Class 12 English

Chapter 3 — Journey to the End of the Earth

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Overview

Summary

Chapter 3 of the Class 12 English NCERT textbook (Vistas), "Journey to the End of the Earth", is a non-fiction travel essay by Tishani Doshi. She describes her voyage aboard the Russian research vessel Akademik Shokalskiy to Antarctica as part of Geoff Green's Students on Ice programme, tracing the continent's history as the core of the ancient supercontinent Gondwana and its role as an archive of climate data essential to understanding Earth's past, present and future.

  • Antarctica and GondwanaThe essay reaches back 650 million years to Gondwana, the vast southern supercontinent centred around present-day Antarctica, which thrived for 500 million years before breaking apart to shape the modern world.
  • A living record of climate changeAntarctica holds 90 per cent of Earth's ice and half-million-year-old carbon records locked in its layers, making the frozen continent a vital archive for reading the planet's climate history and its likely future.
  • Students on Ice and small things matteringGeoff Green's Students on Ice takes young people to Antarctica so future policy-makers can absorb, learn and act. The phytoplankton, "grasses of the sea," show that caring for small things keeps the big things in place.
Essentials

Key points & formulas

  1. 01Doshi begins her journey 13.09 degrees north of the Equator in Madras, crossing nine time zones, six checkpoints, three bodies of water, and multiple ecospheres to reach Antarctica.
  2. 02Six hundred and fifty million years ago, Gondwana — a giant amalgamated southern supercontinent centred roughly around present-day Antarctica — existed; it thrived for 500 million years before breaking apart.
  3. 03Antarctica stores 90 per cent of the Earth's total ice volumes and holds half-million-year-old carbon records trapped in its layers of ice, making it a vital archive for studying climate change.
  4. 04Students on Ice, headed by Geoff Green, takes high school students to Antarctica to offer the future generation of policy-makers a life-changing experience 'at an age when they're ready to absorb, learn, and most importantly, act.'
  5. 05Phytoplankton — 'those grasses of the sea' — use photosynthesis to nourish and sustain the entire Southern Ocean's food chain; further depletion of the ozone layer could devastate them and disrupt the global carbon cycle.
  6. 06Antarctica's simple ecosystem and lack of biodiversity make it 'the perfect place to study how little changes in the environment can have big repercussions.'
  7. 07The essay's central parable: 'Take care of the small things and the big things will fall into place' — drawn from the role of microscopic phytoplankton in sustaining life.
Questions

Frequently asked questions

01

What is 'Journey to the End of the Earth' about?

It is a non-fiction travel essay by Tishani Doshi about her voyage to Antarctica aboard the Russian research vessel Akademik Shokalskiy. She was part of Students on Ice, a programme that takes high school students to Antarctica. The essay explores Antarctica's geological history, its role in climate change research, and the importance of phytoplankton to the food chain.

02

Who is the author of 'Journey to the End of the Earth' and what programme was she part of?

The author is Tishani Doshi. She travelled as part of Students on Ice, a programme headed by Canadian Geoff Green that takes high school students to the ends of the world to provide inspiring educational opportunities and foster a new understanding of the planet.

03

What is the Students on Ice programme and why did Geoff Green start it?

Students on Ice is a programme run by Canadian Geoff Green that takes high school students to Antarctica. Green started it because he got tired of taking celebrities and retired, rich curiosity-seekers who could only 'give back in a limited way.' He wanted instead to offer the future generation of policy-makers a life-changing experience at an age when they are ready to absorb, learn, and most importantly, act.

04

What is Gondwana and what is its connection to Antarctica?

Gondwana was a giant amalgamated southern supercontinent that existed 650 million years ago, centred roughly around present-day Antarctica. It thrived for 500 million years when the climate was much warmer and a huge variety of flora and fauna existed. Eventually, the landmass was forced to separate into the continents we know today, and visiting Antarctica now means being part of that geological history.

05

How does Antarctica help us understand climate change?

Antarctica holds half-million-year-old carbon records trapped in its layers of ice. Its ice-cores are a direct archive of the Earth's past climate. Because Antarctica has never sustained a human population, it remains relatively pristine. Scientists study it to assess the impact of rising carbon dioxide levels and to ask whether the West Antarctic ice sheet will melt entirely or whether the Gulf Stream will be disrupted.

06

What is the significance of phytoplankton in the essay?

Phytoplankton are described as 'those grasses of the sea that nourish and sustain the entire Southern Ocean's food chain.' These single-celled plants use photosynthesis — the sun's energy to assimilate carbon and synthesise organic compounds. Scientists warn that further depletion of the ozone layer will affect phytoplankton, which in turn will affect all marine animals and birds of the region and the global carbon cycle. The essay uses them as a metaphor: 'take care of the small things and the big things will fall into place.'

07

What does the chapter say about the impact of human civilisation on the Earth?

The essay states that human civilisations have existed for a paltry 12,000 years — 'barely a few seconds on the geological clock.' In that time, humans have etched dominance over Nature with villages, towns, and megacities. The unmitigated burning of fossil fuels has created a blanket of carbon dioxide around the world, slowly increasing average global temperatures.

08

What are Cordilleran folds and why does the essay mention them?

The essay mentions Cordilleran folds alongside pre-Cambrian granite shields, ozone, carbon, evolution, and extinction as geological phenomena that visiting Antarctica helps one understand. They are part of the deep geological history embedded in the continent — evidence of the processes that shaped the Earth over millions of years.

09

What happened when the ship got stuck in ice near Tadpole Island?

Just short of the Antarctic Circle at 65.55 degrees south, the Akademik Shokalskiy wedged into a thick white stretch of ice between the peninsula and Tadpole Island. The Captain decided to turn back north, but before that, all 52 passengers were instructed to climb down the gangplank and walk on the ocean. Underneath their feet was a metre-thick ice pack, and beneath that, 180 metres of living, breathing salt water. Crabeater seals stretched on ice floes nearby. Doshi called it 'nothing short of a revelation: everything does indeed connect.'

10

Why does the essay argue that Antarctica is 'the place to go' to understand the Earth?

Antarctica is the only place that has never sustained a human population and therefore remains relatively pristine. It stores 90 per cent of the Earth's total ice volumes and holds half-million-year-old carbon records in its ice-cores. Its simple ecosystem and lack of biodiversity mean that even small environmental changes have big repercussions, making it a perfect natural laboratory for studying the planet's past, present, and future.

11

Is the NCERT Class 12 English Vistas PDF free to download?

Yes. The NCERT Class 12 English Vistas PDF, including Chapter 3 'Journey to the End of the Earth', is free to read and download on CBSE PrepMaster. No sign-up or subscription is required.

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More chapters in Vistas

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