WEALTH IN ANTARCTICA.
“The mineral wealth of the Antarctic is incalculable. Gold, silver, lead molybdenium and other metals exist there, while the knowledge of an immense coalfield was confirmed bv Mawson’s last expedition in 1914. It Las now been proved that the coal area is 1200 miles in length and about 100 miles in width. Those are the known limits; it may be wider still, There are at least seven seams, and an analysis of a sample brought back by Shackleton showed it lo be of iair quality. Mining in the Antarctic would of course, offer problems of its own, but we have to remember that metalliferous ores are worked in Alaska. When the United States bought Alaska from Russia in 1876 for 7,500,000 dollars Britain showed little interest and many thought there was nothing in Alaska worth the money. Since then, however, America’s investment has produced £860,000,000 in gold, or more than the National Debt of Great Britain at the time of the purchase. It is no dream, this wealth from the icelands of the South. Here almost at the doors of our Dominions are mighty seas and boundless lands with unguessed possibilities. That we are alive to the potentialities of this great territory is shown by Mawson’s present expedition”— Captain Mills Joyce, a member of the 1914-19 U Ross Sea Expedtion.
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Northland Age, Volume 1, Issue 48, 13 November 1929, Page 2
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223WEALTH IN ANTARCTICA. Northland Age, Volume 1, Issue 48, 13 November 1929, Page 2
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