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312 pages, Paperback
First published March 3, 2020
“By personalizing the new ice continent, D’Urville rejected both explorer tradition and professional common sense. He named Adélie Land and its signature animal neither after the intrepid men who first described it for science nor for the king, but instead for a woman back in Europe who hated Antarctica with all her heart.” (pg. 166)
“The prehistoric secrets yielded up by the islands collectively known as the James Ross Island Basin have earned it a reputation as the Rosetta Stone of Antarctic paleontology.” (pg. 168)
“In their extremity, they composed a letter to Lieutenant Pinkney (sitting a few feet away), expressing their refusal to continue on a course that ‘must soon terminate in DEATH.’ A very reasonable threat of mutiny. The next day, February 5, Pinkney turned back north.” (pg. 187-188)
“The landscape was almost too glorious. And the human eye was an inadequate lens. Seeing it was like spoiling it.” (pg. 226)
“Millions of people from low-lying coastal cities—from New York to Alexandria, Shanghai to Mumbai—will be forced to pack up and leave, joining a global exodus of up to two hundred million climate refugees worldwide. The humanitarian disaster set in train by the collapse of the Antarctic ice sheet will dwarf all forced mass migrations of the past, including the epic trauma of the Middle Passage. As coastlines are redrawn, the human social contract will be hastily rewritten, under emergency conditions not friendly to democratic process or human rights.” (pg. 258)
"Survival not fame, meanwhile, was the principal concern aboard the long-suffering Flying Fish. The last-minute recruits from the Sydney docks proved useless, forcing the officers to join the crew to work the ship. As early as New Year's Day, they lost their jib in rough weather. Wilkes, observing this calamity from the deck of the Vincennes, signalled "make sail" and cruised away, which the incredulous crew of the Flying Fish could only interpret as a sick joke."