Explorer Colin O'Brady sets out on a record-breaking solo crossing of Antarctica
The route has the same starting point Norwegian explorer Roald Amundsen used in 1911, when he became the first to reach the South Pole. O’Brady will trace that history and then go far beyond it. Once he passes the 932-mile mark, every step he takes will be farther than any human has ever gone solo and unsupported on the continent. But he knows how dangerous it will be to try and break this…


















