Journey to the End of the Earth — Tishani Doshi
"To visit Antarctica now is to be a part of that history; to get a grasp of where we've come from and where we could be heading."
1. About the Chapter
'Journey to the End of the Earth' by Tishani Doshi (Indian poet and writer, b. 1975) recounts her experience aboard the 'Students on Ice' programme — a ship that takes high school students to ANTARCTICA. The chapter is: a TRAVEL NARRATIVE (the journey south), a GEOLOGICAL HISTORY (the breakup of Gondwana), and an ENVIRONMENTAL CALL TO ACTION (climate change is happening — Antarctica proves it).
2. The Journey
- Departs from Madras (Chennai). Flies over the Indian Ocean. Stops in South America.
- Boards the Russian research vessel 'Akademik Shokalskiy.'
- Crosses the DRAKE PASSAGE — the roughest stretch of water in the world
- Arrives at ANTARCTICA — the coldest, driest, windiest, highest continent. 90% of the world's ice. If the ice melted: sea levels would rise by ~60 metres.
3. Key Ideas
Gondwana — What Antarctica Tells Us About the Past
- 650 MILLION YEARS AGO: the southern continents (South America, Africa, India, Australia, Antarctica) were JOINED in a supercontinent called GONDWANA.
- Antarctica was at the CENTRE of Gondwana — WARM, GREEN, with DINOSAURS roaming its forests.
- India BROKE AWAY from Gondwana ~140 million years ago, drifted north, and CRASHED into Asia (creating the Himalayas).
- Antarctica FROZE ~35 million years ago. It became the ICE CONTINENT we know today.
- SIGNIFICANCE: Antarctica is a TIME CAPSULE. It preserves — literally FROZEN in ice — the history of the Earth's climate. Ice cores drilled from Antarctica contain bubbles of ancient atmosphere — a record of CO₂ levels going back 800,000 years.
Climate Change — The Urgent Warning
- Antarctica is WARMING. Ice shelves are BREAKING OFF. Glaciers are RETREATING.
- The ice holds enough water to raise sea levels by 60 METRES — submerging every coastal city on Earth (Mumbai, Chennai, Kolkata, all of them).
- The 'Students on Ice' programme aims to EDUCATE the next generation: they will be the ones to live with — or solve — the climate crisis.
The Fragility of Earth's Systems
- Standing in Antarctica: Doshi feels HOW SMALL AND FRAGILE the planet is. From space: a blue marble. From Antarctica: a white continent that holds the planet's future.
- 'The earth doesn't need us. We need the earth.'
4. Themes
1. Antarctica as the Planet's 'Memory'
The ice remembers. Every snowflake that fell 500,000 years ago is still there — compressed into ice, preserving ancient air, ancient climate.
2. The Interconnectedness of Earth
The breakup of Gondwana 140 million years ago shaped India's geography, Australia's isolation, South America's rainforests. The movement of continents — plate tectonics — connected everything.
3. Environmental Urgency
Antarctica is not a distant, irrelevant frozen wilderness. It is the THERMOSTAT of the planet. What happens in Antarctica WILL affect every coastal city in India.
5. Key Lines
- "To visit Antarctica now is to be a part of that history."
- "Six hundred and fifty million years ago, a giant amalgamated southern supercontinent — Gondwana — did indeed exist."
- "The earth doesn't need us. We need the earth."
- "The programme aims to take high school students to the end of the earth... to make them understand the importance of the planet in its present state."
6. Conclusion
Doshi's journey is not just a travelogue — it's a MORAL EDUCATION:
- ANTARCTICA: The coldest, driest, highest continent. 90% of the world's ice.
- GONDWANA: The ancient supercontinent. Antarctica at its heart. India broke away.
- CLIMATE CHANGE: The ice is melting. The seas will rise. The warning is URGENT.
- THE STUDENTS: The next generation. They will inherit this. They must UNDERSTAND it.
'Journey to the End of the Earth' — a chapter that takes you to the literal end of the world, and shows you that the end of the world is also where the world's story begins.
