José María Sobral
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Alférez de Navío José María Sobral (Navy Sub-Lieutenant - born in on April 14, 1880 in Gualeguaychú, Entre Ríos, died on April 14, 1961 in Buenos Aires) was an Argentine military scientist and Antartic explorer.
Sobral joined the Swedish Antarctic Expedition in Buenos Aires at the end of 1901, when the group headed by Otto Nordenskjöld asked the Argentine Government for supplies, to perform a series of meteorological, biological geological and geodesical studies.
The expedition arrived to Snow Hill Island at the Weddell Sea in 1902, where they were to spend one winter. But the ship that was to return to pick them up, the Antarctic under command of Captain Carl Larsen, was crushed by the ice and sank, leaving the expedition to spend a second winter on Snow Hill Island, with no communication with the mainland or the Antarctic party, which was stranded and spent the winter in rough shelter on Paulet Island. A year later Argentine corvette Uruguay rescued the survivors, including the Argentine officer.
Upon return to Argentina Sobral left the army and whent to Sweden to study geology at the Uppsala University, where he doctored in 1913. In 1906 he married Swedish Elna W. Klingström, with whom he would have 9 children.
In 1914 he returned to Argentina, working as National Director of Mining and Hidrology until 1924. In 1930 he was named Argentine consul in Norway, but returned to Argentina a year later to work for Argentine national oil company YPF. He retired in 1935, but continued travelling around Argentina and giving geology lectures un til his death in 1961, anecdotically on his birthday.
Sobral wrote a number of books on the Army, Argentina-Chile relations, Geology, and his Antartic adventure. He's considered the father of the Argentine Antarctica, and a national hero.
The Argentine summer Base Alférez de Navío Sobral was built in 1965 and is located at 81°05' S, 40°00' W, in Edith Ronne Land facing the Filchner Ice Shelf. It supported the Argentine Army's overland expedition to the South Pole in 1965. A stamp bearing Sobral's image and Snow Hill Island is Argentina Scott #1070, 1975.
[edit] References
- Antarctica. Sydney: Reader's Digest, 1985, pp. 152-153
- Child, Jack. Antarctica and South American Geopolitics: Frozen Lebensraum. New York: Praeger Publishers, 1988, p. 69.
- Stewart, Andrew, Antarctica: An Encyclopedia. London: McFarland and Co., 1990 (2 volumes), p. 933.
- U.S. National Science Foundation, Geographic Names of the Antarctic, Fred G. Alberts, ed. Washington: NSF, 1980.
[edit] External links
- Sobral's Biography - Marambio Base site (Spanish)
- Centenary (English)(Spanish)
- "Dos años en el hielo" - extract of Sobral's book and other texts (Spanish)
- "Corbeta Uruguay" Argentine Army site (Spanish)
- "Rumbo a la Antártida" Teína Magazine (Spanish)