Sir Robert Falcon Scott never returned from Antarctica. He died there on his return trek from stepping foot at the South Pole, it is estimated on about March 29, 1912.
Captain Robert Falcon Scott and his polar team all perished on their return trek from the South Pole.
Robert Falcon Scott and his team were the second to reach the South Pole, being beaten by only a month from being the first. He and all the men with him perished on the return journey. He had previously been on a scientific mission in 1901 to Antarctica.
Robert Falcon Scott did not cross Antarctica. They trekked from McMurdo Sound to the South Pole and died on their return. The march began 1 November 1911, and Scott died sometime during the last week of March 1912.
During his Discovery expedition, Robert Falcon Scott wanted to explore Antarctica because he wanted to see the great ice land and see if there were any other wonders that other explorers had missed. On his Terra Nova expedition, he wanted to race Roald Amunden to be the first person to reach the South Pole. Unfortunately, during this journey Robert Falcon Scott did not return, instead, he and his party perished ONLY 3 miles away from safety.
Weather, lack of food and lack of oil for cooking fires were his major obstacles for a safe return to the hut. His team also experienced deteriorating health, given their exposure for several months to the extreme conditions of Antarctica.
Captain Robert Falcon Scott and his polar team all perished on their return trek from the South Pole.
Sir Robert Falcon Scott died on Antarctica in March of 1912, and did not return.
All of Captain Scott's polar team perished on their return trek.
Robert Falcon Scott and his team were the second to reach the South Pole, being beaten by only a month from being the first. He and all the men with him perished on the return journey. He had previously been on a scientific mission in 1901 to Antarctica.
Captain Scott didn't 'make it home': he died on his return trek from the South Pole on the Ross Ice Shelf in Antarctica.
Robert Falcon Scott did not cross Antarctica. They trekked from McMurdo Sound to the South Pole and died on their return. The march began 1 November 1911, and Scott died sometime during the last week of March 1912.
Actually, Robert Falcon Scott did not survive his trek to the South Pole: he perished on his return.
There is no record that Captain Scott killed any ponies, however, it is true that none of the expedition ponies survived to return from Antarctica. Returning ponies from Antarctica, as well, was never in the plan.
Captain Scott and two of his remaining companions, died in their tent on their return, 11 miles from One Ton Depot.
During his Discovery expedition, Robert Falcon Scott wanted to explore Antarctica because he wanted to see the great ice land and see if there were any other wonders that other explorers had missed. On his Terra Nova expedition, he wanted to race Roald Amunden to be the first person to reach the South Pole. Unfortunately, during this journey Robert Falcon Scott did not return, instead, he and his party perished ONLY 3 miles away from safety.
Robert Falcon Scott did not return from his second polar expedition: he died on the Antarctic continent. His first expedition, however, returned to Portsmouth docking on 10 September 1904.
No, Edward Evans did not die in Antarctica. He was a British naval officer and explorer who participated in Robert Falcon Scott's ill-fated Terra Nova Expedition to the South Pole in 1912. Evans died later in 1912 during the return journey from the Pole.