Introduction
Fuglesongen (The Bird Song), a small island off of Spitsbergen in northwestern Svalbard covering approximately 4.1 km2, was not the site of any significant contributions to the history of polar exploration. Historically known as Vogelsang in the late 1800s and early 1900s, it often appears as a mere footnote in the accounts of polar expeditions. The area around Fuglesongen was first explored by Willem Barentsz in 1596, when he seems to have anchored in the narrow strait between Fuglesongen and its neighbouring island Klovningen (Cloven Cliff) (Conway, Reference Conway1906, p. 13). During the early 1600s, contemporary explorers (e.g. William Baffin) attempted to push round the north-west corner of Spitsbergen and were probably the first to set foot on Fuglesongen (Conway, Reference Conway1906, p. 76). In 1818, an expedition under David Buchan and John Franklin shot 40 reindeer on Fuglesongen (Conway, Reference Conway1906, p. 289). Several other famous polar explorers, including Benjamin Leigh Smith and Adolf Erik Nordenskiöld, also mentioned passing Fuglesongen or anchoring nearby in their narratives.
The most intriguing aspect of Fuglesongen among polar historians is the fact that Nils Strindberg, during the ill-fated 1897 Andrée balloon expedition, allegedly dropped a small tin onto it with a letter to his fiancée Anna Charlier, when the balloon passed over the island (Strindberg, Reference Strindberg, Andrée, Strindberg and Frænkel1897a). Strindberg, together with Knut Frænkel and expedition leader Salomon August Andrée, had departed in their hydrogen balloon Örnen (The Eagle) about half an hour earlier from the northern shore of Danskøya (Danes Island), approximately 16 km south-southwest of Fuglesongen. Figure 1 shows the approximate path of Örnen during its initial hour of flight, as it was understood in 1930 when the official narrative from the expedition was released, based on the expedition diaries that had recently been found on Kvitøya (White Island) (Andrée, Strindberg & Frænkel, Reference Andrée, Strindberg and Frænkel1930).
After having passed Fuglesongen, disappearing from the view of the expedition support crew on Danskøya, the three aeronauts’ fate remained unknown until 1930 when their last camp was discovered, by chance, on the desolate island Kvitøya, the easternmost island in the Svalbard archipelago. The recovered diaries (Andrée et al., Reference Andrée, Strindberg and Frænkel1930) told the story about the erratic balloon flight, which lasted nearly three days, the forced landing on 82°56’N latitude and 29°52’E longitude, the attempted 88 days long return march across the ice and the eventual arrival on Kvitøya where they all perished within a few days.
Before the launch, Strindberg mentioned that, when the balloon passed over Amsterdamøya (Amsterdam Island), just north of Danskøya, he would drop a tin containing a message to his fiancée (Stake, Reference Stake2022, p. 134). However, in a letter to Anna Charlier written after the balloon flight and found on Kvitøya in 1930, Strindberg admitted that he had forgotten to do so (Strindberg, Reference Strindberg, Andrée, Strindberg and Frænkel1897b), without providing further details about the tin. Naturally, the search for the tin on Amsterdamøya, organised soon after the departure, came up empty (Stake, Reference Stake2022, p. 134). At the last camp on Kvitøya, Strindberg’s diary from the balloon flight was found, consisting of a series of brief notes in his almanac. One isolated sentence in that diary forms the basis for this paper: “My tin with farewell words to Anna was thrown at Vogelsang.” [in Swedish: “Min burk med afskedsord till Anna kastades på Vogelsang.”] (Strindberg, Reference Strindberg, Andrée, Strindberg and Frænkel1897a).
It is unclear what kind of tin Strindberg used as a container for the letter, as the type, size and material are not detailed in any primary sources. Some later narratives, lacking citations, suggest it was a film canister. Although possible, this idea may be derived from Strindberg’s letter to his fiancée (Strindberg, Reference Strindberg, Andrée, Strindberg and Frænkel1897b), in which he states in the same sentence that he took some photographs at the launch site before preparing the final letter for her, which he intends to throw down onto Amsterdamøya. The idea of a film canister also appears to have been influenced by the 1982 Swedish biographical drama film Flight of the Eagle, which depicts Strindberg using such a container in a scene set at Fuglesongen. The only primary sources available, aside from Strindberg’s own writings from 1897, are Stadling (Reference Stadling1897, p. 3), who does not specify the intended container for the letter, and Stake (Reference Stake2022, p. 134), who mentions that Strindberg was supposed to drop a “case” [in Swedish: fodral] containing the letter. However, given the small variety of sturdy tins brought on the expedition, only a few possibilities remain. These include cylindrical containers; film canisters and tins made of copper, brass or tinned iron sheets used for storing collected samples; and rectangular containers made of copper or aluminium for holding supplies such as provisions and cooking alcohol (Andrée et al., Reference Andrée, Strindberg and Frænkel1930; Edström, Reference Edström1931). In a 2011 personal communication, Sander Solnes, a former conservator at the Svalbard Museum, mentioned that a tin made of copper or brass on an island in the Arctic would not have corroded significantly during this period; hence, the tin Strindberg used as a container for the letter could very well still exist.
