Credit: ©The Royal Society
    Image number: RS.11135

    Mount Erebus, Antarctica

    Date
    1902-1903
    Creator
    Charles William Rawson Royds (1876 - 1931, British)
    Archive reference number
    Material
    Technique
    Dimensions
    width (print): 95mm
    height (print): 114mm
    width (paper support): 207mm
    height (paper support): 331mm
    Subject
    Content object
    nature
       > landscape
    Description
    Landscape view of Mount Erebus showing cumulus cloud formations, which form before and after a gale.

    Unused photograph from Notes on the Meteorological Instruments and their Exposure by Lieutenant C Royds, R.N., National Antarctic Expedition 1901-1904, Meteorology, Part I, Observations at Winter Quarters and on Sledge Journeys with discussions by various authors (The Royal Society, 1908).

    Paper support inscribed: ‘a bad photograph, another example of the det: Cum: cloud which used to hang about Mt. Erebus before and after a gale'.
    Object history
    Charles William Rawson Royds (1876-1931) Royal Navy officer was first lieutenant and one unofficial photographer on the British National Antarctic Expedition, generally known as the Discovery Expedition, led by Robert Falcon Scott (1868-1912). Others included Reginald Skelton (1872-1956) British Engineer.

    The Discovery Expedition was the first official British exploration of the Antarctic regions since James Clark Ross's voyage sixty years earlier. It was organized on a large scale under a joint committee of the Royal Society and the Royal Geographical Society, and yielded observations on biology, zoology, geology, meteorology and magnetism”.
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