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In Search Of A Penguin's Egg

A year living with ten scientists in a hut buried deeply within an ice shelf eight hundred miles from the South Pole is an unusual experience. Aside from the climatic problems and the care with interpersonal relationships essential in such circumstances the authors project was even more unusual and challenging. A few miles from this scientific station there was a rookery of about ten thousand Emperor Penguins. Captain Scotts friend and biologist Dr Edward Wilson was determined to discover whether these creatures were fish which could fly or birds which could swim like fish - or even reptiles for they were primitive creatures in evolutionary development. Wilson died with Scott on the way back from the South Pole and the scientific puzzle drifted into obscurity. The author who was on
National service fifty years later and certainly not a professional explorer was asked to provide a timed series of Emperor Penguin embryos at twelve hourly intervals for ten days. Ignorant of what the project entailed he agreed and so started an adventure which coloured the rest of his life. No one told him that the penguins laid their eggs in pitch darkness in the depth of the polar winter nor that the average temperature would be in the minus forties. Penguins like sheep are not easy to tell apart so how was he to time an embryo unless he saw the egg laid? How also was he to pick out the same penguin several days later to harvest the embryo? It was a mission which seemed close to impossible but then the challenge had been handed out to a daft Scotsman with the genes of a Scotch terrier.
  • Availability: In Stock
  • Supplier: WHSmith
  • SKU: 9781449017293
Availability: In Stock
£7.58

Product Description

A year living with ten scientists in a hut buried deeply within an ice shelf eight hundred miles from the South Pole is an unusual experience. Aside from the climatic problems & the care with interpersonal relationships essential in such circumstances the authors project was even more unusual & challenging. A few miles from this scientific station there was a rookery of about ten thousand Emperor Penguins. Captain Scotts friend & biologist Dr Edward Wilson was determined to discover whether these creatures were fish which could fly or birds which could swim like fish
- or even reptiles for they were primitive creatures in evolutionary development. Wilson died with Scott on the way back from the South Pole & the scientific puzzle drifted into obscurity. The author who was on National service fifty years later & certainly not a professional explorer was asked to provide a timed series of Emperor Penguin embryos at twelve hourly intervals for ten days. Ignorant of what the project entailed he agreed & so started an adventure which coloured the rest of his life. No one told him that the penguins laid their eggs in pitch darkness in the depth of the polar winter nor that the average temperature would be in the minus forties. Penguins like sheep are not easy to tell apart so how was he to time an embryo unless he saw the egg laid? How also was he to pick out the same penguin several days later to harvest the embryo? It was a mission which seemed close to impossible but then the challenge had been handed out to a daft Scotsman with the genes of a Scotch terrier.

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Jargon Buster

Ice - Frozen water, the solid state of water.
professional - A term used to describe products or people which may be focused on specialist educational training
Year - The time it takes the planet earth to orbit the sun. This takes around 365.25 days.
Fish - A creature that lives in water. A fish uses gills to breath unlike mammals
Adventure - an undertaking of an exciting challenge or experience.
Ice - Frozen water, Ice is cold to the touch and forms when water reaches 0 degrees centigrade.
Puzzle - A problem usually in need of thought for a solution.
Unusual - Something unique and different.
Professional - A person that is trained within a profession.
Winter - The fourth season of a year that comes between Spring and Autumn
Experience - To gain further knowledge by practising.
Year - 365 days (366 days in a leap year), the time taken for planet earth to make one full revolution around the sun.

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