532 
SCOTT'S LAST EXPEDITION 
programme, (ii.) 389 ; return to 
Lyttelton, (ii.) 403 ; voyage home, 
(ii.) 404; winter cruise, 1911, (ii.) 
369-73 
Terra Nova Bay — conditions, March 
1912, (ii.) 384, 386 
Terror, Mt., ilL (i.) 84; panorama 
of mountain and glaciers, (i.) 184 
Thermos flasks, value for biological 
work, (ii.) 486 
Thermometer screens, (i.) 265, 267, 
ill. 306, 321 : names, (i.) 2S3 
Three Degree Depot, (i.) 526, 557, 
ilL 526 
Three Kings Island, (ii.) 369 
Tide Crack — absence of, (ii.) 21, 221 : 
Razorback Island, ill. 4 
Tide-gauge, construction and work- 
ing of, (i.) 293, 336 
Tides — McMurdo Sound, (ii.) 487 : 
Nelson's lecture, (ii.) 322 . record 
of, (ii.) 487-8 
Tobacco, solace of, (ii.) 273 
Transport workers' strikes of 1911 
endangering work of Expedition, 
(ii-) 373 
Trawling, (i.) 139 and Hl.y (11.) 405, 
477, 47S 
Tryggve Gran, Mt, (ii.) 265, 427 
Trypanosome — Atkinson's discovery, 
(i-) 309 
Turk's Head — geology, (i.) 417 
Two-man unit — disadvantages, (ii.) 
301 
U 
Upper Glacier Depot, (i.) 512, 562 
V 
Victoria Land. See South Victoria 
Land. 
Vince's Cross, (i.) 123, 207 
Volcanoes — Debenham's lecture, (i.) 
3x6 
Volunteers for Expedition, number 
of, (ii.) 498 
W 
Wallace, A. R., reference to, (ii.) 
483 
Wangamumu — Mr. Cook s hospi- 
tality, (ii.) 37O) 371 
Warning Glacier, (ii.) loi, ill, 102 
Water driven back by tide — eventful 
lunch, (ii.) 2x6 
Weather conditions : First Winter — 
abnormalities and forebodings, 
(i.) 229, 307, 374 ; persistence of 
bad weather, (i.) 348-9, 354 
Granite Harbour, undercastwe^ithet 
at, (ii.) 266 ; Hut Point, (i.) 207, 
242, 431 : overlying layers of air, 
reluctance to mix, (i.) 274 : season 
of 1 91 2 , rapid closing, (i. ) 5 78, 
590, (ii.) 308 : Second Winter 
(1912) — exceptional season, (ii.) 
318, 321, 328; break-up in July, 
(ii.) 330 ; — warm weather, discom- 
fort of, (i.) 211. See also titles 
Blizzards, Temperature, and Wind 
Werchojansk — coldest spot on earth, 
(ii.) 462 
Western Geological Journeys — choice 
of leader, (i.) 20: equipment, (ii.) 
185-7 — total load, 187 
First Expedition, ill. (i.) 246, 
(ii.) 184: boots, condition of, (ii.) 
203, 206 : coaching by Wilson, (i.) 
130 : compass readings — error, (ii.) 
213: cooks, (ii.) 1S7, 206, 216: 
crevasses, (ii.) 201, 203 : Deben- 
ham's photographs, (i.) 266 : gold, 
prospecting for, (ii.) 196 : instruc- 
tions, (ii.) 184 : killer whales' 
attack, (ii.) 202 : limits of survey, 
(ii.) 182 ; literature, (ii.) 199 : re- 
laying, (ii.) 217 : return journey — 
blizzard, &c., (ii.) 214, 218, 219: 
return to Hut Point, (i.) 203, (ii.) 
221 : surface — soft snow, &c., (ii.) 
200, 206, et seq. 218 
Maps, (ii.) 284, 290 : personnel ot 
Party, (ii.) 183-4 ■ physiographic 
features of region traversed — 
Taylor's lecture, (i.) 332 : 
Second (Granite Harbour) Ex- 
pedition, (ii.) 222, ill. 184 : 
blizzards, (ii.) 219, 224, 225, 226, 
248-50, 269, 276, 290; blubber 
stove — difficulties on Cape 
Roberts, (ii.) 277 ; boots, condition 
of, (ii.) 273 ; cooks and cooking, 
(ii.) 244, 266, ill. 244; crevasses 
(ii.) 281 et seq., 284, 287; equip- 
ment — total load, (ii.) 228 ; food — 
birthday delicacies, (ii.) 244, 257, 
274 ; rations reduced (ii.) 273, 
275 ; seals, killing and flensing, 
(ii.) 242, 245, 24G; skuas' eggs, 
(ii.) 253, 257 ; sledging menu, (ii.) 
238: — "Granite House," (ii.) 243, 
245 : headgear, (ii.) 229 : instruc- 
tions, (ii.) 222 : literature, (ii.) 
273 : night marching, (ii.) 234, 
238 : recreations, (ii.) 273 : relay- 