Using Strindberg’s diary entry as a reference, the second author of this paper went ashore on Fuglesongen with a group of 13 in 2011 to search for the tin (Uusma, Reference Uusma2013). The group used metal detectors to explore the relevant northern part of the island for over 9 h but to no avail. The literature does not reveal any other documented systematic search for the tin on Fuglesongen. Since the tin has never been found, the contents of the letter from Strindberg to his fiancée remain unknown.
There appear to be only three possible explanations for the failed search for the tin on Fuglesongen. First, the search expedition may simply have been unable to find the tin, even though it still was present on the site. It may have been stuck among rocks or have been concealed over time by organic material. Some areas of the island are both extremely steep and a maze of tumble-down rocks of different sizes. The tin may have been lost under a recent rockfall, as sections of the hillsides in the area may have collapsed due to loosening permafrost caused by climate change. Second, something (or someone) may have relocated the tin. The most likely suspect would then probably be the wind. Third – which is the premise for the analysis in this paper – the tin might have been accidentally thrown onto Klovningen, an island of similar size and shape located approximately 2.4 km east of Fuglesongen (see Fig. 1). Due to dense and thick clouds that substantially limited visibility during the part of the balloon flight over these islands, there could have been some confusion among the crew members regarding their current location.
The expedition support crew on Danskøya witnessed the departure and the balloon’s first hour in the air. One of them was G. R. Celsing, a lieutenant on the icebreaking gunboat Svensksund, used for the transport of the expedition personnel and cargo from Sweden. Celsing published a paper on the expedition in the scientific journal Ymer, in which he described the departure. He noted that the balloon ascended to an estimated altitude of 700 m before disappearing beyond Fuglesongen, only to briefly reappear east of the island before it returned to its more northerly course to eventually vanish from sight at the horizon (Celsing, Reference Celsing1897, pp. 233–234). He also attached a sketch showing the last three positions in which the balloon was visible to him (see Fig. 2).
Although Celsing did not explicitly refer to the sketch in his paper, it is evident that point 1 on Celsing’s sketch denotes the balloon’s position before it altered its course to a more easterly direction and disappeared in a cloud beyond Fuglesongen. Point 2 must indicate either the location where Örnen reappeared, east of the island, or the position of its easternmost location in the area in the vicinity of Fuglesongen. Point 3 probably marks its final sighting before it vanished entirely from sight. Celsing’s vantage point, creating the sketch, was at the launch site on Danskøya. By establishing a line on a standard 2D map, from the launch site through point 2 (see Fig. 3), it becomes evident that the balloon must have experienced a notable eastward drift in the vicinity of Fuglesongen, deviating significantly from the representation in Figure 1. The line clearly intersects the island Klovningen—named after a distinctive cliff near its northern tip, depicted immediately to the left of point 2 in Celsing’s sketch—implying the possibility that the balloon traversed over Klovningen before returning to its original, more northerly path.
The aim of this paper is to analyse the possibility that Strindberg’s tin was actually dropped on Klovningen rather than on Fuglesongen. The structure of the paper is outlined as follows: It begins with a review of the various eyewitness accounts concerning the balloon’s trajectory, in particular regarding the passage of Fuglesongen and its surroundings. Thereafter, Nils Strindberg’s original handwritten diary notes from the passage of Fuglesongen and its surroundings are analysed and discussed in relation to prior interpretations of the aforementioned notes. These different accounts are then analysed in relation to meteorological aspects of how Fuglesongen possibly created local effects in the winds in order to derive an understanding and a detailed timeline regarding the passage. The paper concludes with the hypothesis that the tin, despite Strindberg’s note, may have been thrown onto Klovningen. Consequently, a targeted search for the tin on Klovningen could be justified.
