I was puzzled by that as well. There is quite a bit of sail up. The wind appears to be filling the sails from the front (over the port bow). ... i.e. blowing it backwards and sideways. That matches the pattern of calm area and ripples on the water.
To make ripples like that in a relatively short space the wind must be at least 10-15 knots. So, potential damage to the rudder as it bumps into the ice. Yet nobody appears to be working the sails. Puzzling.
I was puzzled by that as well. There is quite a bit of sail up. The wind appears to be filling the sails from the front (over the port bow). ... i.e. blowing it backwards and sideways. That matches the pattern of calm area and ripples on the water.
To make ripples like that in a relatively short space the wind must be at least 10-15 knots. So, potential damage to the rudder as it bumps into the ice. Yet nobody appears to be working the sails. Puzzling.
Lets not get tooooooooo carried away, my d.cks bigger than yours, its just a fabulous old photo with lots of history behind it. Enjoy it as it is and lets not try and go one bettter trying complicate this post guys! Ian
An easier method is to select the Photo Search tab, type "British Antarctic" into the Keywords box, 1910 to 1913 in the data range boxes, and then Search.
The search results appears as photo thumbnails.
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