Authors: John H. Wright
Sievert, Richard,
96
Silverton, Colorado,
256
Smith, Scotty-Bob,
261
,
263
â64
snow swamp, descriptions of on RIS,
117
,
121
â22; descriptions of on Polar Plateau,
234
South Pole Comms,
247
â48,
255
,
275
South Pole Investigative Traverse (SPIT),
10
,
14
â15,
41
South Pole Station, description of,
259
â61
Spenser, Edmund (
The Faerie Queene
),
125
spreader bar sled, description of,
184
Stevens, Wallace (“Anecdote of the Jar”),
253
â54
Stokstad, Robert,
19
Summit Camp, Greenland,
225
Support Force Antarctica,
9
synthetic aperture radar,
103
Total Recordable Incident Rate (TRIR),
22
,
28
â29
Transantarctic Mountains,
14
,
106
,
112
,
123
,
135
,
150
,
188
,
196
,
199
,
243
,
280
,
285
; salient of,
285
Truesdell, Buddy,
96
Uhde, Kim “Bwana,”
61
â63,
66
â73,
75
â76,
78
â80,
84
â90,
179
U.S. Geological Survey Advisory Committee on Antarctic Names,
206
U.S. Merchant Marine tanker,
26
U.S. Navy,
9
U.S. Navy Seabee,
23
Vaitonis, Richard “Stretch,”
42
,
49
â53,
56
,
78
â79,
94
,
96
,
98
â99,
102
,
104
â5,
107
,
109
â10,
115
,
118
,
120
,
126
,
132
,
135
,
138
,
144
,
153
â54,
170
,
173
â74,
177
,
179
,
181
,
184
â86,
188
â89,
195
â99,
203
â6,
208
â10,
219
â24,
226
,
228
,
234
,
237
â44,
245
â47,
249
â57,
266
â68,
272
,
274
â75,
281
,
284
â85,
289
Van Vlack, John “John V.,”
173
,
179
,
181
,
184
,
187
â89,
195
,
198
,
202
â5,
207
,
210
,
222
â223,
234
,
237
â38,
242
,
248
,
251
,
254
â55,
257
â58,
267
â68,
272
,
274
,
278
â83
Walker, Jessica,
139
Weather Forecaster Bill “Wx Bill,”
224
â25
Wells, H. G. (
A Short History of the World
),
187
West, Peter,
130
Wheater, Brian,
3
â5,
9
,
13
,
50
,
52
,
174
,
179
,
220
Whitmore, Megan,
260
â61
Williams Field,
3
â4,
17
,
41
,
58
,
95
â96,
98
,
110
,
134
,
162
,
165
,
179
â80,
192
,
289
â90
Yankielun, Norbert,
102
â5,
108
â9,
118
â21
John H. Wright
began his career in the underground mines of the American West as a mining geologist and hard rock miner. With the closing of the western frontier he headed south to Antarctica, serving first as an explosives engineer, then later driving a tunnel in the ice beneath the South Pole. Because of his record in service to the United States Antarctic Program executing dangerous, difficult jobs with an impeccable record for safety and achievement, he was selected to lead the historic South Pole Traverse Proof-of-Concept Project. He is honored to tell its story.