Albanov wrote a gripping account of his ordeal,
In the Land of White Death, published in Russia in 1917. The
Svyataya Anna was never seen again. She may have sunk, crushed by the polar ice. It was thought she may have been carried by the polar ice drift until she, like the
Fram, broke free on the other side of the Arctic. Two Russian scholars, D. Alekseev and P. Novokshonov, have suggested that, if she did survive the ice, she may have been sunk by a German submarine during the campaign of Spring 1915. In 1914–1915
Otto Sverdrup led a search-and-rescue expedition aboard the ship
Eklips in the
Kara Sea on behalf of the
Russian Imperial Navy. He aimed to find two missing arctic expeditions, those of Captain
Brusilov on the
Svyataya Anna and
Vladimir Rusanov on the
Gerkules, but found no trace of either. Valerian Albanov made repeated requests to Arctic explorer and Admiral
Alexander Kolchak to launch a search expedition for the
Svyataya Anna. In December 1919 Albanov traveled to
Omsk to confer with Kolchak, but the political turmoil in Russia at the time made a relief mission impossible. Explorers announced in 2010 that they had found the bones of one of Albanov's companions. Later that year, a sailor's journal and various other artifacts were found, also on
Franz Josef Land. Among the finds were a pair of sunglasses, which matched a description in Albanov's journal: "We had no effective sunglasses. Our mechanic had fabricated some with pieces of green glass scavenged from gin bottles, but they were essentially useless." In 2006, British musician
V/Vm a.k.a.
The Caretaker released an album named
White Death in reference to the expedition, with a picture of
Valerian Albanov as its cover art. == References ==