Dear valued customer. Please note that our checkout is not supported by old browsers. Please use a recent browser to access all checkout capabilities

Antarctic Regions - Published 1932 by National Geographic

Antarctic Regions - Published 1932 by National Geographic

or make 4 interest-free payments of $14.99 AUD fortnightly with Afterpay More info

Antarctic Regions (1932)

Publisher: National Geographic
Published: October 1932
Scale: 1 : 16,000,000
Size: 664 mm (W) × 484 mm (H)
Orientation: Landscape
Map Type: Historical Exploration & Scientific Map

Published in 1932, Antarctic Regions captures Antarctica at a pivotal moment in the history of exploration — just a few years after Richard E. Byrd completed his historic flight over the South Pole. This map reflects a world in which the southernmost continent was still being actively discovered, measured, and understood.

Produced during the dawn of aerial cartography, parts of the map — particularly its inset regions — were constructed using aerial photographs, a revolutionary technique at the time. The map was accompanied in the same issue of National Geographic by the article “Mapping the Antarctic from the Air: The Aerial Camera Earns Its Place as the Eyes and Memory of the Explorer,” underscoring the technological leap that reshaped polar exploration.

This is a rare visual record of Antarctica as it emerged from the age of heroic exploration into the era of modern science.


🧊 What This Map Shows

  • Antarctic continental outline as understood in the early 1930s

  • Inset regional maps refined using aerial photography

  • Major coastal features and exploration zones

  • Early cartographic interpretations of the polar interior

  • A scientific snapshot from the transition between ground-based and aerial surveying

The map reveals both what was known — and what was still uncertain — about the frozen continent.


✈️ A Turning Point in Polar Mapping

  • Created shortly after Byrd’s pioneering South Pole flight

  • Reflects the first widespread use of aerial cameras in Antarctic mapping

  • Demonstrates how photography transformed exploration accuracy

  • Marks the shift from speculative outlines to observation-based cartography

This map stands at the crossroads of exploration history and technological innovation.


🎨 Cartography & Historical Significance

  • Clean, authoritative early-20th-century National Geographic design

  • Insets highlight regions of particular exploratory focus

  • Scientific clarity balanced with the restraint of pre-satellite mapping

  • A landmark example of interwar-era geographic publishing

It is as much a document of how we mapped Antarctica as it is of the continent itself.


🎨 Materials, Print Quality & Hanging Options

📄 Paper (Classic Framing Option)

  • Printed on high-quality matte paper for crisp linework and text

  • Smooth, low-glare surface — ideal for framing under glass

  • A traditional choice for studies, libraries, and heritage interiors


🔒 Laminated (Write-On / Wipe-Off)

  • Printed on quality paper and encapsulated in protective laminate

  • Durable, waterproof, and tear-resistant

  • Write-on / wipe-off surface compatible with whiteboard markers and map dots

  • Ideal for education, research discussion, and planning

🪵 Optional Timber Hang Rails — Laminated

  • Top and bottom natural timber rails provide structure and balance

  • Bottom rail adds weight so the map hangs flat and straight

  • Prevents edge curl and long-term sagging

  • Supplied with hanging cord — ready to mount on a single hook

Please allow up to 10 working days for laminated maps with hang rails.


🎨 Archival Canvas (Premium Display Option)

  • Printed on 395 gsm HP Professional Matte Canvas

  • Subtle canvas texture enhances tonal depth while preserving fine detail

  • Matte surface reduces reflections compared with glass-framed prints

Archival Pigment Inks

  • Produced using Hewlett-Packard archival, fade-resistant pigment inks

  • Ensures crisp typography, stable colour, and long-term durability

🪵 Optional Timber Hang Rails — Canvas

  • Top and bottom timber rails create a clean, gallery-style presentation

  • Bottom rail adds weight for a perfectly straight hang

  • Prevents edge curl and sag over time

  • Supplied with hanging cord — ready to mount

Please allow up to 10 working days for canvas maps with hang rails.

Canvas editions are intended for display and reference and are not write-on / wipe-off like laminated versions.


📐 Size & Scale

  • Size: 664 mm × 484 mm

  • Scale: 1 : 16,000,000

A refined, wall-friendly format that suits studies, offices, classrooms, and exploration-themed interiors.


📊 Specifications

Attribute Details
Title Antarctic Regions
Publisher National Geographic
Year 1932
Coverage Antarctica
Map Type Historical exploration & scientific
Context Post-Byrd South Pole flight; early aerial mapping
Scale 1 : 16,000,000
Available Formats Paper • Laminated • Laminated + Hang Rails • Canvas • Canvas + Hang Rails
Canvas Weight 395 gsm HP Professional Matte
Inks (Canvas) Hewlett-Packard archival, fade-resistant pigment inks
Size 664 mm × 484 mm
Orientation Landscape

🎯 Who It’s For

  • ❄️ Polar exploration enthusiasts

  • 🗺️ National Geographic collectors — early 20th-century classics

  • 🎓 Educators & libraries — exploration and scientific history

  • 🏛️ Museums & institutions — aviation and mapping milestones

  • 🎁 Gift buyers — distinctive and historically significant


🤝 Our Commitment

This historic National Geographic map is reproduced and printed in Australia with careful attention to clarity, tonal balance, and historical character. Each print is checked and packed with care, ensuring it arrives ready to be displayed and appreciated for years to come.

🛒 Own a moment from the dawn of aerial exploration — choose Paper, Laminated, or Canvas, with optional timber hang rails, and order Antarctic Regions (1932) today.




Related Items