Situated on the remote Ross Island, at Cape Royds in Antarctica, is a perfectly preserved piece of history, accessible to a select few brave enough to attempt the perilous journey; the legendary explorer Sir Ernest Shackleton's Hut, built in 1907.
One such person is Matthew Jordan, 34, from Christchurch, New Zealand, who works as a project manager for Antarctic New Zealand.
In a video posted to Jordan's Instagram account, he reveals to his followers the inside of the 116-year-old Hut, complete with hanging laundry, tinned food, and equipment.
Matthew Jordan, 34, with his favorite animals in Antarctica. Matthew Jordan, 34, with his favorite animals in Antarctica. Matthew Jordan"Walking into Shackleton's Hut for the first time I was struck by the relatively small size of the building, that supported 15 men through the 1908 Antarctica winter," Jordan told Newsweek. "The contrast between this building and the modern facilities that we live in is remarkable. My immediate first feeling was that it looked as though the explorers had just gone outside for a bit, and could walk back through the door at any minute. Their socks are still hanging up above their beds."
Ernest Shackleton, (1874 – 1922) was an Anglo-Irish Antarctic explorer who led three expeditions to the Antarctic.
The Hut was built in 1907, when Shackleton, then 33, led his first expedition to Antarctica to reach the Geographic South Pole on the ship the Nimrod. Despite being the first to climb the world's southernmost volcano, Mt. Erebus, after a two-and-a-half-month trek carrying all their own gear, and only 97 miles from their target, Shackleton and his three companions made the famous decision to turn back due to the risk of starvation. The return journey took three months.
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Arguably, Shackleton's most famous endeavor was his attempt to be the first to cross the Antarctic continent via the pole was known as the Imperial Trans-Atlantic Expedition, 1914 – 1917, on the ship called The Endurance. When TheEndurance eventually sank after being locked in ice for nine months, Shackleton told the crew to abandon ship, camping out on the ice flow in temperatures below—15 degrees Fahrenheit, and eventually reaching the uninhabited Elephant Island, the first time that the crew had stood on solid ground in 497 days. Taking five men and traveling 750 miles across the Arctic in a small boat, Shackleton managed to rescue all remaining 22 men, nine months after The Endurance sank.
The Endurance was discovered on March 5, 2022, a hundred years after Shackleton's death.