As a promising young scientist, Racoviță was selected to be part of an international team that started out on a research expedition to Antarctica, aboard the . The expedition was led by the Belgian officer
Adrien de Gerlache, who was also the ship's owner.
Ship and crew On 16 August 1897, under the
aegis of the Royal Society of Geography in
Brussels, the
Belgica, a former Norwegian wooden
whaler, left the port of
Antwerp, setting sail for the South. It was the ship that gave its name to the whole expedition. The three-mast ship was equipped with a 160 horse-power engine. The 19 members of the team were of various nationalities. The first mate of the vessel was
Roald Amundsen – who was to conquer the
South Pole in 1911. Apart from Racoviță, the team was made up of Belgian physicist
Émile Danco, Polish geologist and oceanographer
Henryk Arctowski with his assistant
Antoni Bolesław Dobrowolski and American physician
Frederick Cook.
Scientific work . The team left the deck of the ship 22 times, in order to collect scientific data, to conduct investigations and experiments. Racoviță was the first researcher to collect
botanical and zoological samples from areas beyond the
Antarctic Circle. He found the first flowering plants that were collected in Antarctica, and collected the type specimens of the flightless
midge Belgica antarctica, the only insect that can survive year-round in Antarctica. Belgica made the first daily
meteorological recordings and measurements in Antarctica, every hour, for a whole year. The scientists also collected information on
oceanic currents and
terrestrial magnetism, with as many as 10 volumes of scientific conclusions being published at the end of the expedition, which was considered a success.
Obstacles The expedition encountered several hardships. Between 10 March 1898 and 14 March 1899,
Belgica was caught between ice blocks, making it impossible to sail any further. The crew had to carve a canal through a layer of ice, in order to generate a waterway by which to sail to a navigable body of water.
Belgica returned to Europe in 1899 without two team-members, who had died during the expedition: Norwegian mariner Carl Wiencke (lost overboard), and Émile Danco {died natural causes}. Racoviță's diary, published in 1899, makes mention of the difficulties that the team-members had to endure. Photos of the time show that he was hardly recognisable after returning from the expedition. The results of his research were published in 1900, under the title ''La vie des animaux et des plantes dans l'Antarctique
("The life of animals and plants in Antarctica"). A year after his return, Racoviță was appointed director of the Banyuls-sur-Mer resort and editor of the review Archives de zoologie expérimentale et générale''. == Later life ==