to cross a totally uncharted
604
00:32:38,049 --> 00:32:40,916
mountain range in freezing conditions.
605
00:32:41,051 --> 00:32:43,519
This is the part of the journey that most surprises me,
606
00:32:43,521 --> 00:32:45,587
because after all they've gone through,
607
00:32:45,623 --> 00:32:47,990
they have to do this. Yes.
608
00:32:48,125 --> 00:32:51,326
And get through it without nearly the gear that we have.
609
00:32:51,462 --> 00:32:54,062
What are you gonna put on me? Okay, so, uh, what we've got--
610
00:32:54,064 --> 00:32:55,864
We've got rope, so you and I need to be
611
00:32:55,900 --> 00:32:57,399
roped up together. Yeah, okay.
612
00:32:57,401 --> 00:33:00,802
Uh, in case either I fall down a hole, or you go down a hole. Yeah.
613
00:33:00,838 --> 00:33:02,937
Spikes for your boots.
614
00:33:02,973 --> 00:33:05,674
Back then...all they did
615
00:33:05,676 --> 00:33:08,743
was, uh, they took wood screws
616
00:33:08,813 --> 00:33:11,480
out of the planking from the boat,
617
00:33:11,615 --> 00:33:14,149
and they put them through the bottom of the boots
618
00:33:14,185 --> 00:33:16,218
in order to have traction on the ice.
619
00:33:16,287 --> 00:33:19,154
That was their equivalent of crampons.
620
00:33:19,156 --> 00:33:21,890
Yeah, very crude, but believe it or not, it's very effective.
621
00:33:22,025 --> 00:33:24,759
So the inherent problem with South Georgia Island
622
00:33:24,829 --> 00:33:26,761
is glaciers. Yes.
623
00:33:26,831 --> 00:33:29,164
It's probably the most dangerous, um,
624
00:33:29,166 --> 00:33:32,301
feature of the landscape. Sure.
625
00:33:32,436 --> 00:33:34,770
The route they proposed to take, um,
626
00:33:34,772 --> 00:33:36,838
involved crossing, um,
627
00:33:36,874 --> 00:33:39,374
two of the main glaciers.
628
00:33:39,509 --> 00:33:41,376
Did they know those glaciers were there when they arrived there?
629
00:33:41,511 --> 00:33:44,712
No, there was no map for the interior of South Georgia.
630
00:33:44,748 --> 00:33:47,649
So when crossing a mountain with glaciers,
631
00:33:47,784 --> 00:33:49,784
I mean, what are the factors you're dealing with?
632
00:33:49,820 --> 00:33:51,786
It's almost like going through a minefield, isn't it?
633
00:33:51,822 --> 00:33:54,322
You could crash through a crevasse at any point.
634
00:33:56,326 --> 00:33:59,328
And these are men who are exhausted, I mean,
635
00:33:59,330 --> 00:34:02,397
they've been doing this for, what, two and a half weeks
636
00:34:02,466 --> 00:34:04,332
at this point. Yeah, physically,
637
00:34:04,368 --> 00:34:08,003
the demand of that is just, uh,
638
00:34:08,072 --> 00:34:10,539
it's unbelievable--it's very hard to comprehend, really.
639
00:34:10,541 --> 00:34:13,008
Let's see what we find.
640
00:34:13,143 --> 00:34:15,177
I'll be the guy on the rope behind you.
641
00:34:20,217 --> 00:34:23,018
WILDMAN: We have UV sunglasses to protect from snow blindness,
642
00:34:23,153 --> 00:34:27,088
but Shackleton and his men had no such luxury.
643
00:34:27,157 --> 00:34:30,893
The intense sunlight scorched their eyes.
644
00:34:31,028 --> 00:34:33,695
Incredible.
645
00:34:33,731 --> 00:34:36,031
It was certainly a-- a test of...
646
00:34:36,100 --> 00:34:38,100
their endurance.
647
00:34:38,235 --> 00:34:40,435
WILDMAN: After an hour of trudging through the elements,
648
00:34:40,504 --> 00:34:42,437
we came face-to-face with an obstacle
649
00:34:42,506 --> 00:34:44,573
that could spell disaster.
650
00:34:44,575 --> 00:34:48,043
COULTHARD: This is the biggest crevasse I've ever come across.
