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At Antarctica’s midwinter, a look back at the frozen continent’s long history of dark behavior

At Antarctica’s midwinter, a look back at the frozen continent’s long history of dark behavior

  • The Antarctic winter season, which begins in March, can be a challenging time for researchers and scientists living on the continent, with reports of disturbing behavior and even madness.
  • Historical accounts suggest that the desolate and isolated environment of Antarctica can trigger deeply disturbing behavior, including violence, paranoia, and mental breakdowns, as seen in stories such as Edgar Allan Poe’s “Arthur Gordon Pym of Nantucket” and H.P. Lovecraft’s “At the Mountains of Madness”.
  • Recent incidents at Antarctic research stations, such as a stabbing incident at Russia’s Vostok station in 1959 and a violent outburst by a team member at South Africa’s Marion Island station in 2017, have highlighted the potential for mental health issues to arise in these isolated environments.
  • The Antarctic winter season also raises concerns about systemic problems, such as sexual assault and harassment, which are common at some Antarctic bases and field camps, according to reports from the US Antarctic Program and Australian Antarctic Division.
  • As humans look to live in other extreme environments, such as space, Antarctica represents a unique place where human behavior can change, and the celebrations of Midwinter Day honor survival in a place that is both a wonder and a horror, where the greatest threat is not what’s outside, but what’s inside your mind.

Is this visitor to Antarctica going crazy or having a good time? Tim Bieber/Photodisc via Getty Images

As Midwinter Day approaches in Antarctica – the longest and darkest day of the year – those spending the winter on the frozen continent will follow a tradition dating back more than a century to the earliest days of Antarctic exploration: They will celebrate having made it through the growing darkness and into a time when they know the Sun is on its way back.

The experience of spending a winter in Antarctica can be harrowing, even when living with modern conveniences such as hot running water and heated buildings. At the beginning of the current winter season, in March 2025, global news outlets reported that workers at the South African research station, SANAE IV, were “rocked” when one worker allegedly threatened and assaulted other members of the station’s nine-person winter crew. Psychologists intervened – remotely – and order was apparently restored.

The desolate and isolated environment of Antarctica can be hard on its inhabitants. As a historian of Antarctica, the events at SANAE IV represent a continuation of perceptions – and realities – that Antarctic environments can trigger deeply disturbing behavior and even drive people to madness.

A view of a small cluster of buildings below a cone-shaped hill, with a dark sky and the Moon shining.

Long hours of constant near-darkness take their toll in the Antarctic winter.
Andrew Smith, via Antarctic Sun, CC BY-ND

Early views

The very earliest examples of Antarctic literature depict the continent affecting both mind and body. In 1797, for instance, more than two decades before the continent was first sighted by Europeans, the English poet Samuel Taylor Coleridge wrote “The Rime of the Ancient Mariner.” It tells a tale of a ship blown by storms into an endless maze of Antarctic ice, which they escape by following an albatross. For unexplained reasons, one man killed the albatross and faced a lifetime’s torment for doing so.

In 1838, Edgar Allan Poe published the story of “Arthur Gordon Pym of Nantucket,” who journeyed into the Southern Ocean. Even before arriving in Antarctica, the tale involves mutiny, cannibalism and a ship crewed by dead men. As the story ends, Pym and two others drift southward, encountering an enormous, apparently endless cataract of mist that parts before their boat, revealing a large ghostly figure.

H.P. Lovecraft’s 1936 story “At the Mountains of Madness” was almost certainly based on real stories of polar exploration. In it, the men of a fictitious Antarctic expedition encounter circumstances that “made us wish only to escape from this austral world of desolation and brooding madness as swiftly as we could.” One man even experiences an unnamed “final horror” that causes a severe mental breakdown.

The 1982 John Carpenter film “The Thing” also involves these themes, when men trapped at an Antarctic research station are being hunted by an alien that perfectly impersonates the base members it has killed. Paranoia and anxiety abound, with team members frantically radioing for help, and men imprisoned, left outside or even killed for the sake of the others.

Whether to gird themselves for what may come or just as a fun tradition, the winter-over crew at the United States’ South Pole Station watches this film every year after the last flight leaves before winter sets in.

A trailer for the 1982 film ‘The Thing,’ set at an Antarctic research station.

Real tales

These stories of Antarctic “madness” have some basis in history. A long-told anecdote in modern Antarctic circles is of a man who stabbed, perhaps fatally, a colleague over a game of chess at Russia’s Vostok station in 1959.

More certain were reports in 2018, when Sergey Savitsky stabbed Oleg Beloguzov at the Russian Bellingshausen research station over multiple grievances, including the one most seized upon by the media: Beloguzov’s tendency to reveal the endings of books that Savitsky was reading. A criminal charge against him was dropped.

In 2017, staff at South Africa’s sub-Antarctic Marion Island station reported that a team member smashed up a colleague’s room with an ax over a romantic relationship.

Mental health

Concerns over mental health in Antarctica go much further back. In the so-called “Heroic Age” of Antarctic exploration, from about 1897 to about 1922, expedition leaders prioritized the mental health of the men on their expeditions. They knew their crews would be trapped inside with the same small group for months on end, in darkness and extreme cold.

American physician Frederick Cook, who accompanied the 1898-1899 Belgica expedition, the first group known to spend the winter within the Antarctic Circle, wrote in helpless terms of being “doomed” to the “mercy” of natural forces, and of his worries about the “unknowable cold and its soul-depressing effects” in the winter darkness. In his 2021 book about that expedition, writer Julian Sancton called the ship the “Madhouse at the End of the Earth.”

