Yes. Douglas Mawson went to Antarctica four times.
On the first occasion, he was part of Ernest Shackleton's British Antarctic Expedition. Together with Australian geologists Professor Edgeworth David and naval surgeon Alistair Mackay, Mawson was the first to reach the magnetic South Pole on 16 January 1909.
On his second exploration, leading the first Australasian Antarctic Expedition, Mawson, on the boat Aurora departed from Hobart on 2 December 1911. He reached Commonwealth Bay on the Antarctic continent on 7 January 1912. He returned in 1914.
Mawson undertook two more explorations in Antarctica; one in 1929 and the last in 1931, leading the first and second British, Australian and New Zealand Antarctic Research Expeditions (BANZARE).
he travelled by boat many times
Exactly four times
Yes. Douglas Mawson went to Antarctica four times. On the first occasion, he was part of Ernest Shackleton's British Antarctic Expedition. Together with Australian geologists Professor Edgeworth David and naval surgeon Alistair Mackay, Mawson was the first to reach the magnetic South Pole on 16 January 1909. On his second exploration, leading the first Australasian Antarctic Expedition, Mawson, on the boat Aurora departed from Hobart on 2 December 1911. He reached Commonwealth Bay on the Antarctic continent on 7 January 1912. He returned in 1914. Mawson undertook two more explorations in Antarctica; one in 1929 and the last in 1931, leading the first and second British, Australian and New Zealand Antarctic Research Expeditions (BANZARE).
Douglas Mawson went to Antarctica four times.On the first occasion, he was part of Ernest Shackleton's British Antarctic Expedition. Together with Australian geologists Professor Edgeworth David and naval surgeon Alistair Mackay, Mawson was the first to reach the magnetic South Pole on 16 January 1909.On his second exploration, leading the first Australasian Antarctic Expedition, Mawson, on the boat Aurora departed from Hobart on 2 December 1911. He reached Commonwealth Bay on the Antarctic continent on 7 January 1912. He returned in 1914.Mawson undertook two more explorations in Antarctica; one in 1929 and the last in 1931, leading the first and second British, Australian and New Zealand Antarctic Research Expeditions (BANZARE).
During the Australisian Expedition, Mawson lost his companion Ninnis into a crevasse, after which Ninnis was never seen again. (Read more, below.) Prior to this event, their companion, Mertz, had fallen into a crevasse and was lost as well. (Read more, below: Mertz.) One of Mawson's extreme blessings of good luck was that if he did fall in, he was rescued. The total number of times would require a full reading of all of his Antarctic history: the number is small if he fell it at all. Notably, once this Expedition was finished, Mawson returned to Antarctica, but always by sea, never wanting to trek or explore there again.
Sir Earnest Shackleton left Antarctica several times, and also returned to Antarctica. He is buried in Grytviken, South Georgia.
Sir Douglas Mawson was an Australian citizen who became a world-renowned geologist.He is perhaps most famous in the public eye for his roles in the perilous Antarctic expeditions of the early 20th century.He was on the 1908 team that made the first ascent of Antarctica's volcanic Mount Erebus.Then in 1910-1914 he was a leader of the Australian Antarctic Expedition which was first to reach the south magnetic pole. Winds averaged 50 mph and at times reached 200 mph in subsero temperatures. Most of the expedition members survived the brutal weather and a fatal accident. Mawson documented the terrible adventure in his 1914 book The Home of the Blizzard.The Home of the Blizzard is now in the public domain and can be read online using the link provided below.
Antarctica is 1.4 times bigger than the usa and 58 times bigger than the uk
New Zealand would roughly fit into Antarctica about 21 times New Zealand would fit into Antarctica about 51 times. Itsarea is approximately 270,500 square miles, which is less than 1/50th of the area of Antarctica.
Since Antarctica is 'discovered' by every first-time visitor, the answer to your question is tens of thousands of times, since that's the number of people who have visited Antarctica in history.
Antarctica is about the size of USA and Mexico combined.
Generally July and August are the coldest times of year in Antarctica.