360 SCOTT’S LAST EXPEDITION 
F 
Feet: varied condition on the march, (i.) 
127: warmth—effect of nature of surface, 
(ii) 45 
Fenwick, Mr., (i.) 4 
Ferrar Glacier, (ii.) 287 et seg.: ‘apposed’ 
with Taylor Glacier, (ii.) 136, 288: cliffs, 
(ii.) 127: coral reef structure, (ii.) 128: 
geological section at top of Lower Ferrar, 
(ii.) 130: movement, (i.) 282, (ii.) 136: 
sunholes on Lateral Tongue, (ii.) 128 
Ferrar, Mr. H. T., (ii.) 300 
Ferrying on an ice floe, (ii.) 198, 274, 2. 196 
Finger Valleys, (ii.) 294 
Finnesko, (i.) 91, 114, 372, il. 228 
Finnesskis, (ii.) 227 
Fire outbreaks in the hut—second winter, 
(ii.) 221, 229 
Firms supplying stores, (ii.) 339-41: em- 
ployees’ interest in Expedition, (ii.) 340 
Fish: catches, (i.) 184, 195, 220, il. 186: 
frozen into ice, (i.) 149, 150, 152: glacier 
‘ice, fish found in, (ii.) 142: new genera 
and new species, (ii.) 333: seal’s stomach, 
fresh fish in, (ii.) 90 
Flashlight—photography, (i.) 202, 203, 
208: signalling purposes, possibilities for, 
(i.) 209 
Flat Iron headland—portage, (ii.) 176 
Fog banks, dispersal of, (ii.) 44 
Fog Bay, (ii.) 13 
Food—hut, fare in, (i.) 199: Mid-winter 
menu, 1912, (ii.) 223: seals and penguins 
as, see titles Seals and Penguins: simple 
fare v. luxuries, (i.) 188: sledging diets, 
see Sledging Journeys: vegetables, fresh, 
brought by ship, (ii.) 228 
Football, (i.) 177, 180, 185, 186, 191, 194: 
Debenham’s accident, (i.) 300, 306, (ii.) 
153, 225 
Forage, (i.) 3, (ii.) 342 
Forde, R., P.O., (i.) 2: cooking, ill. (ii.) 
166: crevasse, jammed in, (ii.) 196: Depot 
Journey (Autumn), (i.) 97 note, 116: De- 
pot Journey (Spring), (ii.) 199 et seq.: 
frostbite on hand, (i.) 286, 293, (ii.) 166: 
Granite Harbour Geological Expedition, 
(ii.) 152: sledgemaster, (ii.) 125: snow- 
blindness, (ii.) 194 
Fossils—Campbell’s finds, (i.) 82,86: Cloud- 
maker Moraine, (ii.) 221: Gondola Ridge, 
(ii.) 179: Mt. Buckley (i.) 388, (ii.) 300: 
New Zealand—Mt. Potts, (ii.) 255 
Four-man team, (ii.) 199 
Fram, (ii.) 58 
Fraser, Messrs. James & Sons—Honorary 
Auditors, (ii.) 339 
Fresh-water cascade, il]. (i.) 71 
Frostbite and sunburn combined, (ii.) 74, 
117 
Frostbites. See names of Men and Ex- 
peditions 
Frost rime, (i.) 131 
Frost smoke, (i.) 173, il. (ii.) 34 
Fry’s chocolates, appreciation of, (ii.) 167 
Fuel allowance on sledging journeys. See 
title Sledging Journeys 
Funds of the expedition, (ii.) 338 
G 
GarpEntnc—Gran’s seakale, (ii.) 173, 182: 
Simpson’s hyacinth bulbs, (ii.) 219 
Gateway, (i.) 334, 339, App. 22, 437 
Geikie, Sir A., (ii.) 345 
Geology—Debenham’s lectures, (i.) 187, 
279: instruction, price of—Nelson’s offer, 
(i.) 211: oldest rocks, (ii.) 295: Scott’s 
interest in, (i.) 145 and note: South Vic- 
toria Land—faulting and volcanic out- 
breaks, (ii.) 299, geological history, (ii.) 
295 et seq., glacial geology résumé, (ii.) 
285 et seqg.: Work of expedition—sum- 
mary of geological journeys, (ii.) 301-2. 
For particular mountains, districts, &c., 
see their names 
Geology, Cape, (ii.) 166, 183 
Gilbert, Sir Humphrey, quoted, (i.) 166 
Glacial geology of Victoria Land—résumé, 
(ii.) 285 et seq. 
‘Glaciated’—use of word, (i.) 210, (ii.) 284 
Glacier Moat, (ii.) 135 
Glacier Tongue, (i.) 94 et seqg., 174: end 
broken away in March, 1911, journey of, 
(i.) 283, (ii.) 158, 194 
Glaciers—face of glacier, ill. (ii.) 59: glass- 
roof and bottle-glass ice, (ii.) 129, 140, 
141, 178: ice splitting in the cold, (ii.) 
135: marine organisms found on, (i.) 
196, 230, (ii.) 144: movement, (i.) 282, 
(ii.) 173, 183, 282, 292, 307: soundings in 
connection with, (ii.) 274:—outlet glacier 
valleys, z//. (ii.) 288: problems, (i.) 266: 
tongues, (ii.) 307-8. See also names of 
Glaciers 
Glass-roof ice, (ii.) 129, 140, 141, 178 
‘Glazed frost,’ (i.) 47 