Eyewitness accounts
The events during the start and the first part of the flight of Örnen are well documented (Andrée et al., Reference Andrée, Strindberg and Frænkel1930; Ekholm & Svedenborg, Reference Ekholm and Svedenborg1922; Sundman, Reference Sundman1968). After waiting for stable southerly winds at Danskøya for nearly two weeks, the morning of 11 July 1897, finally provided favourable conditions for the Andrée expedition to attempt a flight to the North Pole; there was a moderate breeze from south-southwest (Strindberg, Reference Strindberg, Andrée, Strindberg and Frænkel1897b). Following thorough discussions among Reference Andrée, Strindberg and FrænkelAndrée, Strindberg and Frænkel, as well as with the expedition support crew, the decision was made. They penned their final letters, and at 1.41 p.m., they boarded the gondola, bidding farewell at 1.43 p.m. The mooring lines securing the balloon in the balloon house were severed, and at 1.46 p.m., the hydrogen balloon Örnen, which had never been test flown, ascended (all times in UTC, based on Strindberg’s real-time diary entries). Critical events unfolded during the next few minutes. The intention was to achieve some level of manoeuvrability for Örnen using guide ropes, which were intended to slide behind the balloon on the ice, and a sail. However, upon launch, the lower sections of all three guide ropes were lost, resulting in Örnen becoming an uncontrollable free-flying balloon. The balloon suddenly lost altitude and briefly dipped into the sea, prompting Reference Andrée, Strindberg and FrænkelAndrée, Strindberg and Frænkel to jettison eight bags of ballast to regain elevation.
At 1.56 p.m., 10 min after departure, the balloon flew over the flat headland at the eastern part of Amsterdamøya, where Strindberg had intended to drop the tin containing the letter to Anna Charlier, on the expected (given the wind) roughly north-northeast trajectory. Eighteen minutes later, at 2.14 p.m., apparently having increased speed, the balloon was flying directly west of Fuglesongen at an altitude of about 600 m. In the following moments, Örnen veered in over Fuglesongen and temporarily vanished from view from Danskøya, both becoming obscured by clouds and by descending below the highest point of Fuglesongen.
Several members of the expedition support crew who witnessed the departure of Örnen from Danskøya documented their experiences and memories from the event. Below is a review over these narratives, with respect to Örnen’s passage of Fuglesongen and its surroundings.
Lieutenant G. R. Celsing (Reference Celsing1897, pp. 233–234) wrote in the scientific journal Ymer: “The balloon finally disappeared behind Vogelsang, only to reappear for a moment east of this island, after which it again moved north and disappeared.” [In Swedish: “Ballongen försvann slutligen bakom Vogelsang för att åter visa sig ett ögonblick öster om denna ö, hvarefter den åter drog sig åt norr och försvann.”].
Lieutenant G. V. E. Svedenborg, the designated alternate crew member in case Andrée, Strindberg or Frænkel became unable to participate in the balloon flight, described his observations from the launch in an article in the Swedish newspaper Aftonbladet, on 27 July 1897 (Svedenborg, Reference Svedenborg1897): “We saw the balloon, after just over half an hour, go behind Fogelsang. In the lee of this island, it seems to have moved slightly eastward, but then appeared to resume its previous direction.” [In Swedish: “Vi sågo ballongen efter något öfver en half timme gå bakom Fogelsang. I lä om denna ö tycks den ha dragit sig något åt öster, men syntes sedan återtaga sin förra riktning.”]. It is worth noting that Svedenborg also published a more extensive piece about the Andrée expedition 25 years later (Ekholm & Svedenborg, Reference Ekholm and Svedenborg1922) but did not provide any details about the passage of Fuglesongen at that time.
J. Stadling, a correspondent for the newspaper Aftonbladet with the assignment to report from the expedition, published an article covering the launch of the balloon, on 23 July 1897 (Stadling, Reference Stadling1897): “Here, Örnen made a new turn eastward over the northern tip of the island Fogelsang, whereupon it disappeared into a cloud. After a while, it became visible again in a north-northeast direction between the islands Fogelsang and Cloven Cliff, whereupon it once again veered westward and finally disappeared from our sight approximately one hour after its ascent.” [In Swedish: “Här gjorde Örnen en ny svängning mot öster öfver ön Fogelsangs norra udde, hvarpå den försvann i ett moln. Om en stund blef den åter synlig i nordnordostlig riktning mellan öarna Fogelsang och Cloven Cliff, hvarvid den ånyo svängde mot vester och slutligen försvann ur vår åsyn cirka en timmes tid efter dess uppstigande.”]. Thus, Stadling’s narrative clearly indicates that the balloon zigzagged across the area, rather than following the straight course depicted in Figure 1. It is worth noting that Stadling also published a longer article about the Andrée expedition in 1898 in The Century Illustrated Monthly Magazine (Stadling, Reference Stadling1898), but he also did not reveal any further information about the passage of Fuglesongen in that piece.
