Source: Robert E. Peary .

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Source: www.americaslibrary.gov

Robert E. Peary

www.pearyeagleisland.org

Navigation by sextant, magnetic compass, and visual sastrugi wind surface markings:413 nautical miles in 37 days

Today: GPS!Today: GPS!

Migration of the Pole

www.geolab.nrcan.gc.ca/geomag/

Natural Resource Canada

Peary set out onto the polar sea ice with 6 expedition members, 21 Eskimos, and the best 140 dogs (out of 246) with 19 sleds carrying loads of 450 to 500 lbs.

He formed them into 6 teams (divisions) and they broke the trail, established igloo camps, and carried out a system of one-way relays to move supplies forward, sending the injured and poorer performers back to land, one team at a time along the way to 88° N, while Peary saved his own energy for the final dash.

WardHuntIsland

By 88°N, Peary had the choice of the 4 most motivated Eskimos, the best 40 dogs and 5 sleds.

88°N The Pole!~25 miles/day

Source:www.britannica.com

Ooqueah Ootah Henson Egingwah SeeglooOoqueah Ootah Henson Egingwah Seegloo

The The North Pole:North Pole:April 6, 1909April 6, 1909

The North Pole Math GameThe North Pole Math Game

10,000 lbs of supplies (food, fuel, shelter…)

20 sleds that can carry 500lbs

140 dogs (7 per sled)

~500 miles to travel (inc. detours)

Each team has to have enough supplies to return….and the return gets longer for each of the later support teams…

Assume 5 teams of 4 sleds (100 miles for team 1, 200 for team 2…etc). What is the total distance travelled?How much food etc must you cache to supply the next group?