News

He was recently part of a 12-person team that was the first to ever drive wheeled vehicles to the North Pole as part of a ...
Explorersweb on MSN1d
Weekend Warm-Up: Frozen North
A modern expedition follows the path of Hubert Wilkins, who set out for the North Pole in 1931 in a decrepit WW1 submarine.
The proudly neurodiverse art collective’s exhibition “tell ___ ‘hi’ from me” acts as a belated introduction to the wider ...
Activity at the North Pole follows maritime treaties and international law. In other words, anything that can be done in any other ocean can take place at the North Pole.
British explorer Sir James Clark Ross discovered the magnetic north pole in 1831 in northern Canada, approximately 1,000 miles (1,609 kilometers) south of the true North Pole.
The North Pole may be "just a point in the Arctic Ocean," as Thorsten Markus, Chief of the Cryospheric Sciences Laboratory at Goddard Space Center, calls it.
For now, the North Pole – one of the most pristine places on Earth – belongs to everyone and no one. Once all the geological evidence is sifted through, there will be no going back for the Arctic.
With the exception of the Santa's village, the North Pole is quite a lonely place. It's a place where the ground is not earth, but 100% ice and snow - over 9 feet of it. The nearest inhabited land ...
The location of the magnetic north pole was first discovered in 1831 by Arctic explorer James Clark Ross. On an expedition, he mapped and explored Boothia Peninsula in Nunavut, in the Canadian Arctic.
However, with reports that the magnetic north pole has started moving swiftly at 50km per year – and may soon be over Siberia – it has long been unclear whether the northern lights will move too.