Independent Australia
04 Jul 2025, 11:30 GMT+10
A new book uncovers the overlooked history of Australias deep entanglement with Antarctica, a story of ambition, exploration and national self-definition.Jim KablereviewsThe Southern Frontier:Australia, Antarctica and Empire in the Southern Ocean World 1815-1947.
INTHE SOUTHERN FRONTIER, authorRohan Howittuncovers a plethora of visitors and exploration attempts, appeals for exploration funding, public speeches and books written by those engaged in the suggesting of what it could mean for Australia, leading into the competition for making legal claims of parts of the territory raising flags and so forth against the claims of others, especially of Norway and France.
Recent updating to international conventions seems settled that Antarctica be a place for peaceful research and protection, which may itself be more a hope than a permanent situation, given some of the explosive pronouncements from the current U.S. President concerning Canada, Greenland, Gaza and so on.
Howitt writes:
Antarcticas surprise rebound: Why we shouldnt breathe easy yetScientists have detected a mass gain in Antarctica's ice sheet, but it's not quite the climate victory we've been hoping for.
When I was a lad growing up in the 1950s in the rural New England district of NSW, I was fortunate to have what we nowadays call a mentor my mothers employer who fortuitously for me shared my birthday, 29 May.
While I handed over a pair of socks or a handkerchief, Mr E Higginbotham responded with a birthday letter on letterhead paper, accompanied by books or by a fountain pen or by stamps. He was a supporter in those long-ago days of the United Nations and would give me United Nations stamps. Apart from that, stamps of Australian possessions and territories Cocos (Keeling) Islands, Christmas Island, PNG, Nauru, Norfolk Island and stamps of the Australian Antarctic Territory.
Higginbothamwanted me to understand the land in which I had been born. He himself was a young man, an immigrant to Australia from London.
In the 1980s,Doug Thost, one of my first cousins, a UNSW PhD with an expertise in geology and glaciology, gained a position with theAustralian Antarctic Divisionand has spent some 20 visits/research periods within the Antarctic, including on Heard Island. He is also a noted photographer and has some experience in natural history filmmaking.
During my many years in Japan, I purchased some of Thost's spectacular glacier photographs from the Antarctic. They hung on my walls there and do so again here, back in Australia. To continue my stamp collecting, I should mention that his photographic work has been used twice (that I know of) in commemorative stamps for the Australian Antarctic Territory in 2003 and again in 2018.
Thost has also led a number of summer visits to AAT waters by tourists on ice-breakers a vision of tourism first suggested almost a century ago, as I discovered in The Southern Frontier.
During my matriculation Leaving Certificate year (NSW, 1965), one of the texts we had for study was by New Zealand-born poetDouglas Stewart(1913-1985). His verse play wasThe Fire on the Snowand first aired on the ABC on 6 June 1941 to great critical acclaim, according to reports. This was aboutRobert F Scotts doomed attempt to be the first to the South Pole in 1911-1912 and the tragic loss of his entire party on their return.
My teacher, Brian G Neill, was the local regional newsreader for the ABC. He took our group to the Tamworth ABC studio to make a recording of the play, which was then played back at school to all the English classes because, in those days, everybody sat the same exam for English.
Polar regions in peril without government actionWhat will it take to get any government to recognise and take substantive action on climate change and biodiversity loss?
As it was a radio play, we all listened to it as part of our preparation. We were listening to and studying it almost as long after it was first aired as the number of years before it that the tragedy had occurred. In the radio version,Ida Osbourne(co-founder of the ABC childrens radio program,The Argonauts Club) played the narrator (a Chorus-like device) and in our version, our classmate, Patricia Tandy, did likewise.
When I was a student at Sydney University in the latter 1960s I recall the oldEdgeworth David Building, named to honour the Professor of Geology who in 1909 led the first expedition to reach the South Magnetic Pole, beyond Fisher Library towards City Road, but demolished nearly 20 years ago. The name was then bestowed on another building near the Macleay Building, close to Parramatta Road.
From these apparently random matters, I was intrigued when I first read a note about the publication of Rohan Howitts recent book. I was further cheered early in the introduction when the writer pointed out other attempts at reorienting the map of Australia, a south-east part of the Indian Ocean. Or of those historians looking to the north, the Indonesian archipelago to PNG and their southeast Asian spread further to the north. Or east into the South Pacific/Aotearoa, or even inwards (thinkMark McKenna), but examining Australia towards the south and the Antarctic has generally not been a focus.
