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Four Antarctic Years in the South Orkney Islands Jose Manuel Moneta Translated by Kathleen Skilton and Kenn Back Edited by R K Headland Bernard Quaritch, 2017 ISBN 978-0-9955192-0-6, 440 pp. £45

Published online by Cambridge University Press:  21 December 2018

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Abstract

Type
Book Review
Copyright
© Antarctic Science Ltd 2018 

There is a plethora of diaries and expedition narratives published from the Heroic Age expeditions describing the life of those early Antarctic explorers, but most are in English, and were staffed by national participants. Despite making a claim to a sector of Antarctica, Argentina took very little part in that early exploration and consequently there was little published giving a South American experience of Antarctic life. The one major contribution Argentina made was to take over responsibility for the Orcadas station on Laurie Island in the South Orkney Islands from the Scottish Antarctic Expedition headed by William Bruce. It is for this reason that the account by Moneta of life at the station assumes considerable significance in providing the Argentine public with some insight into what the Antarctic was really like.

Orcadas station has played an unusually significant role in the history of Antarctic governance. Originally established by the Scotia Expedition, it was formally handed over to the Argentine Government when the expedition left the Antarctic in 1904 to ensure that it remained open and active. The British Government had shown a complete lack of interest in the expedition, which competed for attention with that of Scott, and Government files show that they saw no value at all in these worthless rocks of the South Orkneys. The Argentine response was quite the reverse, and they set about both supporting the station and using it as a geopolitical tool, in due course, to support their sovereignty claim to Antarctic territory.

The original account in Spanish has been through twelve editions since it was first published in 1939 and is well known in Argentina but little known elsewhere. This is an excellent translation with many added footnotes as well as appendices on place names, a brief biography of the author, a bibliography and an index, and the photographs are much better quality than in the original Spanish editions. This finally makes Moneta’s account of his almost five years spent at Orcadas Station widely available to the non-Spanish speaking audience.

Staffing Orcadas immediately after its handover to Argentina was characterized by a lack of suitable Argentinians and so the station complement had an almost international character with men from Sweden, Norway, Denmark, UK, Russia, Hungary, Uruguay and the occasional token Argentinian. Gradually the Argentine Meteorological Service, which was then part of the Ministry of Agriculture, established a better recruitment system and by the time Moneta first went there in 1923, as Meteorological Assistant, there was always at least one Argentinean wintering. After 1927, Argentineans became the majority although foreigners were also employed up to 1936. Moneta’s period covered 1923–30 and included three winters.

Moneta’s first visit was via South Georgia where he provides an interesting account of the whaling activities. The party continued to Laurie Island aboard the whale catcher Rosita, which proved a testing journey. It appears that the Argentine Government normally used Compania Argentina de Pesca ships, as the Argentine Navy had no ship suitable for use in ice. He discovers within the first day the importance of penguin meat in the diet and quickly learns that gentoos taste better than chinstraps or Adelies. The scientific work they undertook was hourly meteorological measurements, sea temperature and magnetic measurements. Since there was no radio initially available to send the data out, it was compiled for its historical climate value. Argentina had built a new wooden hut for the station in 1905 that remained in use for another 34 years and was extended several times. His account however makes it clear that, even by 1923, the space per man was still extremely limited and with only five men there was much to do simply to stay alive. His narrative captures the tedium of the winter, the tensions that arise from living so closely with just a few people for a long period, and his interests in the natural history and exploring his surroundings.

He returned for a second winter and installed the new radio station that failed to work, and also made a cine film which was unfortunately destroyed by fire in Buenos Aires. He was keen to reshoot the film and so he went back again in 1927, this time as leader for the first expedition of only Argentines. A major task was the installation of a functioning radio system, which proved to be technically difficult and, although Moneta does not mention it, a major source of concern to the British Government who had now decided that the South Orkneys belonged to the UK and that Orcadas should be using a Falkland Islands radio licence. Argentina Day, on 25 May, was celebrated by a radio programme devoted to the men at Orcadas and a forerunner of the BBC World Service annual winter link many decades later to the British stations. He was also successful in remaking his film which became a great success around Argentina but from which he made no money as the contract had deliberately been drawn up to ensure that!

After his four winters south, Moneta was something of a celebrity and spent the following years writing articles about the Antarctic. In 1946 he became the Secretary General of the newly established Comision Nacional de Antarctico and the Argentine delegate to the International Whaling Commission. He was ambassador in four countries between 1949 and 1954, and he did finally return to Laurie Island in 1973, dying on 30 March that year.

This is a major volume in Argentine Antarctic history, easy to read in this sympathetic translation and fascinating in the details Moneta chose to record.