Lewis Gordon Pugh SWIMS at North Pole
July 16, 2007
Lewis Gordon Pugh, 37, A british adventure swimmer, has become the first person to ever swim at the North Pole. Doing the stunt to bring awareness to Global Warming in the Arctic, Pugh dove into the 29 degree water.
His swim lasted aproximately 18 minutes and 50 seconds and went for a distance of 0.6 miles. The water, at 29 degrees, is the coldest known temperature that a human has ever been able to swim in.
I hope my swim will inspire world leaders to take climate change seriously. The decisions which they make over the next few years will determine the biodiversity of our world.
I want my children, and their children, to know that polar bears are still living in the Arctic. These creatures are on the front line up here.
I am obviously ecstatic to have succeeded, but this swim is a triumph and a tragedy: a triumph that I could swim in such ferocious conditions but a tragedy that it’s possible to swim at the North Pole.
Pugh’s swim was conducted in a free-flowing waterhole. The hole was used to demonstrate the effects the climate has been having on the arctic. He went on to explain that over the next years, waterholes like these will become more prevelent in the Arctic.
Lewis Gordon Pugh is best known for having swam on 5 of the seven known continents of the world, as well as being the first person to ever swim the Sognefjord, Norway’s longest fjord.
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