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Please use this identifier to cite or link to this item: http://hdl.handle.net/1842/2975

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Title: Accidents and opportunities: a history of the radio echo-sounding of Antarctica, 1958-79
Authors: Siegert, Martin
Turchetti, S.
Dean, K.
Naylor, S.
Issue Date: 2008
1-Sep-2008
Citation: Siegert, M., Turchetti, S., Dean, K., Naylor, S.. (2008-09-01) Accidents and opportunities: a history of the radio echo-sounding of Antarctica, 1958-79, British Journal For The History Of Science 41(150) 417-444
Abstract: This paper explores the history of radio echo-sounding (RES), a technique of glaciological surveying that from the late 1960s has been used to examine Antarctica's sub-glacial morphology. Although the origins of RES can be traced back to two accidental findings, its development relied upon the establishment of new geopolitical conditions, which in the 1960s typified Antarctica as a continent devoted to scientific exploration. These conditions extended the influence of prominent glaciologists promoting RES and helped them gather sufficient support to test its efficiency. The organization and implementation of a large-scale research programme of RES in Antarctica followed these developments. The paper also examines the deployment of RES in Antarctic explorations, showing that its completion depended on the availability of technological systems of which RES was an integral part.
URI: http://journals.cambridge.org/download.php?file=%2FBJH%2FBJH41_03%2FS0007087408000903a.pdf&code=db5ebba284368f99d563057d88374391
http://dx.doi.org/10.1017/S0007087408000903
http://hdl.handle.net/1842/2975
ISSN: 0007-0874
Appears in Collections:Global Change Research Institute publications

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