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Antarctic Mountaineering: Climbing the Coldest, Most Remote Peaks on Earth

From the Heroic Age to Vinson Massif and beyond

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Antarctic Mountaineering: Climbing the Coldest, Most Remote Peaks on Earth

Antarctica's mountains are the least visited on Earth — no indigenous people, no permanent settlements, and temperatures that drop below -40C. This guide covers the discovery of Vinson Massif, Antarctic climbing history from Shackleton's Nimrod expedition, and the extreme logistics required to climb at the bottom of the world.

Introduction

The Last Frontier

The Heroic Age

Shackleton and the Nimrod Expedition

The First Ascent of Mount Erebus (1908)

Scott, Amundsen, and the Mountains They Passed

Vinson Massif — Antarctica's Highest

Discovery and First Ascent (1966)

Why Vinson Is on the Seven Summits

Climbing Vinson Today

Other Antarctic Peaks

Mount Erebus — The Active Volcano

Mount Tyree — The Hardest Summit in Antarctica

The Ellsworth Mountains

Extreme Logistics

Getting to Antarctica

Weather Windows

Cost — The World's Most Expensive Climbs

Environmental Considerations

Antarctic Treaty Obligations

Leave No Trace in a Pristine Continent

The Future of Antarctic Climbing

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