There is no documentation that Robert Falcon Scott ever set foot on any of the Americas.
Captain Robert Falcon Scott's body was found in November 1912, along with the bodies of his companions, after they had perished on their return journey from the South Pole during their ill-fated Terra Nova Expedition.
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The body of Antarctic explorer Robert Falcon Scott was found only a few miles from the geographic South Pole. It was left there, with a large ice cairn raised over the bodies of Scott and his remaining companions, Wilson and Bowers.
Yes, Robert Falcon Scott died on his return journey from the South Pole. His body, along with those of his companions, was found in a tent on the Ross Ice Shelf in 1912, after they had perished from exhaustion, extreme cold, and starvation.
By all accounts Robert Falcon Scott succumbed to a combination of starvation and hypothermia. Her was found in his tent beside his two remaining companions, also deceased, with his deer-skin bag thrown open and his clothes pealed away from his upper body.
Both expeditions were guided by the stars, using a sextant to find the latitude and longitude for their destination.
Scott and his team found a tent erected by Norwegian explorer Roald Amundsen and his team, that flew a Norwegian flag. Inside, they found a note documenting the location of the Amundsen team's camp nearby.
Roald Amundsen and Robert Falcon Scott both led teams to the South Pole at the same time in 1911. Amundsen was aware of Scott's objective, but Scott was not aware that Amundsen was right behind him. Roald Amundsen's team got there first on 14th of December, 1911. Amundsen reported that he saw no sign of Scott. Scott's team reached the South Pole on 17th of January, 1912, acknowledging in his diary that Amundsen had got there a month earlier. The last members of the Scott expedition were found dead by a relief party in November 1912.
Captain Scott and his team didn't arrive until January 1912, and when they arrived, they found a tent set up by the team led by Norwegian, Roald Amundsen, about a month before Scott's team arrived.
Roald Amundsen and Robert Falcon Scott both explored the South Pole at the same time in 1911. Amundsen was aware of Scott's objective, but Scott was not aware that Amundsen was right behind him. Roald Amundsen got there first on 14th of December, 1911. Amundsen reported that he saw no sign of Scott. Scott reached the South Pole on 17th of January, 1912, acknowledging in his diary that Amundsen had got there a month earlier. The last members of the Scott expedition was found dead by a relief party two years later in 1913.
The members of his crew who found their bodies report that Scott had apparently thrown off his deer-skin bag and all the clothes from his chest, so although fully clothed, he apparently prefered to sucumb to hypothermia.
Roald Amundsen and Robert Falcon Scott both explored the South Pole at the same time in 1911. Amundsen was aware of Scott's objective, but Scott was not aware that Amundsen was right behind him. Roald Amundsen got there first on 14th of December, 1911. Amundsen reported that he saw no sign of Scott. Scott reached the South Pole on 17th of January, 1912, acknowledging in his diary that Amundsen had got there a month earlier. The last members of the Scott expedition was found dead by a relief party two years later in 1913.