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In Our Time - Antarctica

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Melvyn Bragg and his guests discuss the history of Antarctica. The most southerly of the continents is the bleakest and coldest place on Earth. Almost entirely covered in ice, Antarctica spends much of the winter in total darkness. Antarctica was first named in the second century AD by the geographer Marinus of Tyre, who was one of many early geographers to speculate about the existence of a huge southern landmass to balance the known lands of northern Europe. But it wasn't until the nineteenth century that modern man laid eyes on the continent. In the intervening two hundred years the continent has been the scene for some of the most famous - and tragic - events of human exploration. In 1959 an international treaty declared Antarctica a scientific reserve, set aside for peaceful use by any nation willing to subscribe to the terms of the agreement. With: Jane Francis Professor of Paleoclimatology at the University of Leeds Julian Dowdeswell Director of the Scott Polar Research Institute and Professor of Physical Geography at the University of Cambridge David Walton Emeritus Professor at the British Antarctic Survey and Visiting Professor at the University of Liverpool. Producer: Thomas Morris.