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Expedition finds remains of UK researcher who died in Antarctica 66 years ago

Dennis 'Tink' Bell (L) pictures with colleagues in 1959
11 Aug 2025 19:38

LONDON (PA Media/dpa)

The remains of a British meteorologist who died in Antarctica around 66 years ago have been discovered in a melting glacier, the British Antarctic Survey (BAS) has said.

Dennis "Tink" Bell, 25, died after falling down a crevasse on a glacier at Admiralty Bay on King George Island on July 26, 1959.

A team from the Henryk Arctowski Polish Antarctic Station found his remains among rocks exposed by a receding glacier on January 19 this year, the BAS said on Monday.

Bone fragments were carried to the Falkland Islands on the BAS Royal Research Ship Sir David Attenborough and handed to the coroner for British Antarctic Territory Malcolm Simmons, who brought them back to London from Stanley.

DNA testing carried out at King's College London finally matched the remains with samples from Bell's brother David and his sister Valerie Kelly.

"When my sister Valerie and I were notified that our brother Dennis had been found after 66 years we were shocked and amazed," David Bell, now living in Australia, said.

Bell trained as a radio operator in the Royal Air Force before joining the Falkland Islands Dependencies Survey (FIDS) as a meteorologist in 1958.

He was stationed for a two-year assignment at Admiralty Bay, a small UK base with half a dozen men, on King George Island - one of the South Shetland Islands which lie in the Southern Ocean about 124 miles off the northern coast of the Antarctic Peninsula.

On July 26, 1959, Bell and three of his colleagues - meteorologist Ken Gibson, surveyor Jeff Stokes, and geologist Colin Barton - left base with two dog sledges to climb the glacier and carry out survey and geological work.

But on the way up, the soft snow made the journey difficult, and the dogs began to show signs of tiredness.

"To encourage them Bell went ahead. tragically without his skis," the BAS said.

"Suddenly he disappeared leaving a gaping hole in the crevasse bridge through which he had fallen."

According to accounts in the British Antarctic Survey records, the other members of the team made attempts to recover Bell's body but their efforts were thwarted by declining weather conditions. 

"The confirmation of the remains found on Ecology Glacier as those of Dennis 'Tink' Bell is both a poignant and profound moment for all of us at British Antarctic Survey," Professor Jane Francis, Director of BAS, said.

"Dennis was one of the many brave FIDS personnel who contributed to the early science and exploration of Antarctica under extraordinarily harsh conditions.

"Even though he was lost in 1959, his memory lived on among colleagues and in the legacy of polar research. This discovery brings closure to a decades-long mystery and reminds us of the human stories embedded in the history of Antarctic
science."

The Polish expedition which recovered Bell's remains also found over 200 personal items, including the remains of radio equipment, a flashlight, ski poles, an inscribed Erguel wristwatch, a Swedish Mora knife, ski poles and an ebonite pipe stem.

Source: DPA
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