CLAIM TO LAND
NORWAY’S TITLE QUESTIONED. A new point in international law has been raised by the claim to territory in the Antarctic made on behalf of Norway by tho explorer Lars Christensen, who sent an airman to drop the Norwegian flag upon a range of mountains. The question is whether the dropping cf a flag or other mark of sovereignty from an aeroplane can he considered effective occupation of the territory. Experts admit that the question seems to be without precedent. The case of the explorer Abel Tasman is believed to tell against Norway. When Tasman found it impossible to land from a boat on Forestier’s Peninsula (Tasmania), he did not content himself with running as close as possible and pitching a flag and pole ashore. He had the carpenter strip off, swim ashore and plant the flag in tho orthodox manner.
j Amundsen’s dropping of a flag on ' the North Pole from an aeroplane is ! not a case in point, since there is no ‘ land at the North Pole and it was not i intended to claim sovereignty over icefields.
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Bibliographic details
Manawatu Standard, Volume LVII, Issue 100, 30 March 1937, Page 11
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182CLAIM TO LAND Manawatu Standard, Volume LVII, Issue 100, 30 March 1937, Page 11
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