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German educational film: Alfred Wegener and The Greenland Expedition

Film | Digitized | Accession Number: 2002.189.1 | RG Number: RG-60.3660 | Film ID: 2602

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    German educational film: Alfred Wegener and The Greenland Expedition

    Overview

    Description
    This is part one of a three part film of which USHMM has all three parts. (Film IDs 2587, 2591, and 2602). Footage of Alfred Wegener and his crew as they embark on the first phase of their journey (via ship) to Greenland to explore the island. CU of Wegener, smoking a pipe, and another crew member on the ship's deck. VS of the cargo being loaded and unloaded from the ship, the cargo included supplies, food, horses, etc. MCU of the ships helm, the ship is named the Gustav Holm. VS of the icy waters that the ship encounters. The natives of the island come to meet the ship at its port of call, and to help unload all of the equipment. VS of the men jumping from one chunk of floating ice to another in order to carry the equipment to shore. VS, Wegener and crew setting up their base camp near the shore, panoramic views of the shoreline and the snow capped mountains in the distant BG. Portions of the crew begin the journey into the icy mountains, still transporting some equipment by sea.
    Duration
    00:11:26
    Date
    Event:  1930-1931
    Locale
    Greenland
    Credit
    United States Holocaust Memorial Museum, gift of Steven Zabin
    Contributor
    Producer: Puchstein film
    Subject: Alfred Wegener
    Producer: Reichsstelle fur den Unterrichtsfilm [RfdU]
    Biography
    Alfred Wegener (Nov. 1, 1880 - Nov. 1930) studied in Berlin, Heidelberg, and Innsbruck. After obtaining his doctorate in 1904, this geophysicist, meteorologist, and climatologist followed his brother Kurt to the Aerological Observatory in Lindenberg. Alfred Wegener's first expedition from 1906 to 1908 was to set the course taken during the rest of his life, for Greenland became the place he carried out the bulk of his research work. He was described by a contemporary as "quiet man with a charming smile." From 1909 to 1919 as a lecturer at the University of Marburg, he began to search for paleontological, climatological and geological evidence in support of his theory of continental drift, which he first presented to the scientific world in 1912. Wegener also conducted research on thermodynamics and cloud physics. After expeditions to Greenland in 1906 and 1912, he returned in 1929 and 1930, as a professor at the University of Graz, aiming to measure the thickness of ice with the help of a new technique. In November 1930, he and his companion Rasmus Villumsen died while returning from camp in the middle of the Greenland ice to their base camp on the west coast, about 400 kilometers away.

    Physical Details

    Language
    Silent
    Genre/Form
    Instructional.
    B&W / Color
    Black & White
    Image Quality
    Good
    Time Code
    01:00:00:00 to 01:11:26:00
    Film Format
    • Master
    • Master 2602 Film: positive - 16 mm - b&w - print - A-wind
      Master 2602 Video: Betacam SP - PAL - small
      Master 2602 Film: positive - 16 mm - b&w - print - A-wind
      Master 2602 Video: Betacam SP - PAL - small
      Master 2602 Film: positive - 16 mm - b&w - print - A-wind
      Master 2602 Video: Betacam SP - PAL - small
      Master 2602 Film: positive - 16 mm - b&w - print - A-wind
      Master 2602 Video: Betacam SP - PAL - small
    • Preservation
    • Preservation 2602 Film: negative - 16 mm - polyester - b&w - duplicate negative - B-wind - Kodak - 3234
      Preservation 2602 Video: Betacam SP - NTSC - small
      Preservation 2602 Film: negative - 16 mm - polyester - b&w - duplicate negative - B-wind - Kodak - 3234
      Preservation 2602 Video: Betacam SP - NTSC - small
      Preservation 2602 Film: negative - 16 mm - polyester - b&w - duplicate negative - B-wind - Kodak - 3234
      Preservation 2602 Video: Betacam SP - NTSC - small
      Preservation 2602 Film: negative - 16 mm - polyester - b&w - duplicate negative - B-wind - Kodak - 3234
      Preservation 2602 Video: Betacam SP - NTSC - small
    • User
    • User 2602 Film: positive - 16 mm - b&w - silent - workprint
      User 2602 Film: positive - 16 mm - b&w - silent - workprint
      User 2602 Film: positive - 16 mm - b&w - silent - workprint
      User 2602 Film: positive - 16 mm - b&w - silent - workprint

    Rights & Restrictions

    Conditions on Access
    You do not require further permission from the Museum to access this archival media.
    Copyright
    Copyright Undetermined
    Conditions on Use
    Owner of copyright, if any, is undetermined. It is possible this is an orphan work. It is the responsibility of anyone interested in reproducing, broadcasting, or publishing content to determine copyright holder and secure permission, or perform a diligent Fair Use analysis.

    Keywords & Subjects

    Administrative Notes

    Film Provenance
    Colonel Alexander Zabin, MD shot 16mm color films as a U.S. Army surgeon in Europe during World War II. He also obtained a collection of 16mm German film productions, many under the label Reich Scientific and Educational Film body. Col. Zabin's son Steven Zabin donated the film collection to the United States Holocaust Memorial Museum in May 2002.
    Note
    This story was filmed over a period of two years (1930/31).
    See RG-60.3650, Film ID 2591 and RG-60.3647, Film ID 2587 for other parts of this film.

    Alfred Wegener took part in four expeditions to Greenland. He was the only German to participate in a Danish expedition led by Ludvig Mylius-Erichsen - the so-called 'Denmark Expedition of 1906-08' - to explore and survey the as yet unknown regions of northeast Greenland. He applied the techniques for aerological research of the upper atmosphere and conducted the first ever meteorological studies to be performed in a polar climate, using kites and fixed balloons at heights of up to 3000 meters. He later used the results for his thesis. He also gathered the basic experience of living and traveling in Greenland, writing in his diary, "I believe that the decision to participate in this expedition will be decisive for my whole life."

    In 1912/13, Wegener and Danish glaciologist Johann Peter Koch returned to Greenland. After wintering in northeast Greenland, during which they performed glaciological and climatological measurements, they succeeded in traversing northern Greenland from east to west with two other team members. Half-starved, they finally reached their destination on July 15, 1913; their horses did not survive the ordeal, and it was only by chance that they were rescued by an Inuit. Later, Wegener said that this expedition was his most successful and happiest undertaking.

    Wegener planned and led his last two expeditions to Greenland, which were subsequently named the 'Alfred Wegener German Expedition to Greenland.' He carried out a preliminary expedition in 1929 with Johannes Georgi, Fritz Loewe, and Ernst Sorge to explore the glacier for ascent. His main expedition in 1930/31 with fourteen German participants was to create an all-year meteorological and glaciological profile of Greenland's inland ice sheet with three stations. In November 1930, Wegener and his Inuit companion, Rasmus Villumsen, died after trying to provide the central 'Eismitte' station with sufficient supplies for the winter. The expedition was completed by his brother, Kurt Wegener.
    Film Source
    Dr. Steven Zabin
    File Number
    Legacy Database File: 3829
    Record last modified:
    2024-02-21 08:04:09
    This page:
    https:​/​/collections.ushmm.org​/search​/catalog​/irn1002680

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