Belgrano I Base

Belgrano I Base
Base Belgrano I
Antarctic base
Location within Antarctica
Belgrano I Base

Location within Antarctica

Coordinates: 77°46′S 38°11′W / 77.767°S 38.183°W / -77.767; -38.183Coordinates: 77°46′S 38°11′W / 77.767°S 38.183°W / -77.767; -38.183
Country  Argentina
Province Tierra del Fuego, Antarctica, and South Atlantic Islands Province
Department Antártida Argentina
Region Filchner Ice Shelf
Location Piedrabuena Bay
Founded January 18, 1955 (1955-01-18) (1954–55 austral summer season)
Evacuated 1980
Named for Manuel Belgrano
Government
  Type Directorate
  Body Dirección Nacional del Antártico
  Operator Instituto Antártico Argentino
Elevation 32 m (105 ft)
Time zone ART (UTC-3)
Type All year-round (1955–1980)
Period Annual
Status Abandoned since 1980 over safety concerns.
Remains presumed lost in Southern Ocean
Facilities
  • Main house
  • Personnel houses (4)
  • Hangar
  • Radio station
  • Power plant
  • Laboratory (meteorology, astronomy, seismography, riometry)
  • Deposits

Belgrano I Base (Spanish: Base Belgrano I) was a permanent, all year-round Argentine Antarctic base and scientific research station named after General Manuel Belgrano, one of the Libertadores and the creator of the Argentine Flag. It was located on Piedrabuena Bay on the Filchner Ice Shelf.

At the time of its inauguration in 1954 it became Argentina's southernmost permanent base.[1] It was shut down in 1980 over safety concerns due to it being built on increasingly unstable ice, which endangered both personnel and equipment.[2] A new, larger replacement base was established further south, and named Belgrano II,[2] followed by Belgrano III,[3] which became the southernmost of the three.

History

On 18 November 1954 the Antarctic Naval Task Force commanded by then Ship-of-the-Line Captain Alicio E. Ogara sailed from Buenos Aires with the objective of setting up a base on the Filchner Ice Shelf that would serve as a launch point for expeditions to the South Pole.[1] The fleet consisted of ARA Bahía Buen Suceso, ARA Bahía Aguirre, ARA Punta Loyola, ARA Chiriguano, ARA Sanavirón, ARA Yamana and the icebreaker ARA General San Martín.[1]

On 2 January 1955 the expedition sailed up to the southernmost point of the Weddell Sea at 78° 01' S. At the time it was the highest austral latitude ever reached by boat, and a new world record was set.[4] The task force then sailed north along the ice wall, seeking for an anchoring place.[4]

On 3 January then Brigade General Hernán Pujato, director of the Argentine Antarctic Institute, flew over the ice shelf area aboard a helicopter to choose a suitable place to mount the base, selecting a small cove where the high wall of ice sloped down to the sea.[1]

The unloading of the materials, equipment, tools, instruments and consumables was conducted from ARA General San Martín.[1] The team built a main house, four quonset huts, food stores and hangar. They left on the new base enough fuel for three years.[1]

The expedition commanded by then Colonel Jorge Edgard Leal that on 10 December 1965 reached the South Pole was prepared at Belgrano I and launched from there on 26 October of that year.[1]

Belgrano I was shut down after 25 years of continuous service due to the fast deterioration of the ice barrier it was sitting on; new, often hidden cracks and crevices endangered the on-duty personnel and material.[2] The base was closed on January 1980 and all of its staff and equipment were evacuated by helicopters operating from the icebreaker ARA Almirante Irízar.[5] In order to continue asserting Argentine sovereignty over the area while carrying out the planned scientific activities, and after detailed studies on alternative locations done by the Argentine Army, it was decided to lay the new facilities on solid land on a new base called Belgrano II.[2]

The glacier upon which Belgrano I was standing was continuously drifting towards the sea; eventually it would become a tabular iceberg afloat in the Southern Ocean.[2]

On 26 January 1988 a helicopter from Almirante Irízar confirmed that a tabular iceberg about 100 km (62 mi) long containing Belgrano I's remains, the Salta Refuge, two beacons, and the abandoned Shackleton (British) and Drushznaya (Soviet) stations, had split from the ice shelf. This time Almirante Irízar reached 78° 21' 02" S in the Weddell Sea, a new world record.[6]

Another helicopter flyby in January 1989 showed that the iceberg had split into several smaller pieces, which made location of the remains unpractical.[7] The iceberg continued drifting through the Southern Ocean, where the base's remains have presumably been lost.

Description

During winter this desolate region is almost totally devoid of animal life. On summer, seals, petrels, skuas and emperor penguins can occasionally be spotted. The entire landscape is nothing but blinding-white plains.[1]

Due to heavy snow precipitations, Belgrano I was almost totally covered by snow and ice. Only the sounding balloons launching platform, the aurorae observation tower and multiple chimneys and antennae stuck out on the surface.[1]

The base also had a system of tunnels dug up in the ice and further buried by the copious snowing: some of them were more than 10 m (33 ft) deep. These passages provided for a safer mean of walking across buildings without getting exposed to the exterior freezing temperatures and whipping winds; they were also used as temporary deposits.[1]

Scientific activities

Being placed in the auroral zone, Belgrano was ideal for studies of the upper atmosphere, characterized by constant magnetic and ionospheric disturbances. In 1970 a new facility was built: the LABEL laboratory (LAboratory BELgrano), dedicated to further study of these phenomena.[1] It was located some 250 m (820 ft) from the main house and other dependencies of the base, and it housed valuable scientific instruments for aurora australis observations,[1] This activity ran across the penumbra and total darkness periods, from 15 March to 10 October. A tower equipped with all-sky cameras photographed the whole celestial hemisphere every minute in order to compose a continuous record of aurorae evolution. Behavior of the ionospheric layers was studied through surveys carried out every 15 minutes. Cosmic radiation was measured by riometer and radiosondes.[1]

Upon closure of Belgrano I, the LABEL laboratory was moved to Belgrano II along with all its equipment and instruments.[2]

See also

References

  1. 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 10 11 12 13 "Base Belgrano I" (in Spanish). Fundaciòn Marambio. Archived from the original on 11 March 2014.
  2. 1 2 3 4 5 6 "Base Belgrano II" (in Spanish). Fundaciòn Marambio. Archived from the original on 2 June 2012.
  3. "Base Belgrano III" (in Spanish). Fundaciòn Marambio. Archived from the original on 12 March 2014.
  4. 1 2 Hermelo, Ricardo (September 2004). "Primera penetración al Mar de Weddell (Antartida)" (in Spanish). Histarmar. Archived from the original on 16 October 2012.
  5. "Campaña Antártica 1979–1980" (in Spanish). Sitio no oficial del rompehielos A.R.A. Almirante Irízar. Archived from the original on 14 March 2014.
  6. "Campaña Antártica 1987–1988" (in Spanish). Sitio no oficial del rompehielos A.R.A. Almirante Irízar. Archived from the original on 14 March 2014.
  7. "Campaña Antártica 1988–1989" (in Spanish). Sitio no oficial del rompehielos A.R.A. Almirante Irízar. Archived from the original on 14 March 2014.

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