Hostname: page-component-cd9895bd7-gvvz8 Total loading time: 0 Render date: 2024-12-26T13:48:39.606Z Has data issue: false hasContentIssue false

The development of Antarctic tourism

Published online by Cambridge University Press:  27 October 2009

Extract

The Antarctic continent and its off-lying islands are probably the part of the world least disturbed by man. If all human activity beyond latitude 60°S ceased, all that would remain would be the remnants of scientific stations and a few dilapidated structures associated with Antarctic whaling when it was a land-based industry. Many hold the view that efforts should be made to retain this near-pristine condition and there is therefore widespread opposition to all forms of commercial enterprise in the Antarctic, including tourism. While there may be grounds for opposing the harvesting of living resources because of the possibility of over-exploitation, and for opposing the extraction of Antarctic minerals because of the danger of irreversible environmental damage, opposition to tourism, especially as there are no facilities in the Antarctic specifically designed for their benefit, seems more difficult to justify.

Type
Articles
Copyright
Copyright © Cambridge University Press 1980

Access options

Get access to the full version of this content by using one of the access options below. (Log in options will check for institutional or personal access. Content may require purchase if you do not have access.)

References

Antarctic. 1966. News item from The Press, Christchurch, 4 November 1910. Antarctic, Vol 4, No 6, p 292.Google Scholar
Antarctic. 1970a. Antarctic tourism? Antarctic, Vol 5, No 9, p 403–05.Google Scholar
Antarctic. 1970b. No Antarctic air service before 1972–73 summer. Antarctic, Vol 5, No 12, p 500–01.Google Scholar
Antarctic Journal. 1966. US Antarctic activities: long range projection, 1965–1970. Antarctic Journal of the US, Vol 1, No 3, p 84.Google Scholar
Antarctic Journal. 1968. Visitors during ‘Deep Freeze'68’. Antarctic Journal of the US, Vol 3, No 4, p 151.Google Scholar
British Tourist Authority. 1978. Tourism in context, 2nd ed.London, British Tourist Authority.Google Scholar
Goodwin, M. P. 1966. Letter from the Antarctic. (Unpublished manuscript in Scott Polar Research Institute.)Google Scholar
Hillary, E. 1968. Mountaineering and geology in northern Victoria Land. Antarctic, Vol 5, No 2, p 7073.Google Scholar
Kazarian, R. 1977. Media representatives in Antarctica. Antarctic Journal of the US, Vol 12, No 4, p 215.Google Scholar
Reich, R. J. 1979. Tourism in the Antarctic: its present impact and future development. (Unpublished dissertation for the Diploma in Polar Studies, Scott Polar Research Institute, Cambridge.)Google Scholar
Roberts, B. B. 1978. International co-operation for Antarctic development: the test for the Antarctic Treaty. Polar Record, Vol 19, No 119, p 107–20.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
The Dominion. 1980. The Dominion (Wellington, New Zealand), 20 06 1980, p 13.Google Scholar
Washington Post. 1979. A great feeling of conquest at the bottom of the world. Washington Post, 13 04 1979, p D1 and D10.Google Scholar
Wilson, E. A. 1966. Diary of the ‘Discovery’ expedition to the Antarctic regions, 1901–1904. Edited from the original mss in the Scott Polar Research Institute, Cambridge by Ann Savours. London, Blandford Press.Google Scholar