Property of W. W. Norton & Company: Smush That Rises Above The
Property of W. W. Norton & Company: Smush That Rises Above The
Property of W. W. Norton & Company: Smush That Rises Above The
At sea in the High Arctic, it’s easy to lose sight of where you are.
We’ve been steaming for days on the Canadian Coast Guard ice-
breaker CCGS Sir Wilfrid Laurier without seeing much more than
ocean and sky, the gray threads of distant island shorelines, and vast
stretches of fractured, drifting ice. It’s late summer, in the few weeks
between the final melt and the next full freeze. Like clouds parting
after a storm, the sea ice is cracking and drifting. The Northwest Pas-
sage is opening.
By the thousands, pans of ice weighing many tons, carved by wind
and sea into a floating gallery of blue, green, and aquamarine sculp-
tures, slowly glide past. Any that get in our way crash against the
icebreaker’s thick steel hull with a slushy smush that rises above the
rumble of the Laurier’s powerful diesel engines. As she ploddingly
shoves aside the blocks of sea ice, they dive and pop up like corks, stir-
ring the ocean to a frothy roil.
After months of meticulous planning, and years of frustrated
searching, everyone in this latest expedition is on edge. More than a
hundred people are making the renewed push to find Sir John Frank-
lin’s sunken ships. Second-guessers are sniping from afar, politicians
with an eye to reelection pressing for results. The searchers urgently
need to know how much leeway the Arctic will grant before the sea
xxi
Property of W. W. Norton & Company
ice closes again, and more than 165 years of hunting pauses once more
until the Arctic deigns to let the big ships back in.
That’s if the money doesn’t dry up first.
Year to year, it’s anyone’s guess what the mercurial North, and
fickle taxpayers, will allow. So it was in the mid-nineteenth century,
when the British Admiralty sent the Franklin Expedition to search
for the passage’s elusive western exit. So it is now. An ice-free channel
one August can be clogged with hull-crushing floes the next. There’s
never much time to fathom the Arctic’s moods. They swing wildly
from sunny, with warm rays glinting off seas so calm they look like
metallic mirrors, to stormy, when wicked gales send waves crashing
over an icebreaker’s massive bow for days.
More than a century and a half after Franklin and his men were
lost, the 2014 Victoria Strait Expedition is only days old and the Arc-
tic is already closing the search window. For years, as the global cli-
mate grew steadily warmer, the climb in average temperatures way
up here has been increasing faster than anyplace else on Earth. But
northerly winds howling down from the North Pole can still blow a
vengeful cold. Darkness is starting to eat into the twenty-four-hour
daylight, devouring a larger slice of the midnight sun with each pass-
ing day. Another hard season of winter darkness is descending fast.
It’s the sixth year of a government-led quest for the wrecks of
Franklin’s storied ships, HMS Terror and HMS Erebus. The expedi-
tion’s objective is a search box on coldly vengeful seas, where some
of the depth soundings on navigation charts are almost as old as the
hunt for the lost Franklin Expedition itself. Roughly 10 percent of
Canada’s Arctic waters, and some 40 percent of the Northwest Pas-
sage, have been charted to modern standards. That’s one reason the
long effort to find Erebus and Terror has been so difficult in what ought
to be the most promising place: off the northern tip of King William
Island. Franklin’s crew, their commander dead from unknown causes,
abandoned Erebus and Terror to the ice there in 1848. As they fought
dominance over the world’s seas by turning for home when things got
rough. Just one more expedition could mean victory. Run into another
wall of ice? Well, maybe the triumphant breakthrough awaited far-
ther to the northwest. Still more ice? Perhaps history would be made
by an earlier departure, in spring instead of summer.
Even Scoresby acknowledged intriguing hints of an undiscovered
passage in the observable evidence, such as the unexplained travel of
whales over the high latitudes. That seemed impossible if the northern
polar region was solid pack ice. How would they surface to breathe?
The evidence, however dubious to some, included “whales with stone
lances sticking in their fat, (a kind of weapon used by no nation now
known,) having been caught both in the sea of Spitzbergen, and in
Davis’ Strait.” Fischal Zeeman of India had reported a whale killed
in the Strait of Tartary, linking the Sea of Japan and Russia’s Sea of
Okhotsk, “in the back of which was sticking a Dutch harpoon, marked
with the letters W. B.” The harpoon was traced back to William Bas-
tiaanz, admiral of the Dutch Greenland fleet. It “had been struck into
the whale in the Spitzbergen Sea,” off Norway’s northern coast. Intel-
ligent people of the day cited it as proof of open water. More experi-
enced observers like Scoresby knew that ice cover was variable.
Franklin sided with him in doubting the theory of the Open Polar
Sea. Captain James Fitzjames reported from Erebus, the expedition
flagship christened in the name of the lowest, darkest region of Hell,
in a letter home before turning in on the night of June 6, 1845: “At
dinner to-day Sir John gave us a pleasant account of being able to get
through the ice on the coast of America, and his disbelief in the idea
that there is an open polar sea to the northward.” But the expedition
commander’s orders came from Sir John Barrow, the Admiralty’s top
civil servant and chief architect of the revived search for the North-
west Passage. He was a believer.
To a public hungry for stories from the Far North—just as the
world was mesmerized by the Apollo missions to the moon in the
that keep an Inuit traveler’s hands toasty on long journeys. Snow gog-
gles, possibly made aboard ship, put a strip of stiff leather and wire-
mesh gauze between a Franklin sailor’s eyes and the relentless winds
that tormented them, striking like millions of tiny needles. The gear
couldn’t have offered much hope to men who had to survive two
vicious winters before the survivors tried to walk out, some dragging
heavy sledges or boats over the snow and ice. There were too many
easy breaches for the wind to break through and ravage poorly pro-
tected skin: Trouser buttons broke and fell off, holes in the cloth were
patched with thick flannel, which became frayed and rank in the end-
less cycle of freeze and thaw. It was only after the Franklin Expedition
was lost that the Admiralty made a greater effort to develop clothing
specifically for the Arctic.
After abandoning their best shelter, Erebus and Terror, in 1848, the
mariners had to trek for months, through snow and ice in winter and
sucking mud if the weather warmed enough those summers. Their
feet were shielded by relatively thin boots insulated with whatever the
wearer could scrounge. Royal Navy seamen’s boots were long, square-
toed, and rounded at the top to fit a man’s calf. They wouldn’t be much
against a January storm on a southern city’s streets today, let alone in
an especially cold few years in the Arctic. Brass screws bored through
the soles might have improved the traction slightly, and straw or cloth
shoved into the empty toe space might have preserved a hint of heat.
Compared with the skins of seal, caribou, or polar bear, among the
excellent natural insulators in multilayered Inuit kamiik, a blue cloth
legging attached to the ankles of the British sailors’ seaboots was use-
less adornment. Severe frostbite was more likely to occur the longer a
man survived, only to die a slow, excruciating death. For men hauling
the bulky sledges, sweating and freezing as they leaned into hammer-
ing winds, gangrene eating through their toes, the boots would have
squeezed and scraped like painful shackles.
and paid dearly. It’s one of the last places left on our planet that holds
out, as long as it can, refusing to bow to human will. Which, of course,
only tempts more conquerors to try.
The bigger questions, burning like distant lanterns in an endless
Arctic night, are about the nature of the people who went looking for
Franklin and his lost sailors, why they did it, and what that tells us
about ourselves.
After all, one way or another, we’re each searching for something.