Photo by Photo Submitted
HISTORIC ARTIFACTS – Dora Medrzycka is seen on the remote Walsh Glacier during the recent expedition. Photo by LESLIE HITTMEIER
Photo by Photo Submitted
HISTORIC ARTIFACTS – Dora Medrzycka is seen on the remote Walsh Glacier during the recent expedition. Photo by LESLIE HITTMEIER
Photo by Photo Submitted
The DeVry ‘Lunchbox’ model motion picture camera. Photo by LESLIE HITTMEIER
A historic cache of camera equipment and mountaineering gear, abandoned by legendary mountaineers Bradford Washburn and Robert Bates in 1937, has been discovered in Kluane.
A historic cache of camera equipment and mountaineering gear, abandoned by legendary mountaineers Bradford Washburn and Robert Bates in 1937, has been discovered in Kluane.
The announcement was made Thursday from Haines Junction by Outdoor exploration media company Teton Gravity Research (TGR).
The discovery was made during a recent expedition led by professional mountain explorer Griffin Post.
Washburn and Bates were forced to abandon the gear while attempting to escape the mountains with their lives.
Now, 85 years later, the TGR team has discovered the Washburn-Bates cache of gear on the remote Walsh Glacier in Kluane National Park and Preserve, on the traditional territory of the Kluane First Nation.
Among the relics discovered was a significant portion of Washburn’s Fairchild F-8 aerial camera, an item that was successfully extracted from the ice.
This camera is believed to be Washburn’s first-ever aerial photography camera – a format in which he gained worldwide notice.
In addition to the Fairchild F-8, the team retrieved two motion picture cameras: a DeVry “Lunchbox” model and a Bell & Howell Eyemo 71A, with film still loaded in both motion cameras, along with several pieces of mountaineering equipment.
Griffin was joined by glaciologist Dorota (Dora) Medrzycka, who leveraged innovative glacial mapping processes to determine where the cache may have moved over decades on the glacier.
Her team at the University of Ottawa supported Medrzycka remotely, led by Dr. Luke Copland.
Upon finding the cache, the expedition team meticulously documented its location and reported the find to Parks Canada, the agency that oversees national parks in Canada.
In collaboration with the Kluane First Nation, Post, Medrzycka and a team from Parks Canada returned to the glacier a few weeks later to retrieve what they could of the cache while following the best practices as determined by Parks Canada archaeologists.
“While there’s the obvious historical value in retrieving these artifacts, particularly the camera and film from one of the most legendary aerial photographers in history, the scientific value of the find is equally important, providing researchers with a data point to calculate glacier movements in the area that predates any other data point by decades,” Post said in a statement.
The discovery of the Washburn-Bates cache unlocks never-before-known glacial movement data.
Until now, scientists only had data on the glacier’s movements dating back to the ’60s.
The new find enables scientists to better understand how the velocity and thickness of Walsh Glacier have changed over a longer period than is available from almost any other data source.
Such new information could be helpful to scientists endeavoring to decode the impact of climate change on glaciers around the world.
“The rediscovery of the Washburn-Bates cache after 85 years locked in the ice adds a tangible dimension to an exciting story of exploration and survival at almost unbelievable odds,” said Sharon Thomson, an archaeologist for Parks Canada.
“From a cultural resource management perspective, it presents a rare and valuable opportunity to study change over time on an archaeological site in a dynamic glacial environment.”
A Teton Gravity Research expedition film crew documented the discovery and recovery of the artifacts. The company plans to release the film project soon.
A Parks Canada team of conservators, working from their laboratory facilities in Ottawa and Winnipeg, are treating the artifacts that were removed from the glacier to preserve them for years to come.
The Parks Canada team looks forward to sharing these objects and the associated stories of historical significance with the public, TGR said.
Post has spent the better part of the last decade travelling the world in search of mountains to ski.
Appearing in the past seven films by TGR, Post has made significant descents from the Tetons to the Arctic Circle, earning accolades from ESPN and Powder magazine along the way.
The 22,000-square-kilometre Kluane Park is part of a UNESCO World Heritage Site and is home to extensive icefields, with 17 of the 20 tallest mountains in Canada.
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Comments (8)
Up 0 Down 3
Josey Wales on Nov 3, 2022 at 4:51 am
Comrade Hammer...more folks as me are absolutely essential to diluting our over representation of flaming communists and state sponsored cultural supremacists.
Not certain what ya mean by Confederate blah blah gibberish.
You could not deport me as it infers an import, I was calved on these lan’s.
Why no sickle, doesn’t the hammer get lonely?
Deport me, man that is funny.
Maybe see ya in the gulags comrade?
Up 5 Down 5
TheHammer on Nov 2, 2022 at 10:57 am
There won't be any racism on film, it's all in the comments. If this was my land I sure as heck would want to take it all back. And if I had the power I would deport Josey Wales. Do we really need Civil War Confederate headbangers in Yukon?
Up 5 Down 5
DB Cooper on Oct 31, 2022 at 6:11 pm
Gee I wonder what the carbon footprint was on this expidition?
Up 15 Down 15
Josey Wales on Oct 30, 2022 at 9:53 am
Well finally a good news article!
Who knew that twice in one week our beloved “FN” had an opportunity to rid the creators lan’ of evil whiteys refuse?
Now if we...and “them” can only locate that missing Skymaster and decontaminate those sacred lan’s of yet more of whiteys junk, do a smudge and dance for the land...
Just trying to be consistent using the optics of progressive lenses.
Oh yeah, forgot...I cannot change the lenses looked through as I am not they.
Admonished...and will heel to my place in the hierarchy of human importance.
Up 26 Down 13
Paul Wray on Oct 29, 2022 at 4:52 pm
Will these be hauled off to the scrap metal dump like the old vehicles on the Canol Road?
Up 19 Down 16
Paul Wray on Oct 29, 2022 at 11:42 am
Maybe we should take these items to the scrap metal dump.
Up 23 Down 19
bonanzajoe on Oct 28, 2022 at 5:15 pm
Something else to be turned over the the FN to be buried.
Up 11 Down 9
Smile on Oct 28, 2022 at 4:38 pm
Hope it doesn’t contain rather personal photos…