Sydney Kirkby (explorer)

Australian explorer
The basics

Quick Facts

IntroAustralian explorer
PlacesAustralia
isExplorer
Gender
Male
BirthAustralia
The details

Biography

Sydney Lorrimar Kirkby, MBE (born 1933) is an Australian surveyor and Antarctic explorer.

Work

Syd Kirkby was first appointed as Surveyor at Mawson Station for 1956, the third year of ANARE operations in Antarctica.

Syd Kirkby was Surveyor and/or Station Leader of the ANARE 16-month wintering party at Mawson Station for three years: 1956-57, 1960–61, 1980-81. Additionally, he was a member of the summer operations team for four years: 1961-62, 1962–63, 1964–65 and 1979-80.

Kirkby's many accomplishments in Antarctica include establishment of the easternmost, westernmost, and southernmost astrofixes in Australian Antarctic Territory. During his first expedition (1956–57), he was the first man to venture into the Prince Charles Mountains with sled dogs. In the autumn of 1960, he and his team journeyed 400 kilometres through Enderby Land from the Napier Mountains to Mawson station. Between 1961 and 1965, he surveyed more Antarctic territory than any other explorer. His contributions have made a significant impact on the fields of regional geochronology, petrology, tectonics geology, orogeny, glaciology, geomagnetism, and paleomagnetism.

Awards and recognition

Many geographical features in and around Australian Antarctic Territory have been named for Syd Kirkby. Some of these are:

  • Mount Kirkby in the Porthos Range of the Prince Charles Mountains
  • Kirkby Head on Tange Promontory in Enderby Land, near the Russian Molodezhnaya Station
  • Kirkby Shoal in Newcomb Bay, near Casey Station, Shirley Island, Windmill Islands
  • Kirkby Glacier on the eastern boundary of Australian Antarctic Territory in the Trans Antarctic Mountains, Oates Land

Other awards and recognition include:

  • the Polar Medal (1957)
  • Member of the Order of the British Empire (1965)
  • the Gold Medal of the Australian Geographic Society as Adventurer of the Year (1997)
  • nominated by the newspaper The Australian as one of the ten greatest Australian adventurers of the 20th century (1999)

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