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Innocents in the Dry Valleys
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15 February 2010

In the summer of 1958, physicist Colin Bull, along with a biologist and two undergraduate geology students from Victoria University of Wellington, launched an exploration of the Dry Valleys of Victoria Land, Antarctica—the first of what has become an annual expedition spanning the past fifty years. With Innocents in Dry Valleys Bull recounts the story of that first, shoestring expedition, bringing a dry wit—and a clear appreciation of youthful bravado—to accounts of adverse conditions, recurrent dangers, funding snafus, and bureaucratic meddling. Innocents in Dry Valleys is a winning account of a landmark expedition, sure to interest scientists and armchair explorers alike.
Colin Bull is a geophysicist who served as a senior lecturer in physics at Victoria University and later was the director of the Institute of Polar Studies at the Ohio State University.
Foreword, by Dr Eddie Robertson
Introduction, by Dr Peter Barrett
Author's note
Dramatis Personae
Chapter 1. An idea
Chapter 2. Loife in Noo Zillun
Chapter 4. Go. No, stop! No, go! Scott Base
Chapter 5. Landed gentry
Chapter 6. An enigmatic lake and a remarkable saga
Chapter 7. A trip to the seaside
Chapter 8. And the walk back 'home' again
Chapter 9. Alone for a short while, maybe
Chapter 10. The End. Wait for the applause!
Chapter 11. Aftermath
Publications
Glossary
Place-Names
Conversion table
Index