A. Stake, the engineer responsible for the hydrogen production in Danskøya, recorded in his diary, which remained unpublished until 2022 (Stake, Reference Stake2022, p. 131): “… then proceeded in a straight line between Pike’s Point [a landmark on Danskøya close to the point where the balloon was launched] and the northwestern corner of Vogelsang, over which it ascended and disappeared among the clouds. We observed it for about 1 h.” [In Swedish: “… gick så i rak linje mellan Pikes udde och nordvästra hörnet av Vogelsang över vilken den höjde sig och försvann bland molnen. Vi sågo den ca 1 timme.”]
A. Machuron, a mechanic and representative for the balloon manufacturer, H. Lachambre, documented the passage of Fuglesongen in his book about the expedition (Lachambre & Machuron, Reference Lachambre and Machuron1898, p. 302–304): “We see it clear the top of the hill, and stand out clearly for a few minutes against the blue sky, and then slowly disappear from our view behind the hill. Scattered along the shore, we stand motionless, with full hearts and anxious eyes, gazing at the silent horizon. For one moment then, between two hills we perceive a grey speck over the sea, very, very far away, and then it finally disappears.”
Dr. G. Violet, a correspondent for the German newspaper Lokal-Anzeiger, conveyed details about the expedition in a telegram, reproduced in the Swedish newspaper Svenska Dagbladet on 20 July 1897 (Violet, Reference Violet1897): “… it looked as though it was being pressed against the cliffs at Vogelsang, but with the aid of binoculars, we could see how it hovered a few meters above them and now completely free, continued northward. At exactly 3 o’clock, the balloon disappeared at the horizon.” [In Swedish: “…. Det såg ut, som om den trycktes mot klipporna vid Fågelsång, men med beväpnade ögon kunde vi se, hur den sväfvade några meter öfver dem och nu alldeles fri fortsatte mot norr. På slaget 3 försvann ballongen vid horisonten.”]
Yet another eyewitness, supposedly an officer on Svensksund according to Ekholm and Svedenborg (Reference Ekholm and Svedenborg1922) and apparently also a correspondent for the newspaper Stockholms Dagblad, wrote anonymously an article about the departure in the paper (Då Andrée steg upp, 1897), but with no further details about the passage of Fuglesongen. (Most likely, Celsing was this anonymous writer.)
Among the other main members of the expedition support crew who witnessed the departure, Captain C. A. Ehrensvärd did not produce any personal writings about the event, yet he pointed out in an interview (Andree: Svensksunds återkomst, 1897) that Violet’s prior account regarding the departure was inaccurate. Similarly, Lieutenant C. G. Norselius, having not authored any personal documents relating to the departure, highlighted inaccuracies regarding Violet’s narrative in an interview (Svensksund åter hemma, 1897). The surgeon aboard Svensksund, Dr. Lembke, while not having published any personal accounts, was also interviewed (Svensksund åter hemma, 1897) but did not specifically address any details of the departure.
As shown, the eyewitnesses at the launch site in Danskøya did not perfectly agree on the details of how the passage of Fuglesongen occurred. However, in a summary of the course of events during the departure of Örnen, Ekholm & Svedenborg (Reference Ekholm and Svedenborg1922) emphasised that Celsing’s, Svedenborg’s and Stadling’s accounts were portrayed in a consistent and believable manner, but that neither the account by Violet nor the narrative by Machuron were reliable, since they differed in several aspects from the Swedish authors’ relatively uniform description. Consequently, Ekholm relied primarily on Celsing’s account in his chronicle. It should be noted that this analysis by Ekholm was conducted eight years before the final camp on Kvitøya was discovered and, thus, was not in any way biased from Strindberg’s diary notes.
Sundman (Reference Sundman1968), who compiled an otherwise magnificent collection of source material about the Andrée expedition, relied solely on Celsing (Reference Celsing1897) in his description of Örnen’s passage over Fuglesongen and its surroundings. Thus, the consensus among scholars seems to be that the most reliable eyewitness accounts are Celsing’s, Svedenborg’s and Stadling’s. Stake’s diary, recently published, also supports these accounts.