651
00:34:48,045 --> 00:34:50,511
WILDMAN: But I wanna get a closer look.
652
00:34:50,547 --> 00:34:52,580
We'll just keep going up in a straight line.
653
00:34:52,650 --> 00:34:54,716
I'll stop, rig up an anchor,
654
00:34:54,718 --> 00:34:56,718
and then you can go to the edge.
655
00:34:56,720 --> 00:34:57,985
Following you. All right.
656
00:34:58,022 --> 00:34:59,855
Just remember to test that edge, all right? Yep.
657
00:34:59,990 --> 00:35:03,658
Walk out, okay, I've got the rope.
658
00:35:03,727 --> 00:35:06,662
Test the snow.
659
00:35:06,797 --> 00:35:09,398
Yeah, test the edge.
660
00:35:09,400 --> 00:35:11,800
Ah, jeez... Whoa, whoa, whoa, right, right.
661
00:35:11,802 --> 00:35:14,269
You need to lay down. Lay down.
662
00:35:14,305 --> 00:35:17,673
Okay, and just... Feels solid.
663
00:35:17,675 --> 00:35:20,709
Okay, that's it, that's it. Oh, my God!
664
00:35:23,781 --> 00:35:27,682
Holy crap!
665
00:35:27,685 --> 00:35:30,752
That is unbelievable! Yeah?
666
00:35:30,754 --> 00:35:32,821
COULTHARD: They're called man eaters
667
00:35:32,956 --> 00:35:35,557
for a reason. That is terrifying!
668
00:35:35,626 --> 00:35:37,826
Oh, my Lord.
669
00:35:39,830 --> 00:35:41,563
This would be typical of something they were
670
00:35:41,632 --> 00:35:43,932
crossing, huh? Yeah, absolutely.
671
00:35:47,771 --> 00:35:49,504
How would they have navigated all of this?
672
00:35:49,640 --> 00:35:52,573
They just had a compass, and they set
673
00:35:52,610 --> 00:35:55,777
an east magnetic course knowing that in the distance,
674
00:35:55,813 --> 00:35:58,647
there was a whaling station. A terrifying experience
675
00:35:58,716 --> 00:36:00,716
for these guys. Frightening.
676
00:36:00,851 --> 00:36:03,185
Did they sleep? They did.
677
00:36:03,187 --> 00:36:06,054
But, uh, Shackleton cheated.
678
00:36:06,189 --> 00:36:09,458
Basically, when they reached a certain point
679
00:36:09,460 --> 00:36:12,327
on one of the ridges, they were so exhausted,
680
00:36:12,462 --> 00:36:15,130
they just collapsed, and they began to go
681
00:36:15,265 --> 00:36:17,933
into a hypothermic sleep, and Shackleton knew
682
00:36:18,068 --> 00:36:21,536
if they fall asleep in deep sleep, then...
683
00:36:21,671 --> 00:36:23,605
It was over. That was it, it was over.
684
00:36:23,674 --> 00:36:27,342
So he wakes them up and said, "Hey, you've had half an hour,"
685
00:36:27,344 --> 00:36:30,878
and instead, they only had five minutes. Wow, little psychological trick.
686
00:36:30,914 --> 00:36:33,414
Yeah, he just picked them up and carried on.
687
00:36:33,450 --> 00:36:36,885
WILDMAN: The men struggle on for hours.
688
00:36:39,623 --> 00:36:41,356
Look at this-- we're socked in here.
689
00:36:41,425 --> 00:36:43,091
Look how fast the weather changed here.
690
00:36:43,160 --> 00:36:45,560
COULTHARD: Yeah, the weather in South Georgia Yeah.
691
00:36:45,596 --> 00:36:48,029
changes very, very, very quick. Mmhm.
692
00:36:48,032 --> 00:36:50,231
The wind can pick up from zero to 50 knots.
693
00:36:50,267 --> 00:36:52,900
Let's get out of here, because this weather's gonna
694
00:36:52,936 --> 00:36:55,837
catch up with us if we're not careful.
695
00:36:55,972 --> 00:36:58,440
WILDMAN: Shackleton and his two crewmembers climbed up
696
00:36:58,509 --> 00:37:01,509
the mountainside to the ridge only to confront
697
00:37:01,578 --> 00:37:03,511
yet another hurdle.
