[Scott’s Last Expedition Volume I by Captain R. F. Scott]@TWC D-Link bookScott’s Last Expedition Volume I CHAPTER III 12/53
We plotted the Barrier edge from the point at which we met it to the Crozier cliffs; to the eye it seems scarcely to have changed since _Discovery_ days, and Wilson thinks it meets the cliff in the same place. The Barrier takes a sharp turn back at 2 or 3 miles from the cliffs, runs back for half a mile, then west again with a fairly regular surface until within a few hundred yards of the cliffs; the interval is occupied with a single high pressure ridge--the evidences of pressure at the edge being less marked than I had expected. Ponting was very busy with cinematograph and camera.
In the angle at the corner near the cliffs Rennick got a sounding of 140 fathoms and Nelson some temperatures and samples.
When lowering the water bottle on one occasion the line suddenly became slack at 100 metres, then after a moment's pause began to run out again.
We are curious to know the cause, and imagine the bottle struck a seal or whale. Meanwhile, one of the whale boats was lowered and Wilson, Griffith Taylor, Priestley, Evans, and I were pulled towards the shore.
The after-guard are so keen that the proper boat's crew was displaced and the oars manned by Oates, Atkinson, and Cherry-Garrard, the latter catching several crabs. The swell made it impossible for us to land.
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