Hostname: page-component-848d4c4894-hfldf Total loading time: 0 Render date: 2024-05-16T04:48:54.488Z Has data issue: false hasContentIssue false

Charles Swithinbank: glaciologist

Published online by Cambridge University Press:  27 October 2009

Liz Cruwys
Affiliation:
Scott Polar Research Institute, University of Cambridge, Lensfield Road, Cambridge CB2 1ER
Beau Riffenburgh
Affiliation:
Scott Polar Research Institute, University of Cambridge, Lensfield Road, Cambridge CB2 1ER

Abstract

This is the second in a series of biographies entitled ‘Children of the Golden Age,’ the purpose of which is to describe the background and contributions of significant living figures in polar research who began their scientific careers in the years following World War II. Born on 17 November 1926 in Burma, Charles Winthrop Molesworth Swithinbank attended Bryanston School in Dorset before joining the Royal Navy in 1944. He read geography at the University of Oxford and was named assistant glaciologist for the Norwegian-British-Swedish Expedition (1949–52). After completing his DPhil, he joined the Scott Polar Research Institute, where he studied ice distribution in the Northwest Passage. Moving to the University of Michigan (1959–63), he led three expeditions to the Ross Ice Shelf before becoming the first British exchange scientist with the Soviet Antarctic Expedition (1963–65). Returning to the Scott Polar Research Institute, he developed a glaciological programme that led to his appointment as chief glaciologist of the British Antarctic Survey. He became head of the Earth Sciences Division in 1974, a post he held until his retirement in 1986. Swithinbank's contributions to Antarctic science include studies of the deformation, flow, and thickness of glaciers and the interpretation of satellite imagery. He served as president of the International Glaciological Society (1981–84) and has received a number of honours and awards.

Type
Children of the ‘Golden Age’
Copyright
Copyright © Cambridge University Press 2002

Access options

Get access to the full version of this content by using one of the access options below. (Log in options will check for institutional or personal access. Content may require purchase if you do not have access.)