Strindberg’s diary notes
Several diaries and notebooks were discovered scattered at the final campsite of the Andrée expedition on Kvitøya in 1930. Among these findings was Nils Strindberg’s annotated almanac from 1897, located at the tent site. In this almanac, comprising 142 pages in total, Strindberg made his diary entries. The notes in the almanac have been analysed by the authors of this paper, with particular attention given to the entries spanning pages 57–58 (see Fig. 4). These pages cover Strindberg’s notes on the events surrounding the balloon launch and the initial 77 min of the flight, including the notation about dropping the tin at Fuglesongen. Notably, the pre-printed dates on the spreads do not correspond to the dates of Strindberg’s handwritten entries.
Strindberg’s diary notes were already published in 1930 (Andrée et al, Reference Andrée, Strindberg and Frænkel1930), but the re-analysis in this paper has revealed some previously overlooked details. By studying all handwritten entries within the entire almanac, a discernible pattern emerges: it becomes evident that Strindberg begins almost every new paragraph with an indentation, followed by text lines starting at the far-left margin. This structural understanding allows for the identification of which lines of text were written in sequence: those beginning at the far-left margin are consequently linked to a preceding, indented line. In addition, some previous interpretations of the diary notes made upon their initial publication (Andrée et al., Reference Andrée, Strindberg and Frænkel1930) were found to be incorrect. For example, there is, in fact, no period on line 9 after Strindberg’s note about forming fogs, which alters the understanding of lines 9–10. Using these insights, the authors of this paper have also conducted a new translation of the diary notes into English.
Tables 1–4 present the translated version and analysis of the content of pages 57–58 in Strindberg’s diary. The complete Swedish version, which notes inaccuracies in previous interpretations, is included as an appendix. Note that Strindberg’s chronometer, known as Kullenberg 5566, was initially not accurately set, running 9 min ahead of the correct time. He only became aware of this problem 64 min post-launch, as indicated by a notation on the right page, line 25. Therefore, both Strindberg’s indicated time and the corrected time are referenced in Tables 1–4.
The next step is to examine Strindberg’s account of his observations with regard to the passage over the Fuglesongen area. In lines 7–8, Strindberg describes his observations of the northernmost part of Fuglesongen from an altitude of 600 m, which corresponds to point 1 on Celsing’s sketch (“h = 600 m North Cape 2 27”). At this point, the elevation of the island is about 300 m. Thus, if the tin had dropped there, it would have traversed through the air for approximately 300 m. Given the average speed of the balloon, the current wind speed can be estimated to somewhere around 10 m/s, indicating that the tin may not have landed where Strindberg had intended. When the tin left Strindberg’s hand, it had the same horizontal velocity as the balloon, and the wind likely supported its velocity rather than slowing it due to air friction. Thus, the tin could even have landed in the water without Strindberg noticing it from a relatively large distance.
In the following paragraph (lines 9–10), Strindberg mentions the formation of fog (“Fogs are forming 2.29”), corroborating eyewitness accounts of the balloon disappearing into clouds at this time. In line 11, Strindberg notes: “Quiet and still.” This is noteworthy, given that the act of documenting this particular observation here implies that he has not previously experienced the journey as quiet and still. Given the aerostatic nature of Örnen, a hydrogen balloon flying freely with the speed of the wind, the gondola conditions could have been completely calm, provided sufficient height. Due to the friction of air against the surface, the airflow near the surface is always turbulent. This is characterised by rapid fluctuations in the wind in all three dimensions, much faster than the inertia of the balloon would allow it to adjust. The intensity of the turbulence typically decays with height up to, here, typically a few hundred metres. Apart from the tumultuous events during and immediately after the launch, when the balloon was close to the surface, the journey ought to have been quiet and still all the time up to this point. However, the only external circumstance that was documented to have changed at this time, which may have prompted him to make the note, is the formation of fog. It is easy to imagine that Strindberg in this situation became more aware of the stillness when he was deprived of his visual impressions and had to rely solely on hearing and the sensation of movement. If the fog was dense around Örnen with a loss of visibility it is possible that Strindberg also lost the ability to orient himself. This is further supported by the fact that Strindberg was neither making any notes at this time about the balloon significantly losing altitude nor was he noting that the course was simultaneously deviating significantly to the east. When visibility cleared again, it is possible that the balloon was over Klovningen, the island closest in proximity. This is about 2 km further east, and at an approximate speed of 10 m/s, this would have taken about 3 min. This opens up the possibility that the tin may have been dropped there, under the mistaken belief that they were still situated above Fuglesongen.
