Lt Cdr George R. Lush, M.B.E., R.N

Commander Lush will be remembered in the record of the Royal Society as one who played a distinguished role in the Society’s history of expeditions. He took a leading part in two of these. First from January 1956 to January 1957 when as a member of the advance party, under the leadership of Surgeon Commander David Dalgliesh, he participated in the setting up of the Society’s Antarctic geophysical research station, later named Halley Bay, as a contribution to the International Geophysical Year. The party, having sailed in MV Tottan made landfall in the southerly Weddell Sea where man had not trod before and in the severe Antarctic conditions, built the research station which has been the base of so much valuable geophysical work ever since. George Lush with all his skill and determination gave conspicuous service in this year’s operation.

In 1953 the International Council of Scientific Unions (I.C.S.U.) appointed a committee (C.S.A.G.I.) under the presidency of Professor S. Chapman, F. R.S., to organize a programme of international scientific co-operation for making simultaneous physical measurements over the whole Earth during the eighteen months July 1957 to December 1958. The scheme is known as the ‘International Geophysical Year’ (I.G.Y.) and as the United Kingdom representative in international scientific affairs, the Royal Society has appointed a National Committee to organize the British contribution to the programme. The I.G.Y. is the direct descendent of two earlier similar schemes known as the First and Second International Polar Years, organized in 1882 and 1932. The I.G.Y. is concerned with measurements over the whole globe, but because of inaccessibility the making of measurements on the Antarctic continent has to be planned well in advance. The Royal Society is contributing to the Antarctic studies by sending an expedition to set up a research station on the coast of the Weddell Sea. The site for the station, being in the British Sector of Antarctica, comes within the jurisdiction of H.E. The Governor of the Falkland Islands and much help has been given by the Falkland Islands Dependencies Survey, and the Crown Agents for Oversea Governments and Administrations have acted as the Royal Society agents in the ordering of stores and equipment. The advance party is led by Surgeon Lieutenant-Commander David Dalgliesh, R.N., and the three scientists are Major G. E. Watson, R.E.M.E., an electronic engineer lent by the War Office, Dr Stanley Evans, a radioastronomer from the Jodrell Bank Experimental Station, Manchester University, and D. W. S. Limbert of the Meteorological Office, Harrow. Other members include K. E. C. Powell as the diesel mechanic and Captain R. Dalgliesh, brother of the expedition commander, as tractor driver, together with J. E. Raymond and his brother-in-law D. Prior as carpenters. The wireless operator is Charles Le Feuvre and Commissioned Boatswain G. R. Lush, R.N. acts as a general handyman.


2020 ◽  
Vol 11 (2) ◽  
pp. 157-171
Author(s):  
Yulia S. Lyubovtseva ◽  
Alexei D. Gvishiani ◽  
Anatoly A. Soloviev ◽  
Olga O. Samokhina ◽  
Roman I. Krasnoperov

Abstract. The International Geophysical Year (IGY) was the most significant international scientific event in geophysical sciences in the history of mankind. This was the largest international experiment that brought together about 300 000 scientists from 67 countries. Well-planned activity of national and international committees was organized for the first time. The history of the IGY organization and complex international experiments in planetary geophysics conducted within its program are discussed in this article. Special attention is given to the estimation of the significance of this project for developing worldwide geophysical research.


1957 ◽  
Vol 146 (923) ◽  
pp. 155-165

Another year of intensive preparation reached its climax on 13 November when H. M. the Queen visited the Magga Dan which was to convey the Royal Society expedition to the Antarctic, and when the members of the expedition were presented to her. The ship sailed two days later bearing the good wishes of all, on this combination of physical and scientific adventure which will make an important contribution to the International Geophysical Year. A great debt is owing to all who took part in the arrangements and especially to Sir David Brunt and to Dr Martin who have borne so much of the burden and eat of the day.


Author(s):  
G. E. Fogg

Beginning with its dispatch of Halley on his geomagnetic cruise of 1699 to 1700, the Royal Society has played a sporadic, ad hoc, but nevertheless considerable role in the scientific investigation of the South Polar regions. In three ventures—Ross's geomagnetic survey of 1839 to 1843, the first Scott expedition of 1901 to 1904 and the British contribution to the International Geophysical Year of 1957 to 1958—it made major contributions to the planning and support of Antarctic scientific programmes. Throughout, it has given backing to polar expeditions but has been consistent in putting science before geographical discovery. It has numbered some 20 Antarctic scientists among its Fellows.


The decision to establish a station for geophysical observations in Antarctica was one of the most important steps taken by the Royal Society to promote the aims of the International Geophysical Year. Antarctic exploration has long attracted men of science. In 1861, almost a century before the I. G. Y., Commander Maury of the U. S. Navy, a distinguished pioneer meteorologist, wrote to this country pleading the cause of international co-operation in the scientific exploration of the Antarctic. In reply to the question cui bono? Maury said: ‘ . . .it is enough for me, when contemplating the vast extent of that unknown region, to know that it is a part of the surface of our planet, and to remember that the Earth was made for man; that all knowledge is profitable; that no discoveries have conferred more honour and glory upon the age in which they were made, or have been more beneficial to the world, than geographical discoveries, and that never were nations so well prepared to undertake Antarctic exploration as are those that I now solicit’ (Maury 1861). Yet, despite this plea, few landings were made on the continent in the nineteenth century, and the first wintering in the Antarctic was that of the Belgica in 1897-99. After that the pace quickened. During the early years of the present century there were many notable expeditions, especially by Scott (1901-04) and Shackleton (1907-09), culminating in the tragic Scott expedition of 1910-13 which established bases at Cape Evans and Cape Adare and made more extensive observations in meteorology, geomagnetism, atmospheric electricity and geology than ever before. The early explorers expected hardship and were prepared for peril. As Sir George Simpson, one of the scientist members of the last Scott expedition, says ‘In 1910 only wooden ships were used to penetrate ice-covered seas; the only energy available for transport over snow-covered land was the animal power of men, dogs and ponies; there was no communication with the outside world and scurvy was the chief, almost the only, danger to health.’


2020 ◽  
Vol 48 (1) ◽  
pp. 142-156
Author(s):  
I. A. Melnikov

Systematic study of Antarctica began only a century and a half after its discovery by the Russian expedition of F. Bellingshausen and M. Lazarev on the sloops “Vostok” and “Mirny” on January 16 (20), 1820. Since the International Geophysical Year (IGY) in 1956, regular studies of ice cover, subglacial topography, geomorphology of the surrounding seas and bottom sediments, as well as marine and continental biological communities have begun on the continent and coastal waters. Scientists from the Institute of Oceanology took part in the first Russian Antarctic expeditions. Their work gave new knowledge about the nature of Antarctica and largely determined the scientific direction of its future research.


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