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  • Trans Antarctic Expedition
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    Previous: Edmund Hillary and Rear Admiral Dufek at Scott Base in 1957 before the departure on the trip south by tractorNext: Team photoTrans Antarctic Expedition

    Andrew Packard Adjusting wind-exposed culture plates

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    Antarctica NZ Data
    Image NumberTAE1167
    About
    Description

     

    Andrew Packard adjusting wind-exposed culture plates. Photographer information is largely taken from initials on the reverse of the photograph.  There are a few images claimed by (and attributed to) Geoffrey Lee Martin not verified by reverse of photo

     

    Historical Recap from Peter Webb, Geologist on the First Expedition to Victoria Valley

    VICTORIA UNIVERSITY ANTARCTIC EXPEDITION (VUWAE-1 (1957-58)

    The VUWAE-01 party was a subset of the New Zealand Trans-Antarctic Expedition led by Sir Edmund Hillary. The Victoria Valley party comprised Dr Ronald Balham (Biologist), Richard Barwick (Biologist), Andrew Packard (Biologist), and Peter Webb (Geologist).  The first two were faculty members from the Department of Zoology at VUW, Packard was a guest scientist from the United Kingdom, Webb was an undergraduate student in geology from the Department of Geology at VUW. This was the first party to operate in the area.

    During the summer season of 1956-57 the New Zealand Royal Air Force flight wing flew their Beaver an Auster aircraft over what later became known as Wright and Victoria Valleys and took low level reconnaissance photos. The large lake in the mid section of Victoria Valley was designated as the location for the four man party camp  the following season. In the 1957-58 season the camp site was  established at the western end of what was later named Lake Vida (Vida was a Scott Expedition 1910-13 husky).

    The party flew into Lake Vanda in the US Navy Sikorsky helicopter “King Pin” as one very heavy load, also taking in a small rowing boat. The helicopter was so heavily laden that it couldn’t make enough elevation to get through Bull Pass and went back down Wright Valley and entered Victoria Valley over Clark Glacier. Open water existed only at the eastern end of the lake close to the camp site. The boat proved useful in this location. The remainder of the lake was ice covered as it is today.

    The weather was mostly excellent for fieldwork. There was no snowfall but we did experience very high valley floor winds at times. Streams entering the eastern end of the lake were in flood for several hours a day. On his traverse to Lower Victoria Valley Peter Webb encountered a severe sand storm (in the region of the dunes on the northern side of Lake Vanda) and for a while enjoyed zero visibility and a good sandblasting. The party ranged all over the valley system on foot. This included visits to Lake Vashka, Upper Victoria Glacier, Sponsors Peak, Insel, and the peaks to the north and south (St Johns Range, eastern Olympus Range,etc). Panorama photos (360 degrees)) were taken from all peaks climbed; and the full length of Lake Vida was measured by step counts. Triangulation based on the panorama photos and length of the lake, which appeared in many pans, were later used to create a basic field map. These data and those from the TAE northern party were used when the first 250,000 scale topo maps were prepared by the NZ Lands and Survey and US Geological Survey.

    The biologists concentrated on sampling lake water for micro-organisms, taking soil samples, algae and lichen samples. All members contributed to discovery, mapping and later carbon dating of numerous mummified seals and penguins. Much of this was later published in NZ. Peter Webb conducted the geological sampling and

    mapping program, used the data in his M.S, thesis, and published it in the NZ Journal of Geology and Geophysics in 1959.

    Work in the Victoria and Wright Valleys area was continued by the VUWAE-2 (1958-59) and VUWAE-3 (1959-60) parties. Results from these three seasons of work was published in Nature, Journal of Glaciology, and the NZ Journal of Geology and Geophysics. Further information on these early days can be found in Colin Bull’s (2009) recent book “Innocents in the Dry Valleys” (Victoria University Press).

     Souce: http://www.dri.edu/history-of-vida-research

    DepictsAndrew PackardLast edited by: Adrienne FarrPhotographerGeoffrey Lee MartinProgrammeTrans Antarctic ExpeditionLast edited by: Adrienne FarrEventVUWAE-01Season1956-1958Last edited by: Adrienne FarrDate TakenBetween 1st January 1956 and 1st January 1958OriginalNegativeCopyright OwnerAntarctica New ZealandLast edited by: Adrienne FarrNo. People1Last edited by: Adrienne FarrLocationLake VidaLast edited by: Adrienne FarrGeolocation[1] Position[2] Last edited by: Adrienne Farr
    Reference
    AttributionPhoto by [Photographer name if known] ©Antarctica New Zealand Pictorial Collection [Image No] [Year]Last edited by: Jenny RyanKeywordTAE,History,Trans Antarctic ExpeditionIGY,History,Trans Antarctic ExpeditionImage LocationTAE CabinetCD TAE (4)CD TAE (11)
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    Depicts
    • Andrew Packard
    Photographer
    • Geoffrey Lee Martin
    Location
    • Lake Vida
    Copyright
    3This work is licensed under a Creative Commons Attribution-Noncommercial-No Derivative Works 3.0 New Zealand License
    This licence allows you to download this work and share it with others as long as you mention us and link back to us, but you cannot change it in any way or use it commercially.
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    Andrew Packard Adjusting wind-exposed culture plates. Antarctica NZ, accessed 11/12/2023, https://adam.antarcticanz.govt.nz/nodes/view/30506
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