This study of our colonial and post-Federation national engagement with those Souther Ocean waters and islands and with the Antarctic continent itself is full of the names of those who visited those places, of those who attached themselves as visionaries and/or boosters to the possibilities of economic exploitation (whaling in the 19th even early 20th Centuries) or for mining (coal, gold, molybdenum) or research.
Australias geographical proximity made the Antarctic seem a space of boundless opportunity. And invoked in the early calls for Australia to lay official claim to that vast land, there were even invocations of an imperialist doctrine" already being set in place from the U.S. over its more southern neighbours in South America and in the Caribbean theMonroe Doctrine.
I recall visiting theGW Bush Libraryin Dallas some years ago and noting the so-calledBush Doctrine. As dangerous and puerile as the Monroe Doctrine. Fortunately, such overt posturing has largely disappeared from our public positioning (apart from a hegemonic want for control over the South Pacific, some might argue). But back earlier last century, positing that Australia had a natural right to control it and to acquire it as a national territory.
Let me outline the eight chapters:
The Australian colonies and early Antarctic exploration;
Debating the Value of the Southern Frontier;
Destiny Antarctica and Visions of Australias Future in the 1880s;
Another Klondyke a renewal of Antarctic exploration in the 1890s;
Antarctic Fever in the early Commonwealth era;
The Golden El Dorado and the Race for the Pole;
Rights and Responsibilities in the Australian Antarctic; and
The Equator to the Pole performing sovereignty in the Australian Antarctic.
The introduction re-orients the map of Australia to the southern outlook, while the conclusion brings concerns to the present day.
Rohan Howitt has performed an important survey of Australia and the Antarctic. He has resurrected the stories and names of early contact with and theories about the possibilities lying within that continent and of its seas. He moves into the thrills of the early territory exploration, including of disasters, and of gradually moving from private fundraising for exploration attempts into total government control the Australian Antarctic Division.
The Southern Frontier:Australia, Antarctica and Empire in the Southern Ocean World 1815-1947 by Rohan Howitt is published byMelbourne University Publishing.
This book was reviewed by an IA Book Club member.If you would like to receivefreehigh-quality books and have your reviewpublishedon IA,subscribeto receive yourcomplimentaryIA Book Club membership.
Jim Kableis a retired teacher who has taught in rural and metropolitan NSW, in Europe, and later, long-term in Japan. He is also a member of the steering committeeofThe New Liberalspolitical party.
Get a daily dose of Denmark Sun news through our daily email, its complimentary and keeps you fully up to date with world and business news as well.
Publish news of your business, community or sports group, personnel appointments, major event and more by submitting a news release to Denmark Sun.
More InformationDUBLIN, Ireland: The Irish Nurses and Midwives Organisation (INMO) has warned that there could be a serious trolley crisis this summer...
ISTANBUL/PARIS/BRUSSELS: As searing temperatures blanket much of Europe, wildfires are erupting and evacuation orders are being issued...
NEW YORK CITY, New York: The U.S. dollar continues to lose ground, weighed down by growing concerns over Washington's fiscal outlook...
DUBLIN, Ireland: The High Court has lifted an anonymity order, allowing Trinity College Dublin and the Pharmaceutical Society of Ireland...
PARIS, France: France is taking stronger steps to reduce smoking. A new health rule announced on Saturday will soon ban smoking in...
VILNIUS, Lithuania – A growing body of research suggests that selectively restricting a single nutrient in our diet could have profound...
ISTANBUL/PARIS/BRUSSELS: As searing temperatures blanket much of Europe, wildfires are erupting and evacuation orders are being issued...
SAN FRANCISCO, California: Under pressure from European regulators, Apple has revamped its App Store policies in the EU, introducing...
China, EU hold 13th round of high-level strategic dialogue At the 13th round of China-EU High-level Strategic Dialogue Wednesday,...
Zagreb [Croatia], July 4 (ANI): Reigning world champion D Gukesh stunned world number one Magnus Carlsen yet again at the SuperUnited...
Data to end violence: United Republic of Tanzania “Before, I didn’t know where to report cases of violence. Now, I have...
Closer green cooperation between China and Europe is crucial for tackling global climate challenges and driving economic recovery,...