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In the second hour this two-part special, NOVA dramatizes the
successful expedition of innovative explorer Roald Amundsen, a
29-year-old Norwegian who turned to the native Inuit to learn their
ancient skills of Arctic survival.
After the Franklin expedition, more than a half-century would pass
before an innovative explorer finally conquered the Northwest
Passage. Unsupported by naval might or government funding, a
29-year-old Norwegian, Roald Amundsen, set out with improbably slim
resources: six men and a tiny, shallow vessel, the Gjoa ,
which he presumed could slip through channels that endangered
larger ships. Caught by the winter ice, Amundsen did what the
earlier Franklin crew had been unable or unwilling to do: he turned
to the native Inuit to learn their ancient skills of Arctic
survival. What they taught him - seal hunting, building igloos and
handling dog teams - not only ensured the success of his voyage but
were crucial training for his conquest of the South Pole in 1912.
NOVA retraces Amundsen's triumphant voyage, taking viewers to the
Canadian Arctic, where his name is legendary among the native
people.