The main accommodation block at Grytviken Whaling Station housed 100 workers with four bunk beds to a room when it was South Georgia s longest running whaling station, operating from 1904 until it closed in 1965.
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19.4×12.9cm 28ppcm
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Imágenes relacionadas
- Old whaling boats at Grytviken which was South Georgia s longest running whaling station, operating from 1904 until it closed in 1965. Grytviken is now the headquarters of the South Georgia administration.
- The old whaling boat, Petrel , at Grytviken which was South Georgia s longest running whaling station, operating from 1904 to 1965. Built in 1928, Petrel was used for whaling until 1956 when she was converted for sealing.
- The old whaling station at Stromness. Here, Ernest Shakleton ended his epic crossing of South Georgia in 1916. The station began operating in 1913. It was converted to a ship repair yard in 1931 until it closed in 1961.
- South Georgia and south Sandwich Islands, South Georgia, Cumberland Bay, Grytviken.Whalers Church orig. built in Norway.
- Two King penguins calling at Grytviken, which was South Georgia s longest running whaling station, operating from 1904 until it closed in 1965. It is now the headquarters of the South Georgia administration.
- A southern elephant seal pup at Grytviken. Grytviken was South Georgia s longest running whaling station, operating from 1904 until it closed in 1965. It is now the headquarters of the South Georgia administration.
- The interior of the Norwegian Lutheran Church at Grytviken, which was prefabricated in Norway and erected by whalers in 1913. In 1922, Sir Ernest Shakelton s body lay here before burial.
- The Norwegian Lutheran Church at Grytviken was prefabricated in Norway and erected by whalers in 1913. It is one of the most southerly in the world. In 1922, Sir Ernest Shakelton s body lay in this church before burial.
Más imágenes relacionadas
- A massive pile of rusting anchor chain a relic from the days when Grytviken was South Georgia s longest running whaling station, operating from 1904 until it closed in 1965. In its heyday, it employed 300 men, mostly Norwegian.
- A male southern elephant seal at Grytviken. Grytviken was South Georgia s longest running whaling station, operating from 1904 until it closed in 1965. It is now the headquarters of the South Georgia administration.
- A fur seal at Grytviken. Grytviken was South Georgia s longest running whaling station, operating from 1904 to 1965. It is now the headquarters of the South Georgia administration.
- South Georgia and South Sandwich Islands, South Georgia, Cumberland Bay, Grytviken. Three graves from the Falkland War conflict.
- South Georgia and the South Sandwich Islands, South Georgia, Cumberland Bay, Grytviken. Looking towards the Allardyce Mountains.
- South Georgia and South Sandwich Islands, South Georgia, Cumberland Bay, Grytviken. Explorer, Sir Ernest Shackleton's Memorial
- South Georgia Island, Cumberland Bay. The memorial to Sir Ernest Shackelton the famous polar explorer erected by his crew.
- South Georgia and the South Sandwich Islands, South Georgia, Cumberland Bay, Grytviken. Antarctic Fur Seal (Arctocephalus gazella)