Little America was a series of Antarctic exploration bases from 1929 to 1958, located on the Ross Ice Shelf, south of the Bay of Whales. They were built on ice that moves very slowly; the relative location on the ice sheet has moved and eventually breaks off into an iceberg. The geographic location has new ice that has shifted to this location and is technically over the open water.

The coordinates are approximate.

Little America I

The first base in the series was established in January 1929 by Richard Byrd, and was abandoned in 1930.

This was where the film With Byrd at the South Pole (1930), about Byrd's trip to the South Pole, was filmed.

Little America II

Little America II was established in 1934, some above the site of the original base, with some of the original base accessed via tunnel.

Little America established the first successful radio broadcasting from Antarctica, making regular broadcasts that could be picked up by household radio sets in the United States, more than away around the Earth's curvature.

In a later expedition to Antarctica, Byrd's expedition spotted Little America's towers still standing, including the Jacobs Wind plant installed in 1933.

Little America III

Little America III was established for the 1940–1941 season, some to the north.

In 1940 a huge exploration vehicle, the Antarctic Snow Cruiser, was brought to Little America III. Unfortunately, the vehicle was found to have a number of design and technical weaknesses and was little used. Abandoned, it became buried in the snow. It was last rediscovered in 1958, but has subsequently been lost once again, either under the snow, or under the waters of the Southern Ocean.

The site of Little America III was carried to sea in 1963.

Little America IV

Little America IV was established in 1946–1947 as the primary camp for Operation Highjump.

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Little America V was established on January 3, 1956, at Kainan Bay, some east of Little America IV, as part of Operation Deep Freeze. Little America V served as the American base in the South Polar program in the International Geophysical Year, from July 1, 1957, to December 31, 1958.

The site of Little America V went to sea on Iceberg B-9 in 1987.

Little America V was one of seven bases that the United States built for the IGY, which also included McMurdo, Hallett, Wilkes, Admundsen-Scott (South Pole Station), Ellsworth, and Byrd.

See also

  • List of Antarctic field camps
  • Brockton Station
  • Byrd Station
  • Dean Cullom Smith
  • Ellsworth Station
  • Framheim
  • Hallett Station
  • List of Antarctic expeditions
  • McMurdo Station
  • Operation Deep Freeze
  • Palmer Station
  • Plateau Station
  • Research stations in Antarctica
  • Siple Station
  • South Pole Station

References

  • Paper by CE Palmer, RNZAF on Winds at Little America, 1929