698
00:37:03,580 --> 00:37:06,581
Very steep gradient. WILDMAN: Wow!
699
00:37:06,583 --> 00:37:08,717
COULTHARD: Yeah, watch the edge. Don't get too close.
700
00:37:08,786 --> 00:37:10,919
So did Shackleton face this kind of obstacle?
701
00:37:11,054 --> 00:37:13,788
Yeah, the weather was closing in from behind,
702
00:37:13,857 --> 00:37:16,524
and they knew that if they stayed there,
703
00:37:16,560 --> 00:37:18,660
they were gonna freeze to death, so they had to descend
704
00:37:18,795 --> 00:37:21,596
quickly, and the only way to do that in their position,
705
00:37:21,632 --> 00:37:25,266
um, was a known mountaineering technique called a glacade.
706
00:37:25,335 --> 00:37:27,402
Uh, it's basically a bum slide.
707
00:37:27,504 --> 00:37:29,203
WILDMAN: So this is their only alternative.
708
00:37:29,239 --> 00:37:31,940
Otherwise, they stay on this ridge, and they die. Yep.
709
00:37:31,942 --> 00:37:34,876
It's incredible-- so Shackleton makes the call,
710
00:37:34,945 --> 00:37:38,012
we're going down that hill. Yeah, shove off.
711
00:37:38,048 --> 00:37:40,148
Yah! Ooooh!
712
00:37:44,221 --> 00:37:46,722
Rahhh.
713
00:37:49,226 --> 00:37:50,892
You okay?
714
00:37:50,894 --> 00:37:53,862
Yeah, I'm fine, but... you can feel the danger.
715
00:37:58,435 --> 00:38:00,702
WILDMAN: After hiking for nearly 30 miles
716
00:38:00,837 --> 00:38:04,405
and 36 hours, Shackleton and his men heard
717
00:38:04,441 --> 00:38:06,975
the sweetest sound imaginable--
718
00:38:07,110 --> 00:38:10,111
the whistle blow from the whaling station.
719
00:38:10,180 --> 00:38:12,614
Their destination was a reality.
720
00:38:14,718 --> 00:38:16,751
On May 20, 1916,
721
00:38:16,787 --> 00:38:19,387
the men arrived at Stromness Whaling Station
722
00:38:19,523 --> 00:38:23,258
and told their unbelievable story.
723
00:38:23,393 --> 00:38:27,262
Shackleton, Worsley, and Crean were finally safe,
724
00:38:27,397 --> 00:38:30,198
but there were still the three men left behind
725
00:38:30,234 --> 00:38:32,400
on the other side of South Georgia,
726
00:38:32,402 --> 00:38:34,936
and what about the 22 back on Elephant Island?
727
00:38:35,005 --> 00:38:37,172
Could Shackleton save them,
728
00:38:37,307 --> 00:38:39,307
and were they still alive?
729
00:38:51,740 --> 00:38:54,107
Polar explorer, Sir Ernest Shackleton,
730
00:38:54,242 --> 00:38:56,843
had set out to cross the continent of Antarctica,
731
00:38:56,912 --> 00:38:59,379
but before he could reach his goal, his ship sank
732
00:38:59,448 --> 00:39:02,782
and turned his expedition into a fight for survival.
733
00:39:02,818 --> 00:39:05,652
Now, against all odds,
734
00:39:05,721 --> 00:39:08,120
after hiking for 36 hours,
735
00:39:08,157 --> 00:39:11,324
Shackleton and two of his men had made it safely
736
00:39:11,459 --> 00:39:13,660
back to civilization.
737
00:39:13,662 --> 00:39:16,530
But the celebration was short-lived.
738
00:39:16,665 --> 00:39:19,065
Shackleton's mission was not over.
739
00:39:19,101 --> 00:39:22,068
He had made a promise to the men he left behind,
740
00:39:22,137 --> 00:39:24,938
three on the other side of South Georgia,
741
00:39:25,073 --> 00:39:28,074
and 22 stranded on Elephant Island.
742
00:39:28,177 --> 00:39:31,611
There was no way of knowing if they were even alive.
743
00:39:31,647 --> 00:39:34,614
First, they picked up the three men,
744
00:39:34,683 --> 00:39:37,751
but getting to Elephant Island was far more difficult.
