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Stromness Bay is on the north coast
of South Georgia - 54° 09' S, 36° 41' W . It is named after the
Orkney town of the same name by the whalers who first used the
place. It is the place where Ernest
Shackleton finally reached help in 1916 after the Endurance sank in
the Weddell Sea. Help was given by the Norwegian whaling station
manager.
Whaling activities began at
Stromness in 1907 when the bay was first used as an
anchorage for a floating factory ship. A shore station was
built in 1912 and was run as a whaling station until 1931
when it was run as a ship repair yard until 1961 when it was
abandoned.
Today the buildings,
machinery and other paraphernalia of whaling and the ship
yard lay around in various states of decay. In recent years
an attempt has been made to repair the "Villa" where the
station manager lived, though calling the building a villa
is more of a relative description than absolute.
These are pictures from
a trip to Antarctica in the summer of 2010 - 2011 for the purpose of
researching former whaling stations and companies by Ulf Gustafsson
of the University of Groningen in the Netherlands.
Pictures
copyright Ulf Gustafsson.
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