Should the tin indeed have been dropped at Fuglesongen, this event would have occurred at a time between lines 7 and 13 in the diary notes (i.e. between 2.18 p.m. and 2.24 p.m., corrected time). It is worth noting that Strindberg refrained from documenting this important event in real-time, despite having the opportunity, as it was calm and quiet. Instead, he prioritised calculating and documenting the balloon’s average speed at lines 12–13, noted as “Speed average 0.57 km/minute.” Could this discrepancy imply that the tin was not dropped during these minutes, possibly due to poor visibility, preventing Strindberg from seeing the ground?
It was not until approximately 30 min after the tin drop that Strindberg made a note of it, as seen in lines 27–29: “My tin with farewell words to Anna was thrown at Vogelsang.” This is one of the few sections on the spread written in past tense. It should also be noted that it is written in passive voice. Could this suggest that either Andrée or Frænkel threw the tin, while Strindberg was making navigational computations, perhaps doing so with less attention to recording which island it was dropped on?
Analysis
The purpose of this section is to analyse the passage over Fuglesongen and its surroundings, based on comparisons of Strindberg’s notes and the eyewitness accounts, in order to deduce a detailed timeline of the passage thereby providing a deeper understanding of the likelihood of either Fuglesongen or Klovningen being the actual target for Strindberg’s tin.
First, Örnen’s altitude when they had just swung in over Fuglesongen at 2.18 p.m. was, according to Strindberg, approximately 600 m. This estimation seems relatively reliable; Celsing (Reference Celsing1897) estimated the altitude before the crossing of Fuglesongen to be 700 m, Stadling (Reference Stadling1897) mentioned 800 m and Svedenborg (Reference Svedenborg1897) 500 m. However, we know that the balloon must have begun to descend rapidly once it had flown in over Fuglesongen, even though Strindberg never mentioned this explicitly in his notes since both Celsing (Reference Celsing1897) and Svedenborg (Reference Svedenborg1897) agreed that the balloon disappeared behind Fuglesongen, and the highest peak on the island—Rotgangsfjellet—is only 387 m high. Lachambre and Machuron (Reference Lachambre and Machuron1898) also mentioned that the balloon disappeared behind Fuglesongen. Furthermore, at 2.24 p.m., Strindberg wrote that a guide rope touched the water. The remains of the longest guide rope, after its lower part had been lost at departure, was 105 m (Ekholm & Svedenborg, Reference Ekholm and Svedenborg1922); thus, the altitude of the balloon at this point was probably about 100 m. Thus, they must have descended approximately 500 m in 6 min, and once again, the balloon was positioned over water, not land, at that time. It is remarkable that Strindberg never mentioned this rapid descent in his notes, given that he had time to write that he perceived the journey as still and quiet during these minutes. Could the reason be that he did not realise the balloon was descending so rapidly due to the lack of visibility from the fog he had just mentioned?
Second, Stadling (Reference Stadling1897) mentioned that Örnen disappeared into a cloud rather than becoming obscured from view behind Fuglesongen itself. Neither Celsing (Reference Celsing1897) nor Svedenborg (Reference Svedenborg1897) included the cloud in their narratives, but Stake also mentioned that the balloon disappeared among clouds. The cloud(s) apparently match Strindberg’s observation at 2.20 p.m. in the balloon that fogs were forming.
Third, it seems clear that they swung in over Fuglesongen somewhere at the northern part of the island. Stadling (Reference Stadling1897) wrote that the balloon made a new turn eastwards over the northern tip and Stake (Reference Stake2022) mentioned that it flew to the northwestern corner of Fuglesongen. Strindberg noted at 2.18 p.m. in connection with an estimated altitude of 600 m that he could see the northern tip of the island. However, the island is small, and without clouds at an altitude of 600 m, one can easily see the northern tip of the island even from the southern tip. Thus, Strindberg’s note does not necessarily mean that they flew over or even close to the northern tip.
Moreover, the turn eastwards over Fuglesongen must have been substantially sharper than what the flight path in Figure 1 suggests; otherwise, the balloon could not have been seen to the east of Fuglesongen by eyewitnesses on Danskøya, which Celsing (Reference Celsing1897), Svedenborg (Reference Svedenborg1897) and Stadling (Reference Stadling1897) all agree that they could. In addition, Svedenborg (Reference Svedenborg1897) mentioned explicitly that the balloon seemed to have veered eastwards over Fuglesongen, and Stadling (Reference Stadling1897) stated that it was visible between Fuglesongen and Klovningen. Finally, point 2 in Celsing’s sketch (see Fig. 2) shows that the line along which he saw the balloon when it became visible after having crossed Fuglesongen crosses Klovningen. Thus, the balloon must at this point have been located either at a much more easterly flight path than what Figure 1 indicates, either north of Klovningen or over Klovningen itself. A more realistic path is indicated in Figure 5.
