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Wilhelm Filchner

German explorer

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BY The Editors of Encyclopaedia Britannica | Last Updated: Sep 9, 2021 | View Edit History

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Wilhelm Filchner
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Born:
 
September 13, 1877 Munich Germany
Died:
 
May 7, 1957 (aged 79) Zürich Switzerland

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Wilhelm Filchner, (born September 13, 1877, Munich, Germany—


died May 7, 1957, Zürich, Switzerland), scientist and explorer who led
the German Antarctic expedition of 1911–12.

In 1900 Filchner crossed the Pamirs, the mountainous region of


central Asia now chiefly within Tajikistan, and he made an expedition
to Tibet in 1903–05. Sailing for Antarctica in the Deutschland (1911),
he penetrated the Weddell Sea at 77°50′ S early in 1912 and charted
the Luitpold Coast (which he named for the prince regent of Bavaria)
between 29° and 37° W. In March the ship became trapped in the pack
ice and drifted until it finally became freed at 63°37′ S, 36°34′ W on
November 26, 1912. In Tibet again (1926–28), Filchner conducted
cartographic surveys and magnetic observations; he also made
a magnetic survey of Nepal (1939–40). His writings include Das
Rätsel des Matschu (1907; “The Riddle of the Matschu”), Zum
sechsten Erdteil (1923; “To the Sixth Continent”), and Ein
Forscherleben (1950; “An Explorer’s Life”).

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