πŸ“‚ ONE HUNDRED AND FORTY DAYS UNDER THE WORLD
Produced by the National Film Unit
Black and white film stills
35mm cellulose acetate negative
Preservation Master

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Produced by the National Film Unit
Black and white film stills
35mm cellulose acetate negative
Preservation Master
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            [additionalDescriptionItem] => Still photographic film (125 film), not motion picture film. 
Strip of five negatives.

Shots of a Diploma of Honour (Diploma d'honore)  and an award medal earned by "One Hundred and Forty Days under the World" at an Italian documentary film festival held in 1972.

Catalogue synopsis of film: One summer's work by New Zealand scientists in the Ross Dependency in the Antarctic and the exploration of some of the last unmapped regions. The mysteries of the snow-covered continent are probed by geologists, biologists and physicists at the Scott Base laboratory and on expeditions, possibly among the last to be made with huskies. H.M.N.Z.S. Endeavour brings supplies from Wellington, while ice- breakers of the United States Navy cut a passage for her through the pack ice to McMurdo Sound. Made in wide-screen format and colour, this is possibly the most notable piece of cinema to come from the Antarctic.
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Item

R24069211

1964

Physical

Open

Still photographic film (125 film), not motion picture film.

Strip of five negatives.

Shots of a Diploma of Honour (Diploma d'honore) and an award medal earned by "One Hundred and Forty Days under the World" at an Italian documentary film festival held in 1972.

Catalogue synopsis of film: One summer's work by New Zealand scientists in the Ross Dependency in the Antarctic and the exploration of some of the last unmapped regions. The mysteries of the snow-covered continent are probed by geologists, biologists and physicists at the Scott Base laboratory and on expeditions, possibly among the last to be made with huskies. H.M.N.Z.S. Endeavour brings supplies from Wellington, while ice- breakers of the United States Navy cut a passage for her through the pack ice to McMurdo Sound. Made in wide-screen format and colour, this is possibly the most notable piece of cinema to come from the Antarctic.


Wellington repository

Photograph

28

[3]

No restrictions on content.

These records are restricted access due to preservation reasons related to their format or technical requirements.

Contact Archives New Zealand for permission to view or the availability of alternative access provisions. Viewing is by appointment only.

These records are restricted under section 49(1)(a) of the Public Records Act 2005.


Research Services, Archives New Zealand, PO Box 12050, Wellington 6144, New Zealand.


πŸ—ƒ W3939

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