Jökull


Jökull - 01.12.2006, Side 84

Jökull - 01.12.2006, Side 84
J. D. Ives Figure 4. Ian and Tony at the Ice Camp north of Miðfellstindur on 6 August, 1953, shortly before their departure for Öræfajökull. This was the last time they were seen. – Ian og Tony við tjaldbúðir norður af Miðfellstindi þann 6. ágúst 1953, stuttu áður en þeir lögðu í sína hinstu för á Öræfajökul. Photo/Ljósm. Jim Exley. son, the park superintendent, was vacationing with his family at the time. Fortunately, Matthew Roberts was staying at the park. He also realized the significance of the discovery and, since he had been in close con- tact with me for some time, accepted the responsi- bility for informing me and asking if I could make a definite identification. He sent me a number of pho- tographs by electronic attachment and assured me that a further visit to the discovery site was being planned. He and three others accompanied Eyjólfur and Alex to the site the following Sunday (9 July, 2006). There followed a painstaking task of collecting, mapping, cataloguing, and photographing and pre- serving what eventually amounted to more than 150 pieces. They included broken tent poles, pieces of tent fabric and clothing, a paraffin stove, crampons, bro- ken skis, a crushed aluminium water flask, two pocket knives, remnants of a small sledge, and pieces of an air mattress. Matthew forwarded to me electronically an additional set of photographs of the items recov- ered together with the map reproduced here as Fig. 1. By telephone and e-mail discussion Matthew and I quickly came to the following conclusion: the equip- ment, without a doubt, represented the remains of that taken by Ian and Tony on their fateful journey from the Ice Camp to Öræfajökull in August 1953. Perhaps the most significant elements were the trade names of the air mattress (Li-Lo) and the paraffin stove (it was a one-pint ‘Burmos’ stove that had been the standard Nottingham expedition issue). I had probably used both items while staying at the Ice Camp in July 1953. But even without these specific pieces, practically all the recognizable items were familiar to me and there was no single piece that was exotic or ‘out-of-place’. 82 JÖKULL No. 56, 2006
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