Apsley Cherry-Garrard (German Wikipedia)

Analysis of information sources in references of the Wikipedia article "Apsley Cherry-Garrard" in German language version.

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aad.gov.au

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archive.org

  • 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. I, 1914, S. 632 (Distanztabelle).
  • 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

ats.aq

bedfordshire-news.co.uk

berkshirehistory.com

cambridge.org

journals.cambridge.org

christies.com

dailymail.co.uk

dailyrecord.co.uk

dnw.co.uk

  • Lot 773. Informationen auf der Homepage des Auktionshauses Dix Noonan Webb, London (englisch, abgerufen am 24. Juni 2013).

findagrave.com

geographic.org

  • The Cloudmaker, Eintrag auf geographic.org (englisch, abgerufen am 8. Januar 2013).
  • Mount Cherry-Garrard, Eintrag auf geographic.org (englisch, abgerufen am 16. Januar 2013).
  • Garrard Glacier, Eintrag auf geographic.org (englisch, abgerufen am 16. Januar 2013).
  • Cherry Icefall, Eintrag auf geographic.org (englisch, abgerufen am 16. Januar 2013).

hertsmemories.org.uk

  • Adam Jones-Lloyd: Apsley Cherry-Garrard, Kurzbiographie auf hertsmemories.org.uk vom 6. Oktober 2011 (englisch, abgerufen am 10. Dezember 2012).

imdb.com

marinespecies.org

nytimes.com

query.nytimes.com

oxforddnb.com

screenonline.org.uk

stanford.edu

tenpound.com

  • 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

waymarking.com

  • Foto der Statue und der Gedenktafel in der St. Helen’s Church von Wheathampstead auf waymarking.com (englisch, abgerufen am 10. Juni 2013).

web.archive.org