745
00:39:43,225 --> 00:39:45,158
The first attempt failed.
746
00:39:45,227 --> 00:39:47,427
So did the second.
747
00:39:47,496 --> 00:39:49,963
Both times, they ships were unable to crash
748
00:39:49,965 --> 00:39:52,632
through the ice pack and had to abort the rescue,
749
00:39:52,701 --> 00:39:56,236
but Shackleton wouldn't give up.
750
00:39:56,305 --> 00:40:00,106
On August 30, 1916,
751
00:40:00,108 --> 00:40:03,710
on a loaned out Chilean steamer, Shackleton arrived
752
00:40:03,779 --> 00:40:06,379
at the shores of Elephant Island.
753
00:40:06,448 --> 00:40:09,048
All of his men were still alive.
754
00:40:09,117 --> 00:40:12,853
For more than two years, the team from
755
00:40:12,988 --> 00:40:15,588
the Imperial Trans-Antarctic Expedition
756
00:40:15,657 --> 00:40:19,125
had lived on the ice, sailed treacherous waters,
757
00:40:19,261 --> 00:40:22,228
and crossed uncharted mountains and glaciers.
758
00:40:29,570 --> 00:40:32,271
Miraculously, Shackleton and all 27 men
759
00:40:32,341 --> 00:40:34,807
returned home to England.
760
00:40:34,877 --> 00:40:37,344
They had survived certain death
761
00:40:37,346 --> 00:40:40,146
and lived to tell the tale.
762
00:40:40,148 --> 00:40:42,682
Shackleton had achieved the unimaginable,
763
00:40:42,751 --> 00:40:45,485
conquering the deadliest elements known to man
764
00:40:45,554 --> 00:40:48,821
and somehow ensuring the safe return of his entire crew.
765
00:40:48,891 --> 00:40:52,359
As tales of this incredible journey spread,
766
00:40:52,494 --> 00:40:55,762
Ernest Shackleton's name became associated with fearless
767
00:40:55,831 --> 00:40:58,965
and unwavering leadership, and with that,
768
00:40:59,034 --> 00:41:01,834
Shackleton cemented his place in history.
769
00:41:01,870 --> 00:41:04,637
His journey of survival
770
00:41:04,673 --> 00:41:07,106
became his greatest accomplishment,
771
00:41:07,175 --> 00:41:10,810
putting him in a category all of his own.
772
00:41:18,020 --> 00:41:21,254
In the glimmering twilight, a lone star hovers,
773
00:41:21,256 --> 00:41:23,790
gem-like above the bay.
774
00:41:23,792 --> 00:41:25,725
WILDMAN: These were the final words written
775
00:41:25,860 --> 00:41:28,461
by Ernest Shackleton in his diary while on
776
00:41:28,463 --> 00:41:31,264
what would be his last expedition to Antarctica.
777
00:41:31,333 --> 00:41:33,800
A few minutes later,
778
00:41:33,869 --> 00:41:36,069
he suffered a fatal heart attack.
779
00:41:36,071 --> 00:41:39,071
It was January 1922.
780
00:41:39,107 --> 00:41:41,541
He was 47 years old.
781
00:41:41,543 --> 00:41:44,810
His wife, Emily, felt that her husband was an explorer
782
00:41:44,846 --> 00:41:47,614
of the world and belonged where his heart and passion
783
00:41:47,749 --> 00:41:49,949
truly lived.
784
00:41:50,018 --> 00:41:53,153
At her request, he was buried
785
00:41:53,155 --> 00:41:55,388
on South Georgia Island.
786
00:42:02,163 --> 00:42:04,564
Even though Shackleton never fulfilled his quest,
787
00:42:04,699 --> 00:42:07,033
he was celebrated as a hero.
788
00:42:07,035 --> 00:42:09,569
His success was measured not by the failure
789
00:42:09,638 --> 00:42:12,906
of his original mission, but by the determined rescue
790
00:42:12,908 --> 00:42:15,708
of his crew-- today, he's considered
791
00:42:15,711 --> 00:42:17,977
one of the world's greatest leaders,
792
00:42:17,979 --> 00:42:20,579
a man who embodied his own family's motto--
793
00:42:20,615 --> 00:42:22,849
"By endurance we conquer."
793
00:42:23,305 --> 00:43:23,180
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