Chinese expedition team overwinters in Antarctica
By Liu Shiyao, People’s Daily
When the northern hemisphere embraced the
summer solstice, its longest day of the year on June 21, members of China’s 36th
Antarctic expedition team were spending the longest night of the South Pole at
the country’s research bases Zhongshan and Great Wall Stations in Antarctica. The
day is also known as the Midwinter Day.
It was pitch-dark outside at 10 am in Antarctica,
when nothing could be seen except a power station, a sewage treatment building,
and a waste incineration building that are lighted all the time during the
polar night period.
The illumination helped bring the shadowy
figures of a few icebergs located a little further away in the sea to the view
from the windows of Zhongshan station.
Since late May, when Antarctica entered the
polar night period, the sun was no longer in sight.
However, glimmering in the clouds is visible in
the northern skies when the weather is clear at noon, presenting reddish or
crimson colors.
Sun Xiaoyu, a member of the wintering team at
the Zhongshan station and head of the scientific investigation group, together
with other eight members of the group, would enter the darkness every day for
research tasks according to their own schedules.
Antarctica is an ideal and natural lab for
scientific researchers because of its rare landforms, climate, and magnetic
field. In particular, the environmental changes in the extremely cold polar
nights during the winter offer the best opportunity for special scientific
experiments.
Every trip of the researchers is an exploration
of the unknown world, as they are often confronted with constant dangers on the
surface of sea ice.
Different varieties of icebergs and ice cracks
radiating from them are seen everywhere on the surface of sea ice, while no one
can tell whether the ice is thick enough to hold their weight.
Because it’s barely possible to identify the
ups and downs of the snow-covered ice when there is no sunlight, the
researchers have to take every step cautiously among disordered ice chunks and
snow banks more than a meter high with great difficulty.
According to Sun, once a bearing of a bogie
wheel on their snowmobile was broken about five kilometers away from Zhongshan Station
because of the bumpy ice surface, and they couldn’t use their basic maintenance
kits to repair it. Fortunately, the communication network worked well, which
enabled them to ask for help from the station.
It was over 20 degrees Celsius below zero then,
and Sun and his colleagues waited on the ice for around four to five hours,
during which period they ate up all the chocolate they brought and were
freezing all over. Fortunately, the rescue arrived timely.
Overwintering in the Antarctica means
challenges both physically and mentally.
Qin Zhonghao, one of the overwintering members
of Zhongshan station, who is also the doctor of the team, said the wind in
Antarctica is the driest and the strongest wind he has ever experienced.
It feels like a knife cutting on the face, Qin
said, adding that every time when they go out, his fellow team members always
have to spend a considerable amount of time putting on protective device to
ensure no skin exposure.
However, the wind in Antarctica is rather
crafty, as it knows how to get to you.
Sometimes the researchers would take off their
gloves in order to perform tasks more flexibly, or they simply forget to tuck
in their clothes before work. In this case, their faces and hands could easily
become chapped, or get frostbite.
“My heart aches every time I dress the wounds
for my colleagues, so I often remind them to stay in good protection almost in
a half-begging and half-warning way,” Qin said.
It is always dark outside during the
overwintering period, when team members at the Antarctic research stations
often suffer psychological imbalance caused by physiological changes due to
lack of sunlight. Besides, they feel lonely and worry about their families when
they are far away from home for a long time.
According to Qin, apart from proactively
seeking positivity, researchers also take part in group activities for mutual
support.
They watch films on Monday and Thursday, and
exercise every day, Qin disclosed, adding “People can get overthinking when they
are alone. By communicating more with each other, we can give and receive more
comfort.”
Qin Donglei, a member and cook of the
overwintering research team of Zhongshan station, prepared a nice meal for his
colleagues on the Midwinter Day.
Sitting at a long table made up of three
smaller tables, the 22 team members enjoyed the delicious food and pleasant
conversations.
“In an effort to continue the Antarctic
research tasks, my 21 fellow team members chose to stick to their posts. It was
our group’s trust in me that gave me this opportunity to cook for them and
ensure that they can enjoy every meal here,” said Qin, who is resolved to carry
on his mission, though the food materials are limited and it is hard to cater
for the appetites of all the members who come from different parts of China.
The job is fulfilling not only because it’s
based on a sense of mission, but that he enjoys the close bond with his fellow
team members, Qin noted.
![]() |
Photo taken at China’s Antarctic research
station, the Great Wall station, on Nov. 24, 2019, shows a Chinese national
flag fluttering in the wind. Photo by Sun Jianxin/People’s Daily Online |

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