References

Alberts, F.G. (editor). 1995. Geographic names of the Antarctic: names approved by the United States Board on Geographic Names. Second edition. Reston, VA: US Board on Geographic Names.Google Scholar
BAS, SPRI, and WCMC. 1993. CD-ROM and Antarctic Digital Database user's guide and reference manual. Cambridge: Scientific Committee on Antarctic Research.Google Scholar
Brecher, H.H. 1986. Surface velocity determination on large polar glaciers by aerial photogrammetry. Annals of Glaciology 8: 2226.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Cherry-Garrard, A. 1922. The worst journey in the world. London: Constable.Google Scholar
Clarkson, P.D., and Brook, M.. 1977. Age and position of the Ellsworth Mountains crustal fragment, Antarctica. Nature 265 (55): 615616.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Crary, A.P. 1962. The Antarctic. Scientific American 207 (3): 6073.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Cruwys, L. and Riffenburgh, B.. 2002. Bernard Stonehouse: biologist, writer, and educator. Polar Record 38 (205): 157169.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Dalenius, P., and Wilson, O.. 1958. On the soil fauna of the Antarctic and of the sub-Antarctic Islands. The Oribatidae (Acari). Arkiv för Zoologi 11 (23): 393425.Google Scholar
Doake, C.S.M. 1975. Glacier sliding measured by a radioecho technique. Journal of Glaciology 15 (73): 8991.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Giæver, J. 1954. The white desert: the official account of the Norwegian-British-Swedish Antarctic expedition. London: Chatto & Windus.Google Scholar
Hattersley-Smith, G. 1991. History of place-names in the British Antarctic Territory. Cambridge: British Antarctic Survey (British Antarctic Survey Scientific Reports 113).Google Scholar
Herbert, W. 1968. A world of men. London: Eyre and Spottiswoode.Google Scholar
Hoffman, S.J. (editor). 2002. Antarctic exploration parallels for future human planetary exploration: a workshop report. Houston: National Aeronautics and Space Administration (NASA/TP-2002–210778).Google Scholar
Ice. 1975. Profile: Charles Swithinbank. Ice 59: 2122.Google Scholar
Kruchinin, Yu.A. 1968. Inversiya glyatsiologicheskoy zonalnosti v vostochnoy chasti berega printsessy Astrid [Inversion of glaciological zones in the western parts of Princess Astrid Coast]. Trudy Sovetskoy Antarkticheskoy Ekspeditsii 38: 6176.Google Scholar
Kruchinin, Yu.A., and Simonov, I.M.. 1968. Izucheniye lednikovoy tektoniki I morfologii lednikov v rayone stantsii Novolazarevskoy (Antarktida) [Studies of glacier tectonics and morphology in the area of Novolazarevskaya station (Antarctica)]. Izvestiya Vsesoyuznogo Geograficheskogo Obshchestva 100 (3): 212222.Google Scholar
Mellor, M., and Swithinbank, C.. 1989. Airfields on Antarctic glacier ice. Hanover, NH: US Army Cold Regions Research and Engineering Laboratory (CRREL Special Report 89–21).Google Scholar
Robin, G. de Q., Swithinbank, C., and Smith, B.M.E.. 1970. Radio echo exploration of the Antarctic ice sheet. In: International symposium on Antarctic glaciological exploration, Hanover, New Hampshire, USA, 3–7 September 1968. Gentbrugge: International Association of Scientific Hydrology (publication 86): 97115.Google Scholar
Schytt, V. 1954. Journeys of the glaciological party 1950–51. In: Giaever, J.The white desert: the official account of the Norwegian–British–Swedish Antarctic expedition. London: Chatto & Windus: 232244.Google Scholar
Storey, B.C., Dalziel, I.W.D., Garrett, S.W., Grunow, A.M., Pankhurst, R. J., and Vennum, W.R.. 1988. West Antarctica in Gondwanaland: crustal blocks, reconstruction, and breakup processes. Tectonophysics 158: 381390.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Swithinbank, C. 1950a. The Oxford University Iceland Expedition of 1947: meteorology. Meteorological Magazine 79 (938): 222224.Google Scholar
Swithinbank, C. 1950b. The origin of dirt cones on glaciers. Journal of Glaciology 1 (8): 461465.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Swithinbank, C. 1957a. The morphology of the ice shelves of western Dronning Maud Land. In: Norwegian–British-Swedish Antarctic Expedition 1949–52: scientific results. Oslo: Norsk Polarinstitutt: Vol 3A: 137.Google Scholar
Swithinbank, C. 1957b. The regime of the ice shelf at Maudheim as shown by stake measurements. In: Norwegian–British–Swedish Antarctic Expedition 1949–1952: scientific results. Oslo: Norsk Polarinstitutt: Vol 3B: 4175.Google Scholar
Swithinbank, C. 1958a. The movement of the ice shelf at Maudheim. In: Norwegian–British–Swedish Antarctic Expedition 1949–52, scientific results. Oslo: Norsk Polarinstitutt: Vol 3C: 7796.Google Scholar
Swithinbank, C. 1958b. The morphology of the inland ice sheet and nunatak areas of western Dronning Maud Land. In: Norwegian–British–Swedish Antarctic Expedition 1949–52, scientific results. Oslo: Norsk Polarinstitutt: Vol 3D: 97117.Google Scholar
Swithinbank, C. 1958c. The regime of the ice sheet of western Dronning Maud Land as shown by stake measurements. In: Norwegian–British–Swedish Antarctic Expedition 1949–52, scientific results. Oslo: Norsk Polarinstitutt: Vol 3E: 121144.Google Scholar
Swithinbank, C. 1960a. Ice movement inland. In: Norwegian–British–Swedish Antarctic Expedition 1949–52, scientific results. Oslo: Norsk Polarinstitutt: Vol 3F: 145158.Google Scholar
Swithinbank, C. 1960b. Ice atlas of Arctic Canada. Ottawa: Defence Research Board of Canada.Google Scholar
Swithinbank, C. 1966. A year with the Russians in Antarctica. Geographical Journal 132 (4): 463475.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Swithinbank, C. 1968. Radio echo sounding of Antarctic glaciers from light aircraft. In: Ward, W.H. (editor). International Union of Geodesy and Geophysics, International Association of Scientific Hydrology, General Assembly of Bern. Gentbrugge: International Association of Scientific Hydrology (publication 79): 405414.Google Scholar
Swithinbank, C. 1969. Airborne radio echo sounding by the British Antarctic Survey. Geographical Journal 135 (4): 551553.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Swithinbank, C. 1972. Arctic pack ice from below. In: Karlsson, T. (editor). Sea ice: proceedings of an international conference, Reykjavik, Iceland, 10–13 May 1971. Reykjavik: National Research Council: 246254.Google Scholar
Swithinbank, C. 1977. Glaciological research in the Antarctic Peninsula. Philosophical Transactions of the Royal Society of London B 279: 161183.Google Scholar
Swithinbank, C. 1985. A distant look at the cryosphere. Advances in Space Research 5 (6): 263274.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Swithinbank, C. 1988. Satellite image atlas of glaciers of the world: Antarctica. Reston, VA: US Geological Survey (USGS Professional Paper 1386-B).Google Scholar
Swithinbank, C. 1989. Ice runways near the South Pole. Hanover, NH: US Army Cold Regions Research and Engineering Laboratory (CRREL Special Report 89–19).Google Scholar
Swithinbank, C. 1996. Video tape recorded 1996 as part of Oral History Programme. Cambridge: Scott Polar Research Institute.Google Scholar
Swithinbank, C. 1997. An alien in Antarctica: reflections upon forty years of exploration and research on the frozen continent. Blacksburg, VA: McDonald & Woodward Publishing Company.Google Scholar
Swithinbank, C. 1998. Forty years on ice: a lifetime of exploration and research in the polar regions. Lewes, Sussex: The Book Guild.Google Scholar
Swithinbank, C. 1999. Foothold on Antarctica: the first international expedition (1949–1952) through the eyes of its youngest member. Lewes, Sussex: The Book Guild.Google Scholar
Swithinbank, C. 2002a. Vodka on ice: a year with the Russians in Antarctica. Lewes, Sussex: The Book Guild.Google Scholar
Swithinbank, C. 2002b. Contributions to research on Mars. In: SPRI Review2001. Cambridge: SPRI.Google Scholar
Swithinbank, C., Doake, C., Wager, A., and Crabtree, R.. 1976. Major change in the map of Antarctica. Polar Record 18 (114): 295299.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Swithinbank, C., and Robin, G. de Q.. 1987. Fifty years of progress in understanding ice sheets. Journal of Glaciology Special issue: 33–47.Google Scholar
Swithinbank, C., Williams, R.S., Ferrigno, J.G., Seekins, B.A., Lucchitta, B.K., and Rosanova, C.E.. 1997. Coastalchange and glaciological map of the Bakutis Coast, Antarctica: 1972–1990. Reston, VA: US Geological Survey (Map I-2600-F).Google Scholar