Shackleton is known for 'not losing a man' on his expeditions.
Around 250,000 people visit Flanders Field each year to pay their respects to the soldiers who fought and died during World War I.
in Antarctica
Dr. Einstein died on April 15, 1955, at the age of 76, at Princeton, New Jersey. Great numbers of people visit Princeton regularly. Few of their visits have anything to do with Einstein's life or death.
Yes, there are a number of monuments in Antarctica. There are about 80 that are listed according to international treaty, with notices placed at them in English, French, Spanish, and Russian. Many memorialize people who died in Antarctica. Some are simply site markers, such as the South Pole or the "Pole of Inaccessibility." There is a link below to a site listing the important monuments in Antarctica.
Wikipedia lists less than 1,000 people who have died either in the Southern Ocean around the continent or on Antarctica since 1810 -- in 'disasters'. About 15 people are listed as having died on Antarctica in expeditions since 1899. There have also been accidental deaths of temporary workers since the 1960s, but the numbers are not readily available.
Robert Falcon Scott died on Antarctica.
Because nobody lives in Antarctica. But Ernest Shackleton lived there but he died. His hut is still there I think
Scott sailed to Antarctica first in 1901, and died there in 1912.
they all died
Scott died in Antarctca, but Shackleton died in South Georgia.
Ernest Shackleton was an explorer of Antarctica.
To honour those that fought and died in the Korean conflict