Cherry-Garrard: The Worst Journey in the World, Vol. I, 1922, S. xlvii.
Huxley: Scott’s Last Expedition, Vol. I, 1914, S. 611.
Cherry-Garrard: The Worst Journey in the World, Vol. I, 1922, S. 1–86.
Huxley: Scott’s Last Expedition, Vol. I, 1914, S. 183: “if anything the most intelligently and readily helpful.”
Huxley: Scott’s Last Expedition, Vol. I, 1914, S. 263: “another of the open-air, self-effacing, quiet workers.”
Huxley: Scott’s Last Expedition, Vol. I, 1914, S. 124.
Cherry-Garrard: The Worst Journey in the World, Vol. I, 1922, S. 104: “in a state of hurry bordering on panic.”
Huxley: Scott’s Last Expedition, Vol. I, 1914, 139–143.
Cherry-Garrard: The Worst Journey in the World, Vol. I, 1922, S. 116.
Huxley: Scott’s Last Expedition, Vol. I, 1914, S. 173.
Cherry-Garrard: The Worst Journey in the World, Vol. I, 1922, S. 127 und 136–154.
Cherry-Garrard: The Worst Journey in the World, Vol. I, 1922, S. 166.
Huxley: Scott’s Last Expedition, Vol. I, 1914, S. 211.
Cherry-Garrard: The Worst Journey in the World, Vol. I, 1922, S. 234.
Cherry-Garrard: The Worst Journey in the World, Vol. I, 1922, S. 230–231: 757 lbs.
Cherry-Garrard: The Worst Journey in the World, Vol. I, 1922, S. 248: −77,5 °F.
Cherry-Garrard: The Worst Journey in the World, Vol. I, 1922, S. 254: “If we had been dressed in lead we should have been able to move our arms and necks and heads more easily than we could now.”
Cherry-Garrard: The Worst Journey in the World, Vol. I, 1922, S. 240.
Cherry-Garrard: The Worst Journey in the World, Vol. I, 1922, S. 257–258.
Huxley: Scott’s last Expedition, Vol. II, 1914, S. 22.
Cherry-Garrard: The Worst Journey in the World, Vol. I, 1922, S. 253.
Cherry-Garrard: The Worst Journey in the World, Vol. I, 1922, S. 256: 9 °F.
Cherry-Garrard: The Worst Journey in the World, Vol. I, 1922, S. 260.
Huxley: Scott’s last Expedition, Vol. II, 1914, S. 29.
Cherry-Garrard: The Worst Journey in the World, Vol. I, 1922, S. 262: “Behind us Mount Terror on wich we stood, an over all the grey limitless Barrier seemed to cast a spell of immensity, vague, ponderous, a breeding-place of wind, drift and darkness. God! What a place!”
Cherry-Garrard: The Worst Journey in the World, Vol. I, 1922, S. 268: “[…] we had within our grasp material which might prove of the utmost importance to science; we were turning theories into facts with every observation we made […]”.
Cherry-Garrard: The Worst Journey in the World, Vol. I, 1922, S. 272.
Cherry-Garrard: The Worst Journey in the World, Vol. I, 1922, S. 270.
Huxley: Scott’s last Expedition, Vol. II, 1914, S. 45.
Cherry-Garrard: The Worst Journey in the World, Vol. I, 1922, S. 280: “Without a tent we were dead men.”.
Huxley: Scott’s last Expedition, Vol. II, 1914, S. 49–51.
Huxley: Scott’s last Expedition, Vol. II, 1914, S. 61–62: “I cannot put down in writing how helpless I believe we were to help ourselves, and how we were brought out of a very terrible series of experiences.”
Cherry-Garrard: The Worst Journey in the World, Vol. I, 1922, S. 291: −66 °F.
Cherry-Garrard: The Worst Journey in the World, Vol. I, 1922, S. 292.
Huxley: Scott’s last Expedition, Vol. II, 1914, S. 71.
Huxley: Scott’s last Expedition, Vol. I, 1914, S. 361: “They looked more weather-worn than anyone I have yet seen. Their faces were scarred and wrinkled, their eyes dull, their hands whitened and creased with the constant exposure to damp and cold […].”
Huxley: Scott’s last Expedition, Vol. I, 1914, S. 362: “It is evident that he has suffered most severley – but Wilson tells me that his spirit nevere wavered for a moment.”
Cherry-Garrard: The Worst Journey in the World, Vol. II, 1922, S. 350.
Huxley: Scott’s last Expedition Vol. I, 1914, S. 376.
Huxley: Scott’s last Expedition Vol. I, 1914, S. 422.
Cherry-Garrard: The Worst Journey in the World Vol. II, 1922, S. 321.
Cherry-Garrard: The Worst Journey in the World Vol. II, 1922, S. 327–328.
Cherry-Garrard: The Worst Journey in the World Vol. II, 1922, S. 328: “[…] the attempt was suicidal.”
Cherry-Garrard: The Worst Journey in the World Vol. II, 1922, S. 335.
