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The Secret South: A Tale of Operation Tabarin, 1943-46
Hardback

The Secret South: A Tale of Operation Tabarin, 1943-46

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Seventy years after the end of World War II, the full story of Britain’s secret Antarctic expedition has still never been told. Launched in 1943, Operation Tabarin was an expedition to secretly establish bases, keep a watchful eye on German and Japanese activities, and curb opportunistic Argentinian incursions. Ivan Mackenzie Lamb was the expedition’s botanist but, until now, his narrative has never been published. His account provides a fascinating insight into this top secret military operation. He was a member of the naval party that established three manned bases, he remained in the field throughout the operation’s two-year duration and took part in all three major sledging expeditions. After the war, he used his diary to complete a vivid story of his time in Antarctica. It is a key eyewitness account and has been illustrated with contemporary photos and expedition maps. Operation Tabarin is without doubt one of the most significant expeditions of what might be described as the ‘post-Heroic’ phase of Antarctic exploration; ultimately it would develop into the British Antarctic Survey, arguably the most important and enduring of all government-sponsored programmes of research in the Antarctic. Operation Tabarin also set in train a series of events that would lead, ultimately, to the Falklands War of 1982. AUTHOR: Ivan Mackenzie Lamb was born in London in 1911. While working at the British Museum he was recruited to serve as a botanist, dog-driver and assistant surveyor on Operation Tabarin. He remained with the expedition for its two year term. For this and his post-war work he was awarded the Polar Medals of both Britain and America. He died on 27 January 1990.

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MORE INFO
Format
Hardback
Publisher
Greenhill Books
Country
United Kingdom
Date
2 October 2018
Pages
262
ISBN
9781784383251

Seventy years after the end of World War II, the full story of Britain’s secret Antarctic expedition has still never been told. Launched in 1943, Operation Tabarin was an expedition to secretly establish bases, keep a watchful eye on German and Japanese activities, and curb opportunistic Argentinian incursions. Ivan Mackenzie Lamb was the expedition’s botanist but, until now, his narrative has never been published. His account provides a fascinating insight into this top secret military operation. He was a member of the naval party that established three manned bases, he remained in the field throughout the operation’s two-year duration and took part in all three major sledging expeditions. After the war, he used his diary to complete a vivid story of his time in Antarctica. It is a key eyewitness account and has been illustrated with contemporary photos and expedition maps. Operation Tabarin is without doubt one of the most significant expeditions of what might be described as the ‘post-Heroic’ phase of Antarctic exploration; ultimately it would develop into the British Antarctic Survey, arguably the most important and enduring of all government-sponsored programmes of research in the Antarctic. Operation Tabarin also set in train a series of events that would lead, ultimately, to the Falklands War of 1982. AUTHOR: Ivan Mackenzie Lamb was born in London in 1911. While working at the British Museum he was recruited to serve as a botanist, dog-driver and assistant surveyor on Operation Tabarin. He remained with the expedition for its two year term. For this and his post-war work he was awarded the Polar Medals of both Britain and America. He died on 27 January 1990.

Read More
Format
Hardback
Publisher
Greenhill Books
Country
United Kingdom
Date
2 October 2018
Pages
262
ISBN
9781784383251