Soviet icon surprises polar scientists
By MICHAEL FIELD - Fairfax Media | Friday, 04 January 2008

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SOVIET IN THE SNOW: Top: An imposing bust of Russian revolutionary Bolshevik 
Vladimir Lenin greets scientists at the South Pole of Inaccessibility - the 
point on Antarctica that is furthest from the ocean. Below: a new marker is 
placed at the true South Pole, which sits on a shifting glacier and has to be 
re-marked each year.

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Scientists trekking across a little visited part of Antarctica have discovered 
a bizarre relic of the Soviet Union is dominating the South Pole of 
Inaccessibility.


In the middle of no-where - literally the point on Antarctica furthest from the 
sea - an imposing bust of revolutionary Bolshevik Vladimir Lenin peers out onto 
the polar emptiness.

A Norwegian-US Scientific Traverse met Lenin this week while nearly a thousand 
kilometres to the south another group were "moving" the South Pole - literally.

A barber's pole marks the actual spot but the US Amundsen-Scott South Pole 
Station sits on top of a moving ice-sheet - so the Pole moves.

The Inaccessibility Pole marks the point on Antarctica that is furthest from 
the ocean. At 3718 metres above sea-level it is in the Australian zone and 
seldom visited.

The Scientific Traverse this week made it to the Inaccessibility Pole for New 
Year's Day and found a one time Soviet Union base buried under the ice.

The group's website says Soviet scientists first visited the Pole in December 
1958 and built a small cabin there.

After several weeks they left, putting the bust of Lenin on top of the chimney 
facing Moscow.

"Today the bust is clearly visible from many kilometres away, and remains as 
they left it on the chimney, although the cabin itself is buried under the 
snow," the explorers say.

The current expedition plans to leave something more substantial in the form of 
an automatic weather station. They will also drill a 90 metre ice core.

One of the drillers, Lou Albershardt, told an US website that they took six 
weeks to reach the pole, noticing Lenin from a long way out.

They all speculated on what the bust might have been made out of; marble or 
concrete.
"You wouldn't believe it. He's plastic," he said.

Lenin died in 1924 and his corpse was embalmed and placed in a mausoleum on 
Moscow's Red Square.

The old Soviet base sits at 82 degrees six minute south, 54 degrees 58 minutes 
east. The pole's actual position is disputed around how to define the coast to 
the north.

The Inaccessibility Pole is around 878 kilometres from the South Pole.

At the South Pole a ceremony was held this week to move the Pole and put in a 
marker on the spot that the pole had been.

The US Antarctic Program said in a statement the new marker was designed by 
base machinist Derek Aboltins. His design has 54 grooves around the edge, one 
for each of the 2007 winter-over staff.

The diamond shaped emblem on top replicates an old sign that used to be 
displayed on the old gymnasium before it was torn down. The resulting marker 
resembles a gear, similar to those that turn the new South Pole Telescope.

The station sits on a glacier which moves about 10 metres per year, so every 
January 1 a brass marker designating exactly 90 degrees South is placed in the 
new location.


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