logo
King praises scientists trying to ‘rescue this poor planet'

King praises scientists trying to ‘rescue this poor planet'

Telegraph21-06-2025

The King has praised British research scientists stationed in the frozen Antarctic for their efforts to 'rescue this poor planet'.
His Majesty recorded a morale-boosting greeting for the annual Antarctic midwinter broadcast, a 30-minute BBC programme especially for the 53 British Antarctic Survey staff isolated on the continent as they mark the shortest and coldest day of the year at the South Pole.
With 24 hours of darkness across some areas and the landscape locked in silence, Midwinter's Day marks the halfway point of the long Antarctic winter and a symbolic milestone as the days begin to stretch back toward light.
The broadcast on Saturday marks its 70th anniversary this year.
The King, a lifelong environmental campaigner, said the research stations highlight the 'role humanity plays, as we struggle to live in harmony with nature'.
He added: 'Each observation, measurement and calculation you undertake adds to the world's understanding of the Earth's fragile systems.
'With the sun shying away from your horizon today, I particularly wanted to send my warmest good wishes.'
King Charles said the charity's work comes at a time when efforts are underway to 'develop an even greater ability to manage the human and animal conflict'.
He added: 'If we're going to rescue this poor planet [from] continuing degradation, and restore some degree of harmony to the proceedings, we must also understand that whatever we take and exploit from nature, we need to give something back in return to enable nature to sustain us.'
The annual BBC broadcast began in 1955, when the only way of communicating with those stationed at the research stations was via shortwave radio.
Now presented by Welsh singer Cerys Matthews, it combines music requests from the base with poignant messages from friends and family and a few famous voices.
The scientists and support staff, including doctors and electricians, who work through the Antarctic winter are known as 'winterers'.
Those living at three British Antarctic Survey research stations, Rothera, Bird Island and South Georgia, face months of total isolation with no sunlight.
Staff traditionally mark Midwinter's Day by getting together and sharing a special breakfast before exchanging handmade gifts and then watching John Carpenter's 1982 horror film The Thing, which sees an alien monster terrorise an Antarctic base.
They then have a celebratory dinner, made by chefs, many weeks after the last delivery of fresh produce.
The ritual is thought to date back to 1902, when Robert Falcon Scott and his expedition team braved their first Antarctic winter. To boost morale, they transformed Midwinter's Day into a moment of joy, complete with decorations, gifts, and a feast.
Staff also receive a letter of thanks from the Prime Minister and His Majesty's Commissioner for the British Antarctic Territory.

Orange background

Try Our AI Features

Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:

Comments

No comments yet...

Related Articles

Unsung observatory worker was UK's first professional female astronomer, experts say
Unsung observatory worker was UK's first professional female astronomer, experts say

The Guardian

timean hour ago

  • The Guardian

Unsung observatory worker was UK's first professional female astronomer, experts say

For more than a century, astronomers assumed she had simply 'computed' complex calculations for the Victorian men who had exclusive use of Cambridge Observatory telescopes. But researchers now say that Annie Walker – a Victorian woman who began working at the observatory in 1879, when she was only 15 – actually observed thousands of stars herself. Previously overlooked evidence indicates Walker was the first British professional female astronomer who was paid a living wage by an observatory in the UK to chart the stars. But unlike the celebrated German astronomer Caroline Herschel, who was granted a salary by King George III to assist her brother William in his work as the court astronomer a century earlier, Walker's work as a trailblazing female astronomer has been neglected. The Institute of Astronomy at the University of Cambridge, which houses its library in the old Cambridge Observatory building, is seeking to put this right. In April the institute managed to get an asteroid – the AnnieWalker – named after its former employee and now the organisation is launching a campaign to find a photograph of Walker to hang in the institute and be used in articles to reassert her rightful place in the history of science. 'She was a real pioneer for women in astronomy – she literally would have recorded the position of thousands of stars,' said the institute's spokesperson Mark Hurn, who has been searching for a photograph of Walker in local archives for '20-odd years'. He is appealing to Guardian readers in the UK and Australia, where Walker died in 1940, for help. 'It would make such a tremendous difference to her legacy to have her photograph.' The daughter of a mill owner, Walker was recruited from her Cambridge boarding school to do routine calculations for astronomers at the observatory. 'That was quite common in the 19th century – it wasn't that unusual for women to do that job. What is unusual is that, in Annie's case, she became trained to use the telescopes. By the 1890s, she was doing the bulk of the observing at the observatory, while still employed as a computer.' Hurn speculates that this happened because the eyesight of Walker's elderly boss, the astronomer Andrew Graham, declined over the 21 years she worked there. 'To observe the stars, she would sit at the eyepiece through the course of the night, waiting for them to cross through the field of the telescope's view, and then she would record the elevation of the telescope and the exact time the star passed.' These numbers would allow her to calculate an exact position for each star, as part of an international project to chart the galaxy. When Graham retired aged 88 in 1903, 'she expected to get his job, but instead a younger man – who Annie had trained on the telescopes herself – was appointed to the role'. This was probably due to a change in the leadership of the observatory, Hurn said. 'John Couch Adams, who was in favour of women's education, was replaced by Sir Robert Ball, a conservative who didn't really approve of women working, particularly in astronomy. Walker's career was blighted by his prejudice.' She resigned in 1903 and emigrated to Nyora in Melbourne, Australia, to be with her brother Frank Walker, a butcher. 'I think she felt she didn't have much of a future in Cambridge.' His living descendants were unable to supply a photograph of her. 'They weren't aware of Annie and her work in astronomy, which is really sad,' said Hurn. Working with an independent historian, Roger Hutchins, the institute has discovered Walker continued to describe herself as an astronomer on the Australian electoral roll in 1909, 'but we've contacted all the observatories out there and we're pretty sure she never worked in an observatory in Australia. We think perhaps she was helping out with her brother's business,' said Hurn. Evidence unearthed by Hutchins has revealed that two catalogues of Walker's work observing the stars were eventually published in the 1920s and 'full credit' given to her by the then director of the Cambridge Observatory, Sir Arthur Eddington. But Hurn thinks Walker probably never knew her contributions to astronomy had been recognised during her lifetime and her status as a pioneer was neglected by previous curators of the observatory's history. 'She was the first professional woman to earn a living from astronomy,' said Hurn. 'But if you asked most astronomers today, they wouldn't know her name.'

