Aviation Specials – May 2018

(Frankie) #1
A trip to Antarctica
A typical fl ight starts in Christchurch and
will initially overfl y New Zealand’s South
Island. Delays of up to a week are not
unheard of, as a departure can only take
place when the weather forecast for
McMurdo is good.
For this leg of the journey, passengers
don’t get to travel in the style they might
be accustomed to – canvas benches
arranged along the side of the hold of an
LC-130 or a C-17 are the typical means of
accommodating scientists who need to
reach the South Pole. An hour into the
trip, the rolling greenery is replaced by
the cold and frequently stormy waters
of the Southern Ocean. For the next
four hours there’s nothing for the crew
or passengers to see but blue sky and
blue sea. The point of no return comes
about halfway. If there’s any doubt, the
aircraft returns to Christchurch rather
than chancing an arrival on Antarctica in
marginal conditions. Once past this point
there is no choice but to land at McMurdo,
whatever the weather.
The blue water continues as far as the eye
can see, but during the fi nal hour the fl ight
passes over the vast Antarctic icefi elds
where there are no airfi elds on which to
make emergency landings and no ground
stations for the crew to talk to on the radio.
Just fi nding the runways in marginal
weather can be challenging, as the
only landing aid available is a TACAN

navigation beacon. The Constellation
which crashed in 1970 was on its second
approach in blizzard conditions when it
hit a snow bank – on leaving Christchurch,
the forecast for McMurdo had been fi ne.
If the weather is bad, the alternates
are the skiways sca ered across the
continent – which are viable propositions
in a ski-equipped Hercules, but not in a
jet. Several square miles of the Ross Sea
have also been mapped out – having been
found to be free of crevasses and relatively
smooth – and can be used for a landing in
white-out conditions.
If this area has to be used, pilots must
make a steady descent towards the

surface at around 200ft/min, relying
on the radar altimeter to make a gentle
fl are just above the surface and hoping
the rollout is fairly smooth. It tends to be
practised, rather than performed in anger.
In 1997, two LC-130s had to make just
such landings within ten minutes of each
other. They sustained no damage but the
crew and passengers had to wait until the
storm abated and rescue vehicles could
pick them up.
Since then, GPS systems have made
locating the landing site easier. Even so, if
an aircraft makes a landing on the icefi eld
travellers may have to remain on the
aircraft for several hours while vehicles
reach them, which means everyone who
travels to McMurdo has to carry cold
weather gear with them.
Ge ing to Antarctica is never easy –
indeed, some would suggest its harsh
weather conditions and the state of
its airfi elds are not really suitable for
commercial aviation. Much of the fl ying
will continue to be provided by the
military, as the only civilian fl ights that are
tolerated carry scientists.
There is, however, always going to be
a need to get personnel and equipment
to the continent for research and
exploration. So, every year the ice and
snow runways are cleared to welcome the
LC-130s, C-17s, BT-67s and Twin O ers that
bear the brunt of an amazing airlift during
the short southern summer.

ANTARTICA


26 // Extreme Airports

ABOVE: NASA
Lockheed P-3B
Orion N426NA
landed on the
ice runway on
November 16, 2013.
(NASA / Justin
Miller, Indiana
University)

Basler BT-67s fl y
to airstrips across
the continent.
(Wikimedia
Commons /
Eli Duke and
Wikimedia
Commons /
Timothy Smith-
Tas50)

ANTARCTIC RUNWAYS
Blue ice
An airstrip kept free of snow accumula-
tion. As there are very few air bubbles
in the structure, it’s strong enough
to support wheeled aircraft. The low
coeffi cient of friction of the surface
necessitates reverse thrust – rather than
braking – to be used to slow down, and
the strips are often several miles long.

White ice
A blue ice airstrip with a top surface
covering of compacted snow.

Skiway
An airstrip made from pulverised, com-
pacted snow that’s typically capable of
supporting only ski-equipped aircraft.

22-26_McMurdo.indd 26 11/05/2018 14:07

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