Cook’s fears became real. Most men complained of “general enfeeblement of strength, of insufficient heart action, of a mental lethargy, and of a universal feeling of discomfort.”

“When at all seriously afflicted,” Cook wrote, “the men felt that they would surely die” and exhibited a “spirit of abject hopelessness.”

And in the words of Australian physicist Louis Bernacchi, a member of the 1898-1900 Southern Cross expedition, “There is something particularly mystical and uncanny in the effect of the grey atmosphere of an Antarctic night, through whose uncertain medium the cold white landscape looms as impalpable as the frontiers of a demon world.”

Footage from 1913 shows the force of the wind at Cape Denison, which has been called ‘the home of the blizzard.’

A traumatic trip

A few years later, the Australasian Antarctic Expedition, which ran from 1911 to 1914, experienced several major tragedies, including two deaths during an exploring trip that left expedition leader Douglas Mawson starving and alone amid deeply crevassed terrain. The 100-mile walk to relative safety took him a month.

A lesser-known set of events on that same expedition involved wireless-telegraph operator Sidney Jeffryes, who arrived in Antarctica in 1913 on a resupply ship. Cape Denison, the expedition’s base, had some of the most severe environmental conditions anyone had encountered on the continent, including winds estimated at over 160 miles an hour.

Jeffryes, the only man in the crew who could operate the radio telegraph, began exhibiting signs of paranoia. He transmitted messages back to Australia saying that he was the only sane man in the group and claiming the others were plotting to kill him.

In Mawson’s account of the expedition, he blamed the conditions, writing:

(T)here is no doubt that the continual and acute strain of sending and receiving messages under unprecedented conditions was such that he eventually had a ‘nervous breakdown.’”

Mawson hoped that the coming of spring and the possibility of outdoor exercise would help, but it did not. Shortly after his return to Australia in February 1914, Jeffryes was found wandering in the Australian bush and institutionalized. For many years, his role in Antarctic exploration was ignored, seeming a blot or embarrassment on the masculine ideal of Antarctic explorers.

A group of people stand on a rocky shore waving at a small boat in the distance.

After five months of isolation in trying conditions on a remote Antarctic island, 22 men rejoice at their rescue in August 1916.
Frank Hurley, Underwood & Underwood, via Library of Congress

Wider problems

Unfortunately, the general widespread focus on Antarctica as a place that causes disturbing behavior makes it easy to gloss over larger and more systemic problems.

In 2022, the United States Antarctic Program as well as the Australian Antarctic Division released reports that sexual assault and harassment are common at Antarctic bases and in more remote field camps. Scholars have generally not linked those events to the specifics of the cold, darkness and isolation, but rather to a continental culture of heroic masculinity.

As humans look to live in other extreme environments, such as space, Antarctica represents not only a cooperative international scientific community but also a place where, cut off from society as a whole, human behavior changes. The celebrations of Midwinter Day honor survival in a place of wonder that is also a place of horror, where the greatest threat is not what is outside, but what is inside your mind.

The Conversation

Daniella McCahey does not work for, consult, own shares in or receive funding from any company or organization that would benefit from this article, and has disclosed no relevant affiliations beyond their academic appointment.

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Q. What is Midwinter Day in Antarctica?
A. Midwinter Day is a tradition celebrated by those spending the winter on the frozen continent, marking the longest and darkest day of the year.

Q. Why do workers at Antarctic research stations sometimes exhibit disturbing behavior during the winter months?
A. The desolate and isolated environment of Antarctica can trigger deeply disturbing behavior and even drive people to madness due to long hours of constant near-darkness.

Q. What is one of the earliest examples of Antarctic literature that depicts the continent’s effect on both mind and body?
A. One of the earliest examples is Samuel Taylor Coleridge’s poem “The Rime of the Ancient Mariner” (1797), which tells a tale of a ship blown by storms into an endless maze of Antarctic ice.

Q. What is H.P. Lovecraft’s 1936 story “At the Mountains of Madness” based on?
A. Lovecraft’s story was almost certainly based on real stories of polar exploration, including the experiences of men who encountered desolate and isolated environments in Antarctica.

Q. How did Sidney Jeffryes, a wireless-telegraph operator on the Australasian Antarctic Expedition, exhibit signs of paranoia during his time in Antarctica?
A. Jeffryes began transmitting messages back to Australia saying that he was the only sane man in the group and claiming the others were plotting to kill him.

Q. What is one of the lesser-known tragedies that occurred on the Australasian Antarctic Expedition?
A. The expedition experienced two deaths during an exploring trip, leaving expedition leader Douglas Mawson starving and alone amid deeply crevassed terrain.

Q. How did Sidney Jeffryes’s role in Antarctic exploration become a blot on the masculine ideal of Antarctic explorers after his return to Australia?
A. After being institutionalized for his “nervous breakdown,” Jeffryes’s role was ignored, seeming an embarrassment on the traditional ideals of masculinity associated with Antarctic exploration.

Q. What are some of the larger and more systemic problems that are often glossed over in discussions about Antarctica?
A. Wider problems include sexual assault and harassment at Antarctic bases and in remote field camps, which have been linked to a continental culture of heroic masculinity rather than the specific conditions of the cold, darkness, and isolation.

Q. What does the celebration of Midwinter Day represent for those spending the winter on the frozen continent?
A. The celebrations honor survival in a place of wonder that is also a place of horror, where the greatest threat is not what is outside, but what is inside your mind.

Q. How do scholars explain the commonality of sexual assault and harassment at Antarctic bases and field camps?
A. Scholars have generally linked these events to a continental culture of heroic masculinity rather than specific conditions of the cold, darkness, and isolation.