Climate week in Exeter comes at 'critical time', expert says
Climate week in Exeter comes at 'critical time', expert says

BBC News

time2 hours ago

  • BBC News

Climate week in Exeter comes at 'critical time', expert says

As the South West experiences its second official heat-alert in two weeks, "the evidence for climate change has never been clearer", an expert has said ahead of a week-long event. The Exeter Climate Forum is bringing together world-leading climate researchers, businesses, policymakers and young comes as the UK Health Security Agency (UKHSA) and the Met Office issued an amber heat-health alert for five regions of England, including the South West. Professor of climate system dynamics at the University of Exeter Peter Cox said: "We've had the warmest years globally in the last two years... this is a critical time to meet up and talk about climate change." Prof Cox said: "We can see evidence that how often you exceed a threshold like 30C, or 35C or especially 40C in the UK, is going up very rapidly with climate change. "I think people are being affected by it and I think most people get it, and the issue is then, how do you connect that to action, from individuals - and individuals are absolutely critical - but also from governments. "I think some progress is being made but it's not enough. And I think more can be done and we've got all the things we need to do it really." The Exeter Climate Conference forms part of the Exeter Climate Forum and is being hosted by the University of Exeter and the Met Office. Organisers say the latest research on the impacts of climate change and "the ways humanity can avoid and adapt to worsening impacts in the future" will be discussed. A government spokesperson said: "We owe it to current generations to seize the opportunities for energy security and lower bills, and we owe it to future generations to tackle the climate crisis, by becoming a clean energy superpower."That's why we have set an ambitious new climate target to reduce emissions by 81% by 2035 – which will give Britain more security, deliver jobs and economic growth."

Starwatch: Spica greets the passing moon
Starwatch: Spica greets the passing moon

The Guardian

time2 hours ago

  • The Guardian

Starwatch: Spica greets the passing moon

This week, the bright star Spica greets the passing moon. The chart shows the view looking south-west from London at 22.15 BST on 3 July 2025. At 8.3 days old, and with 60% of its visible surface illuminated, the moon will be just past its first quarter (half moon) phase and into its waxing gibbous phase, on the way to becoming full next week. Spica is the brightest star in the constellation Virgo, the maiden. It is the 15th brightest star in the night sky and lies about 250 light-years away from Earth. Although it appears as a single object to even our most advanced telescopes, detailed analysis reveals that Spica is in fact a binary star. It is composed of two giant stars, separated by about 18m km, that orbit each other once every four days. One of these component stars has a diameter just under eight times the size of the sun's diameter and the other is four times the diameter. Together they give out more than 12,000 times the light from our sun. From the southern hemisphere, the conjunction will appear to be higher in the sky, and therefore a little easier to see.

DOWNLOAD THE APP

Get Started Now: Download the App

Ready to dive into a world of global content with local flavor? Download Daily8 app today from your preferred app store and start exploring.
app-storeplay-store