Ronne Antarctic Research Expedition
From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
Activities in Antarctica During the 20th Century |
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International agreements | |
Antarctic Treaty System | |
British Commonwealth activities | |
Scott's 1st expedition (1901-04) | |
Shackleton's 1st expedition (1907-09) | |
Scott's 2nd expedition (1910-13) | |
Shackleton's 2nd expedition (1914-17) | |
Shackleton's 3rd expedition (1921-22) | |
Mawson's expedition (1929-31) | |
The Graham Land Expedition (1934-37) | |
Operation Tabarin (1943-45) | |
Commonwealth Trans-Antarctic Expedition (Fuchs-Hillary) (1955-58) |
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French activities | |
Charcot's 1st expedition (1903-05) | |
Charcot's 2nd expedition (1908-10) | |
German activities | |
Drygalski's expedition (1901-03) | |
Filchner's expedition (1911-12) | |
The New Swabia Expedition (1938-39) | |
Norwegian activities | |
Amundsen's expedition (1910-12) | |
U.S. activities | |
Operation Highjump (1946-47) | |
Operation Windmill (1947-48) | |
Ronne's expedition (1947-48) | |
Operation Deep Freeze (1955-56) |
The Ronne Antarctic Research Expedition (RARE) was an expedition from 1947-1948 which researched the area surrounding the head of the Weddell Sea in Antarctica. Finn Ronne led the RARE which was the final privately sponsored expedition from the United States. This was the first expedition to take women to over-winter. Ronne took his wife as did the chief pilot Darlington.