Since Örnen essentially became a free-flying balloon—having lost the lower sections of the guide ropes—the winds dictated its course. We know that the balloon became embedded in a cloud when it reached Fuglesongen and then experienced a rapid descent of 500 m in 6 min. The rapid descent and changes in the path indicate significant shifts in the local winds.
There is no way to reconstruct the winds as they were on the day of the expedition’s departure. Today—unlike at that earlier time—it is well understood that both wind speed and direction vary with height within the so-called boundary layer, the lowest portion of the atmosphere where the flow always becomes turbulent due to its interaction with the solid surface. First, wind speed increases with height, approaching a free atmosphere velocity at the top of the boundary layer, at the region of Andree’s departure likely only a few hundred metres. But the wind also systematically changes direction with height. It was in fact Fritjof Nansen, who during his Fram expedition first observed how sea ice tended to drift to “the right of the wind” (when standing with the wind in the back). During a visit to Stockholm, he mentioned this to the then student Vagn Walfrid Ekman who derived the theory behind the so-called Ekman spiral for the ocean currents (Holton, Reference Holton2004, pp. 127–129); it became his PhD thesis in 1902 (Ekman, Reference Ekman1902), and it has later been confirmed that the same applies to the lower atmosphere. According to this, the wind direction near the surface would, under the influence of the Earth’s rotation, on the northern hemisphere be lower than that in the so-called free troposphere above the turbulent layer. As the wind speed must be zero at the surface, the wind speed would simultaneously increase with height up to the free atmosphere, where the airflow would be smooth, steady, and not turbulent (Holton, Reference Holton2004, pp. 115–116). The simultaneously increasing and turning wind with height is what today’s hot air balloonists, who can regulate their altitude, use to somewhat steer their vehicles. Hence, assuming everything else was horizontally homogeneous and stationary if the airflow close to the surface indicated a southerly flow, it could well have been southwesterly and significantly stronger a few hundred metres above the surface.
Furthermore, complex orography such as mountainous islands may affect the airflow strongly, especially when the lowest atmosphere is negatively buoyant (stably stratified), as it would be with warm air flowing over a colder Arctic surface; the documented southerly airflow may be indicative of such conditions. Depending on both terrain height and the depth of the turbulent atmospheric boundary layer, this can lead to dramatic alterations in both wind direction and speed (Holton, Reference Holton2004, pp. 284–289). If a shallow boundary layer, which is capped by a temperature inversion where the temperature increases with height, is located at a height comparable to the highest terrain, this can have dramatic effects on the flow. The boundary layer, below the inversion, accelerates and diverges to flow around the sides of the island, and the wind direction can therefore change dramatically over short distances in an archipelago. The air aloft, inside the inversion and higher, may instead form a single wave-like feature, where the air rapidly accelerates over and descends on the lee side of the island. A balloon trapped in the inversion at a few hundred metres would experience an acceleration, followed by a loss in altitude. Some distance downstream, a so-called hydraulic jump, may appear, where the boundary layer suddenly deepens, and the flow decelerates back to its background speed. A very similar analogy can easily be found in a stream where water is flowing over a rock that is just barely submerged.
In addition to the obvious effects on visibility, the documented fog may complicate the situation. The fog is likely to be more turbulent, and liquid water may deposit on the balloon. This situation worsens if the temperature in the fog is slightly below freezing (temperature typically decreases by approximately 1° C per 100 m), so-called super-cooled conditions, as fog droplets would freeze into ice on the balloon surface immediately. The added weight of water and ice would impact the balloon’s altitude.
In summary, the effects of orography on the larger Svalbard scale and the Ekman spiral make it quite possible that the free flow at some height west of Svalbard was more westerly than southerly, but terrain blocking at low altitude west of the islands led to the observed south-southwesterly flow. As this flow interacts with the very northwesternmost islets of Svalbard, this can lead to both intense changes in wind speed and direction and fog formation. Therefore, it is plausible to infer that the suggested changes in path and altitude may have been brought about by local topography in combination with atmospheric static stability. Consequently, the distinct eastward deviation in the balloon’s flight path over Fuglesongen while obscured from the observers on Danskøya is plausible.
