'Sir Douglas Mawson'
OBE FRS (
May 5 1882 –
14 October 1958) was an
Australian
Antarctic explorer and
geologist. With
Roald Amundsen,
Robert Falcon Scott, and
Ernest Shackleton, Mawson was a key expedition leader during the
Heroic Age of Antarctic Exploration.
Early life: first expedition to Antarctica
Mawson was born in 1882 in
Shipley,
Yorkshire,
England, the second son of Robert Ellis Mawson, a cloth merchant from a farming background, and his wife Margaret Ann, née Moore, from the Isle of Man. The family immigrated to
Rooty Hill, New South Wales,
Australia in 1884. He was educated at
Fort Street High School and the
University of Sydney, where he gained degrees in
mining engineering and science.
After working as a junior demonstrator in
chemistry, he was appointed geologist to an expedition to the
New Hebrides (now
Vanuatu) in
1903; his report ''The geology of the New Hebrides'', was one of the first major geological works of Melanesia. Also that year he published a geological paper on
Mittagong, New South Wales. His major influences in his geological career were
Professor Edgeworth David and
Professor Archibald Liversidge. He then became a lecturer in
petrology and
mineralogy at the
University of Adelaide in
1905. He identified and first described the mineral
Davidite, named for Edgeworth David.
In
1907, Mawson joined the ''British Antarctic Expedition'' led by Ernest Shackleton as an expedition geologist. With his mentor and fellow geologist, Edgeworth David, he was on the first ascent of
Mount Erebus. Later, he was a member of the first team to reach the
South Magnetic Pole, assuming the leadership of the party from David on their perilous return.
Mawson's Australasian Antarctic Expedition
Mawson turned down an invitation to join Robert Falcon Scott's
Terra Nova Expedition in 1910; Australian geologist
Griffith Taylor went instead. Mawson chose to lead his own expedition, the ''
Australasian Antarctic Expedition'', to
King George V Land and
Adelie Land, the sector of the Antarctic continent immediately south of Australia, which at the time was almost entirely unexplored.
The objectives were to carry out geographical exploration and scientific studies, including visiting the South Magnetic Pole.
The expedition, using the ship ''
Aurora'' commanded by Captain John King Davis, landed at
Cape Denison on
Commonwealth Bay on
8 January 1912 and established the Main Base. A second camp was located to the west on the ice shelf in Queen Mary Land. Cape Denison proved to be unrelentingly windy, the average wind speed for the entire year was about 50 mph (80 km/h). They built a
hut on the rocky cape and wintered through nearly constant blizzards.
Mawson's exploration program was carried out by five parties from the Main Base and two from the Western Base. Mawson's team, which was to trek east, consisted of
Xavier Mertz,
Lieutenant B. E. S. Ninnis and himself. Nearing the end of this team's trek, Ninnis, his dog team and sledge with most of the provisions fell through a crevasse and were lost.
Mawson and Mertz turned back immediately. Mertz died during the return journey and Mawson continued alone. On one occasion during his return trip to the Main Base, he fell through the lid of a crevasse and was saved only by his sledge wedging itself into the ice above him. When he finally made it back to Cape Denison, the ship Aurora had left only a few hours before. Mawson, and six men who had remained behind to look for him, wintered a second year until December
1913. In Mawson's book, ''Home of the Blizzard'', he describes his experiences. His party, and those at the Western Base, had explored large areas of the Antarctic coast, describing its
geology,
biology and
meteorology, and more closely defining the location of the south magnetic pole.
Later life
On his return, he married Paquita Delprat and was knighted, but the public took little interest in his achievements, being completely taken up with the
Scott disaster and the outbreak of
World War I. Mawson served in the war as a
Major in the British
Ministry of Munitions. Returning to Adelaide he pursued his academic studies, taking further expeditions abroad, including a joint British, Australian and New Zealand expedition to the
Antarctic in 1929–1931. The work done by the expedition led to the formation of the
Australian Antarctic Territory in
1936. He also spent much of his time researching the geology of the northern
Flinders Ranges in South Australia. Upon his retirement from teaching in 1952 he was made Emeritus Professor. He died at his Brighton home on
14 October 1958 from cerebral haemorrhage.
[1] He was 76 years old.
His image appeared from
1984-
1996 on the
Australian paper one hundred dollar note. Also,
Mawson Peak (
Heard Island),
Mawson Station (
Antarctica),
Dorsa Mawson (
Mare Fecunditatis), the geology building on the main
University of Adelaide campus, suburbs in
Canberra and
Adelaide, a
South Australian
TAFE institute, and the main street of
Meadows, South Australia are named after him.
See also
★
Mawson's Huts
★
Australasian Antarctic Expedition
★
Mawson Plateau
References
★ Lennard Bickel, ''Mawson's Will'' ISBN 978-1-58642-000-0
★ F. J. Jacka, '
Mawson, Sir Douglas (1882 - 1958)',
Australian Dictionary of Biography, Volume 10,
MUP, 1986, pp 454-457.
External link
★
Hurley, Frank Collection of Photographic Prints. Images of Mawson Expedition 1911-14 held at Pictures Branch, National Library of Australia, Canberra