Operación 90 (''Operation Ninety'') was the first Argentine ground expedition to the
South Pole
The South Pole, also known as the Geographic South Pole or Terrestrial South Pole, is the point in the Southern Hemisphere where the Earth's rotation, Earth's axis of rotation meets its surface. It is called the True South Pole to distinguish ...
, carried out in 1965 by ten soldiers of the
Argentine Army under then-Colonel Jorge Edgard Leal. It was also the first Latin-American expedition to the South Pole. It was named after the target: 90 degree South
latitude
In geography, latitude is a geographic coordinate system, geographic coordinate that specifies the north-south position of a point on the surface of the Earth or another celestial body. Latitude is given as an angle that ranges from −90° at t ...
point (the
geographic South Pole)
The operation had been originally conceived by General
Hernán Pujato in the early 1950s but could not be carried out due a lack of forward bases and icebreakers
The plan was revived in 1961,
and finally approved in July 1962
Preparations began in 1963 and suffered multiple mishaps, including the loss of a Douglas C-47 plane, which crashed while scouting possible routes; the crew was rescued a few days later. Colonel Jorge Edgar Leal, chief of the General Staff's Antarctic Division, was chosen to lead the expedition.
One of the goals of the expedition was to perform scientific measurements and observations. To accomplish this, the soldiers were trained on how to use various meteorological, glaciological, gravimetric, magnetic and topographic equipment.
There was also a political goal: to show that Argentina could exert sovereignty on a portion of Antarctica that the country claims as its own
(See
Territorial claims in Antarctica)
Leal's team departed on six
snowcat vehicles (believed to be
Tucker Sno-Cats based on the spelling used) from
General Belgrano Army Base on October 26, 1965. The main group was preceded by a scouting four-men patrol on a sled drawn by 18 dogs. While the scouts remained at 83° 2″ S, Leal and his men reached the geographic South Pole on December 10. Shortly after, they were met by a radar operator from the
US Amundsen–Scott South Pole Station, who asked them who they were and what they were doing there. After Leal explained that they were not
Soviets, base commander William R. Griffin congratulated them and invited them to share a meal: the first decent food, said Leal, that the group had in some weeks. He also offered the Argentines spare parts to repair their snowcat vehicles, tools, and access to the base's workshop. Leal hesitated, fearing that foreign assistance could diminish the value of the expedition, but ultimately accepted.
They then returned to Base Belgrano, which they reached on December 31. Overall, the mission lasted 66 days.
The group received a hero's welcome upon their return to Buenos Aires and were congratulated personally by President
Arturo Umberto Illia. Leal was promoted to General a few years later
Despite his success, he was pushed out of the military by General
Alejandro Agustín Lanusse,
and spent some time in prison due to his opposition to
Operation Soberanía and the
Malvinas War
Trivia
Before leaving the Amundsen base, Leal and his men were given diplomas recognizing them as members for life of the "Penguin Emperor's Court", a long-running inside joke among Antarctic explorers.
See also
*
List of Antarctic expeditions
References
External links
*
Interview with General Jorge E. Leal*
{{DEFAULTSORT:Operacion 90
Non-combat military operations involving Argentina
History of Antarctica
1965 in Argentina
1965 in Antarctica
Military in Antarctica
Argentina and the Antarctic
Antarctic expeditions
Argentina–United States relations
South Pole