Discussion
Based on our re-analysis of Nils Strindberg’s diary notes, eyewitness accounts and modern meteorological knowledge, we have found that the previously accepted flight path of the balloon depicted in Figure 1 is incorrect. Instead of following a straightforward trajectory, the balloon traversed the area around Fuglesongen and Klovningen in a pronounced zigzag pattern. This new understanding challenges the established narrative and suggests that the balloon’s journey was more erratic and influenced by immediate environmental factors than previously thought. This revised flight path is crucial for accurately reconstructing the events of the expedition. The zigzag pattern observed in the balloon’s flight was primarily caused by meteorological effects on the local wind patterns created by Fuglesongen’s topography. It is plausible that the eastward turn taken by the balloon led it over Klovningen, unnoticed by Strindberg due to the dense cloud cover at the time. The cloud, perceived by Strindberg as fog, and the resulting limited visibility likely caused confusion about the balloon’s exact position. This possibility suggests that the balloon’s actual flight path may have included a crossing over Klovningen, which has implications for understanding the balloon’s journey and planning future searches for the tin.
So, what can we deduce from this regarding the likely location for Strindberg’s tin drop? We suggest that Fuglesongen, after all, probably remains the prime candidate. Strindberg’s diary entry mentioning the tin was dropped there cannot be overlooked. However, the analyses in this paper introduce several doubts, offering grounds for considering a focused search on Klovningen as justified:
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Given the current understanding of atmospheric dynamics and wind conditions near complex terrain, it is quite possible that the balloon turned more sharply to the east during its flight near Fuglesongen and Klovningen than previously believed. This also suggests the balloon could have been above Klovningen following its passage over Fuglesongen.
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The cloud, perceived by Strindberg as fog, likely complicated navigation for Reference Andrée, Strindberg and FrænkelAndrée, Strindberg and Frænkel. Dense fog significantly reduces visibility, and while the exact thickness of this particular cloud is unknown, poor visibility may have prevented Strindberg from noticing changes in the trajectory. It is possible that during this period of limited visibility and altered course, the balloon crossed the relatively narrow strait between Fuglesongen and Klovningen unnoticed by Strindberg.
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Strindberg’s passive voice in noting the drop of the tin on Fuglesongen leaves open the possibility that the actual drop was made by Andrée or Frænkel while Strindberg was busy with something else. As a result, if this was the case, Strindberg could have misinterpreted where the drop was actually made. However, given the personal nature of the item, it seems likely that Strindberg dropped the tin himself.
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Strindberg penned the note about the tin approximately half an hour after passing the supposed drop area. While he recorded most of his diary notes and reflections in real-time, such as their average speed and the quietness while enveloped in the cloud (despite a rapid descent), other details, such as the drop of the tin with the letter to his fiancée, were added to his diary retrospectively.
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The sole evidence of the tin’s drop location is Strindberg’s solitary note, thereby unverifiable unless the tin is discovered.
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Despite some dedicated efforts, the tin remains undiscovered.
Conclusion
In closing our analysis of this 1897 Andrée balloon expedition mystery, it is important to approach the final conclusion with caution and openness to new possibilities. While the prevailing narrative suggests that Strindberg dropped a message for Anna Charlier on Fuglesongen, our study introduces several uncertainties that challenge this notion. These doubts stem primarily from a critical examination of the sole source indicating the tin’s intended location—Strindberg’s own notation—which itself lacks external confirmation and is complicated by subsequent events and observations not fully aligning with the initial account.
Given these considerations, and the fact that a search on Fuglesongen has not yielded the tin, our analyses suggest that an alternative location, Klovningen, merits attention. This hypothesis is not without its own set of uncertainties; however, it is informed by a reevaluation of the balloon’s trajectory, based on modern meteorological knowledge, potentially leading it closer to Klovningen than previously believed. Therefore, while we maintain a cautious stance regarding the definitive location of Strindberg’s message, the insights garnered from our analysis indicate that a targeted search on Klovningen could be a worthwhile endeavour.
On a more general level, our analyses in this paper underscore the importance of revisiting historical data with fresh perspectives, highlighting the potential for new discoveries in the quest to piece together the past. By questioning established beliefs and considering other possibilities, we might uncover overlooked aspects of history, enhancing our grasp of polar heritage.
Acknowledgements
This research received no specific grant from any funding agency, commercial or not-for-profit sectors.
Competing interests
The authors declare none.
Appendix: Nils Strindberg’s reinterpreted diary notes in Swedish