Stock Photo - Feb. 05, 1959 - Norwegian ice from the Arctic circle to the equator; During the last few days small blocks of solid ice have been cut out of the Swartis glacier (The black Glacier) situated right under the Artic Circle and transported by helicopter to the nearest road. This ice in bound for Libreville in French Equatorial Africa, and will start from the town of MO, in Northern Norway (near the Arctic Circle) on February 10th, and is expected to take some 20 days. Why all this fuss? it started in a programme on Radio Luxemburg, where a glass wool expert claimed, that, properly isolated, an ice block from the Arctic could be transported down to the hottest Equator without melting. The radio Luxembourg people did not believe this, and they promised to pay 100,000 francs for each kilogram out of a ton which remained unmelted after the transport had been completed and the ice block carried down to the Equator. The glass wool industries of eight European countries, including Denmark, France, Germany Norway and Sweden, accepted the challenge, but released Radio Luxemborg from the bet; it would cost Radio Luxembourg many millions of francs they said, because they claimed that the ice block would not melt at all during the transporting when isolated in glass wool. Now the glass wool industries are going to prove it. A couple of experts from the Norwegian glass wool factory have cut small blocks of ice out of the Svartis Glacier and transported it down to the town of Mo, where the small blocks have been frozen into one huge block of three tons, and this block will then be properly isolated by glass wool, placed on the truck and then be carried from the Arctic cold down to heat of tropic Africa.The truck will also carry a load of medicine to Dr. Albert Schweizer's hospital at Lambarene, the medicine have been presented to Schweitzer's hospital by various organizations in the countries taking part in the ice transport. Photo Shows A helicopter takes away an ice block by net as Sivert Klevan, an engineer in charge of the transport hauls up another. (Credit Image: © Keystone Press Agency/Keystone USA via ZUMAPRESS.com)

Stock Photo: Feb. 05, 1959 - Norwegian ice from the Arctic circle to the equator; During the last few days small blocks of solid ice have been cut out of the Swartis glacier.

Searchable keywords

Choose multiple keywords