Commander Malcolm Keith Burley, (1927–2010) MBE was a British Antarctic explorer, mountaineer and Royal Navy officer. He received the Cuthbert Prize from the Royal Geographical Society.

Burley's first visit to the Antarctic was in 1960 as an officer on HMS Protector when he climbed Mt Liotard (2225m), the second-highest peak on the remote Adelaide Island.

In 1964 he led a Combined Services Expedition to South Georgia which crossed the island following Sir Ernest Shackleton's route after his epic journey from Elephant Island to seek rescue for his men of the Imperial Trans-Antarctic Expedition. On the 1964 expedition Burley made the first ascent of Mount Paget, Mount Sugartop and Mount Burley named after him by the UK Antarctic Place-Names Committee.[1]

In 1970/71 Burley led a Joint Services Expedition which was dropped off on Elephant Island by HMS Endurance. The party then spent six months carrying out a survey of the island and other scientific research for the British Antarctic Survey and climbing some of the peaks on the island.[2]

In 1973 Burley retired from the Royal Navy to take up a post as bursar at Stowe School.

References

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  1. ^ "FOLLOWING SHACKLETON'S FOOTPRINTS IN SOUTH GEORGIA. DECEMBER 1964. THE COMBINED SERVICES EXPEDITION OF 1964/1965 IN SOUTH GEORGIA, EMBARKED IN THE ANTARCTIC PATROL SHIP HMS PROTECTOR, AND UNDER THE LEADERSHIP OF LIEUT CDR MALCOLM BURLEY. THE EXPEDITION SPENDS FOUR MONTHS ON THE SUB-ANTARCTIC ISLAND AFTER RETRACING THE ROUTE TAKEN BY SIR ERNEST SHACKLETON 50 YEARS BEFORE. THE EXPEDITION WAS FILMED AND THE RESULTING FILM WAS TITLED "RETURN TO SOUTH GEORGIA"". Imperial War Museums. Retrieved 6 December 2024.
  2. ^ Burley, Malcolm (1972). "Joint Services Expedition to Elephant Island". The Geographical Journal. 138 (3): 298–308. doi:10.2307/1795437. ISSN 0016-7398.
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