| SECOND PART
CHAPTER 13: The Ice Bank
 (continued)However, during the day of March 16, these tracts of ice completely
 barred our path.  It wasn't the Ice Bank as yet, just huge ice
 fields cemented together by the cold.  This obstacle couldn't stop
 Captain Nemo, and he launched his ship against the ice fields
 with hideous violence.  The Nautilus went into these brittle
 masses like a wedge, splitting them with dreadful cracklings.
 It was an old-fashioned battering ram propelled with infinite power.
 Hurled aloft, ice rubble fell back around us like hail.
 Through brute force alone, the submersible carved out a channel
 for itself.  Carried away by its momentum, the ship sometimes mounted
 on top of these tracts of ice and crushed them with its weight,
 or at other times, when cooped up beneath the ice fields, it split
 them with simple pitching movements, creating wide punctures. Violent squalls assaulted us during the daytime.  Thanks to certain
 heavy mists, we couldn't see from one end of the platform to the other.
 The wind shifted abruptly to every point on the compass.
 The snow was piling up in such packed layers, it had to be chipped
 loose with blows from picks.  Even in a temperature of merely -5
 degrees centigrade, every outside part of the Nautilus was covered
 with ice.  A ship's rigging would have been unusable, because all
 its tackle would have jammed in the grooves of the pulleys.
 Only a craft without sails, driven by an electric motor that needed
 no coal, could face such high latitudes. Under these conditions the barometer generally stayed quite low.
 It fell as far as 73.5 centimeters.  Our compass indications
 no longer offered any guarantees.  The deranged needles would
 mark contradictory directions as we approached the southern
 magnetic pole, which doesn't coincide with the South Pole proper.
 In fact, according to the astronomer Hansteen, this magnetic pole is
 located fairly close to latitude 70 degrees and longitude 130 degrees,
 or abiding by the observations of Louis-Isidore Duperrey, in longitude
 135 degrees and latitude 70 degrees 30'. Hence we had to transport
 compasses to different parts of the ship, take many readings,
 and strike an average.  Often we could chart our course only by guesswork,
 a less than satisfactory method in the midst of these winding
 passageways whose landmarks change continuously. At last on March 18, after twenty futile assaults, the Nautilus
 was decisively held in check.  No longer was it an ice stream,
 patch, or field--it was an endless, immovable barrier formed by ice
 mountains fused to each other. |