Cherry-Garrard: The Worst Journey in the World Vol. II, 1922, S. 340: “came as a relief.”
Cherry-Garrard: The Worst Journey in the World Vol. II, 1922, S. 343–344.
Huxley: Scott’s Last Expedition, Vol. I, 1914, S. 492–493.
Cherry-Garrard: The Worst Journey in the World Vol. II, 1922, S. 351: “It began to look as if Amundsen had chosen the right form of transport.”
Cherry-Garrard: The Worst Journey in the World Vol. II, 1922, S. 354: 800 lbs.
Huxley: Scott’s Last Expedition, Vol. I, 1914, S. 494.
Cherry-Garrard: The Worst Journey in the World Vol. II, 1922, S. 353 und S. 355.
Cherry-Garrard: The Worst Journey in the World Vol. II, 1922, S. 352.
Cherry-Garrard: The Worst Journey in the World Vol. II, 1922, S. 362.
Cherry-Garrard: The Worst Journey in the World Vol. II, 1922, S. 362: “This evening has been a rather shock. […] Of course I knew what he was going to say, but could hardly grasp that I was going back – to-morrow night.”
Huxley: Scotts Last Expedition, Vol. I, 1914, S. 528–529.
Cherry-Garrard: The Worst Journey in the World Vol. II, 1922, S. 383.
Cherry-Garrard: The Worst Journey in the World Vol. II, 1922, S. 401–407.
Cherry-Gerard: The Worst Journey in the World, Vol. II, 1922, S. 410–413.
Cherry-Garrard: The Worst Journey in the World Vol. II, 1922, S. 429: “recalled by family affairs”
Cherry-Garrard: The Worst Journey in the World Vol. II, 1922, S. 415.
Cherry-Garrard: The Worst Journey in the World Vol. II, 1922, S. 417.
Cherry-Garrard: The Worst Journey in the World Vol. II, 1922, S. 416.
Huxley: Scott’s Last Expedition Vol. II, 1914, S. 298.
Cherry-Garrard: The Worst Journey in the World Vol. II, 1922, S. 420.
Huxley: Scott’s last Expedition Vol. II, 1914, S. 308.
Cherry-Garrard: The Worst Journey in the World Vol. II, 1922, S. 427: “We have got to face it now. The Pole party will not in all propability ever get back. And there is no more that we can do.”
Cherry-Garrard: The Worst Journey in the World Vol. II, 1922, S. 436.
Huxley: Scotts Last Expedition, Vol. II, 1914, S. 318.
Cherry-Garrard: The Worst Journey in the World Vol. II, 1922, S. 441–443.
Cherry-Garrard: The Worst Journey in the World Vol. II, 1922, S. 443: “It is impossible to express and almost impossible to imagine how difficult it was to make this decision.”
Cherry-Garrard: The Worst Journey in the World Vol. II, 1922, S. 453.
Cherry-Garrard: The Worst Journey in the World Vol. II, 1922, S. 480: “We have found them – to say it has been a ghastly day cannot express it – it is too bad for words.”
Huxley: Scotts Last Expedition, Vol. I, 1914, S. 595.
Huxley: Scotts Last Expedition, Vol. II, 1914, S. 346–347.
Cherry-Garrard: The Worst Journey in the World Vol. II, 1922, S. 482–484.
Cherry-Garrard: The Worst Journey in the World Vol. II, 1922, S. 493: “What a relief it was and how different things seem now!”
Huxley: Scotts Last Expedition, Vol. II, 1914, S. 398–399: “To strive, to seek, to find, and not to yield.”
Cherry-Garrard: The Worst Journey in the World Vol. I, 1922, S. 299–301.
Cherry-Garrard: The Worst Journey in the World Vol. I, 1922, Appendix
Cherry-Garrard, The worst Journey in the World, Vol. I, 1922, S. viii: “For a joint scientific and a geographical piece of organization, give me Scott; […] for a dash to the Pole and nothing else, Amundsen: and if I am in the devil of a hole and want to get out of it, give me Shackleton every time.”
atlasobscura.com
Wilson’s Stone Igloo, atlasobscura.com (englisch, abgerufen am 16. Januar 2013).
South Polar Times, Abbildung und Information zum Expeditionsmagazin auf der Homepage der Ten Pound Island Book Company (englisch, abgerufen am 22. Januar 2013).
thegazette.co.uk
London Gazette. Nr. 26333, HMSO, London, 11. Oktober 1892, S. 5679 (Digitalisat, abgerufen am 12. November 2012, englisch).
theguardian.com
Lucy Moore: The nice man cometh. Artikel in der Onlineausgabe der Zeitung The Observer vom 4. November 2001 (englisch, abgerufen am 16. Januar 2013).
Denford Park (Memento vom 4. Oktober 2013 im Internet Archive), Informationen zum Anwesen auf der Homepage des Hungerford Virtual Museum (englisch, abgerufen am 22. Januar 2013).