Erich Dagobert von Drygalski (February 9, 1865 - January 10, 1949) was a German geographer, geophysicist and polar scientist. He led two expeditions between 1891 and 1893, which were supplied by the Society for Geoscience of Berlin. One expedition wintere


Erich Dagobert von Drygalski (February 9, 1865 - January 10, 1949) was a German geographer, geophysicist and polar scientist. He led two expeditions between 1891 and 1893, which were supplied by the Society for Geoscience of Berlin. One expedition wintered during the winter between 1892 and 1893 in Western Greenland. He habilitated 1889 for geography and geophysics with the collected scientific evidence. In 1898, Drygalski became associate professor and 1899 extraordinary professor for geography and geophysics in Berlin. He led the first German South Polar expedition with the ship Gauss to explore the unknown area of Antarctica lying south of the Kerguelen Islands. Despite being trapped by ice for nearly fourteen months until February 1903, the expedition discovered new territory in Antarctica, the Kaiser Wilhelm II Land with the Gaussberg. From October 1906 until his retirement, Drygalski was a professor in Munich, where he also presided the Geographic Institute, founded by him, until his death. In 1910, he took part in Count Ferdinand von Zeppelin's expedition to Spitsbergen and participated in other expeditions to North America and northeastern Asia. He died 1949 at the age of 83.


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