In the Scott Base episode of Voices from Antarctica, Alison Ballance gets some tips on how to sleep warmly and go to the toilet out in the field, and gets a tour of Hillary Hut with Antarctic Heritage Trust conservator Al Fastier.
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Scott Base is New Zealand’s Antarctic station, situated at Pram Point, Hut Point Peninsula on Ross Island in McMurdo Sound. Its exact location is 77°51’S and 166°46’E, and it is 10 metres above sea level. The United States’ McMurdo Station lies a few kilometres away.
Hillary Hut, was known as Hut A in the original Scott Base, and was constructed as a kitset in January 1957.
It is officially known as the TAE / IGY hut. This stands for the Commonwealth Trans-Antarctic Expedition – International Geophysical Year.
Hillary's Hut now serves as a museum.
Hillary Hut was built to house a team of New Zealanders, led by Sir Edmund Hillary, who were supporting Sir Vivian Fuchs’ effort to cross Antarctica. Sir Ed and his team were just meant to lay supply depots for Fuchs, but they ended up driving all the way to the South Pole in Massey Fergusson tractors where they met ‘Bunny’ Fuchs and his team who had crossed from the other side of the continent.
The original Scott Base was intended to be a temporary camp only, but in 1962 the New Zealand government decided to make it a permanent Antarctic Base.
Over time, the old base has been mostly replaced by new buildings.
The Antarctic Heritage Trust has recently restored Hillary’s Hut, as part of a multi-year mission to restore five historic huts in the Ross Sea region.
In 2011, Alison Ballance reported on the restoration of Shackleton’s Nimrod Hut at Cape Royds.
In 2007, Veronika Meduna reported on the restoration of the Nimrod Hut and Scott's Hut at Cape Evans.
Voices from Antarctica – listen to the full series
Voices from Antarctica 1: Ice Flight
Voices from Antarctica 2: Scott Base
Voices from Antarctica 3: Flags to physics
Voices from Antarctica 4: Best journey in the world
Voices from Antarctica 5: Waiting for Emperors
Voices from Antarctica 6: Seal songs
Voices from Antarctica 7: What the ice is saying
Voices from Antarctica 8: Under the ice
Our Changing World’s Antarctic collection
Listen to a wide range of stories recorded in and about Antarctica from our archives.