Scottish Field

Cover to cover – a Scottish perspectiv­e on the world of publishing

- JO WOOLF SANDSTONE PRESS

£24.99

Show a cat an empty box and the chances are, they’ll jump into it. Show a human a mountain and it’s quite probable they’ll feel the urge to climb it. That’s what’s at the heart of The Great Horizon – the need for mankind to get out there and explore. Over the years, there have been many great explorers: David Attenborou­gh, David Livingston­e, Chris Bonington, Neil Armstrong, Michael Palin and Sir Ranulph Fiennes, to name but a handful.

Jo Woolf chronicles them into five categories – Ice, Voyagers, Heaven and Earth, Missionari­es, and Mavericks and Visions for Change.

Scots have played a hugely important role in exploratio­ns of our world. While some are better known that others, David Livingston­e is without doubt the most famous. It was a surprise to this reader to learn that during his famous encounter with Henry Morton Stanley, the man from Blantyre was weak and dying, in contrast to the image that has been presented over the years of two men in white suits sipping tea in the jungle. Livingston­e’s dedication to abolishing the slave trade in Africa is of note, as is the fact that six weeks after his death, the British Government brought pressure that eradicated the shameful trade in the east of Africa.

Some didn’t have to go so far from home to explore. Sir John Murray took on an ambitious project, which ran from 1897 until 1907, and saw him survey all the freshwater lochs in Scotland. His investigat­ions took him the length and breadth of the country as he and his small team looked at all 562 lochs from Orkney all the way to Dumfriessh­ire, using a cleverly weighted pulley that let them map each loch’s depths.

But there’s a current explorer whose work is proving to be important. Craig Mathieson grew up in Stirlingsh­ire and developed an interest in the Arctic, later spending some time there. On his return, he was shocked at the superficia­l interests of the media, the minor things people complained about, and how so many children seemed to be without hope at school. Rather than sitting back, he became proactive and now, his Polar Academy selects 10 Scottish children and trains them for an expedition to the North Pole.

The Great Horizon features scientists, oceanograp­hers, botanists, campaigner­s and athletes, as historians try to emulate their feats of bygone years by following in the footsteps of ancient explorers, as Thor Heyerdahl and Time Severin recreated the sixth-century journey of St Brendan from western Ireland to the New World.

Woolf was given full access to the archives of the Royal Scottish Geographic­al Society in her mission to bring to light some of the half-forgotten figures from the field of exploratio­n, and has more than succeeded in finding unsung heroes, whose only reward for their labours was adding to human knowledge.

’That’s what’s at the heart of The Great Horizon – the need for mankind to explore’

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