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Although the twenty-four officers and scientific staff made valuable observations in biology, geology, glaciology, meteorology, and geophysics along the coast of Victoria Land and on the [[Ross Ice Shelf]], Scott's last expedition is best remembered for the death of Scott and four companions. | Although the twenty-four officers and scientific staff made valuable observations in biology, geology, glaciology, meteorology, and geophysics along the coast of Victoria Land and on the [[Ross Ice Shelf]], Scott's last expedition is best remembered for the death of Scott and four companions. | ||
After wintering at Cape Evans on [[Ross Island]], Scott, Henry Bowers, Edgar Evans, Lawrence Oates, and Edward Wilson set out on a race to be the first men at the [[South Pole]]. Starting with tractors and Mongolian ponies, the final 800 miles (1,300 km) had to be covered by man-hauling alone. Reaching the South Pole on 17 January 1912, they found that [[Roald Amundsen]]'s expedition (based on ''[[Fram]]'') had beaten them by thirty-four days. Worse was to come, as all five men died on the return journey. The frozen bodies of three were discovered eight months later, in November 1912. Their journals and papers were found and retrieved. | After wintering at Cape Evans on [[Ross Island]], Scott, Henry Bowers, [[Edgar Evans]], Lawrence Oates, and Edward Wilson set out on a race to be the first men at the [[South Pole]]. Starting with tractors and Mongolian ponies, the final 800 miles (1,300 km) had to be covered by man-hauling alone. Reaching the South Pole on 17 January 1912, they found that [[Roald Amundsen]]'s expedition (based on ''[[Fram]]'') had beaten them by thirty-four days. Worse was to come, as all five men died on the return journey. The frozen bodies of three were discovered eight months later, in November 1912. Their journals and papers were found and retrieved. | ||
==Later career== | ==Later career== |