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US man crosses Antarctic unaided, alone

Colin O'Brady on his trek.

Colin O'Brady on his trek. Photo: New York Times/Colin O'Brady

An American has became the first person to traverse Antarctica alone without any assistance, trekking across the polar continent in an epic 54-day journey that was previously deemed impossible.

Colin O’Brady, of Portland, Oregon, finished the bone-chilling, 1500-kilometre journey on Wednesday as friends, family and fans tracked the endurance athlete’s progress in real time online.

“I did it!” a tearful Brady said on a call to his family gathered in Portland for the holidays, according to his wife, Jenna Besaw.

“It was an emotional call,” she said. “He seemed overwhelmed by love and gratitude, and he really wanted to say ‘Thank you’ to all of us.”

Mr O’Brady was sleeping near the finish line in Antarctica late on Wednesday and could not immediately be reached for comment.

The 33-year-old Mr O’Brady documented his nearly entirely uphill journey – which he called The Impossible First – on his Instagram page. He wrote on Wednesday that he covered the last roughly 129 kilometres in one big, impromptu final push to the finish line that took well over an entire day.

“While the last 32 hours were some of the most challenging hours of my life, they have quite honestly been some of the best moments I have ever experienced,” Mr O’Brady posted.

The day before, he posted that he was “in the zone” and thought he could make it to the end in one go.

I’m listening to my body and taking care of the details to keep myself safe. I called home and talked to my mom, sister and wife – I promised them I will stop when I need to.”

Though others have traversed Antarctica, they either had assistance with reinforced supplies or kites that helped propel them forward.

In 2016, British explorer Henry Worsley died attempting an unassisted solo trip across Antarctica, collapsing from exhaustion toward the end of the trek.

Mr Worsley’s friend and fellow English adventurer Louis Rudd is currently making an unaided solo attempt in Mr Worsley’s honour and was competing against Mr O’Brady to be the first to do it.

Ms Besaw said Mr O’Brady plans to stay in Antarctica until Mr Rudd finishes his trek, hopefully in the next few days.

“It’s a small club,” she joked. “His intention is to wait for Louis and have kind of a celebratory moment with the only other person on the planet to have accomplished this same thing.”

Mr O’Brady described in detail the ups and downs along the way since he began the trek on November 3. He had to haul 170 kilograms of gear largely uphill and over sastrugi, wave-like ridges created by wind.

On November 18, he wrote that he awoke to find his sled completely buried from an all-night blasting of wind and snow.

That day he battled a 48kph headwind for eight hours as he trudged along.

“I wanted so badly to quit today as I was feeling exhausted and alone, but remembering all of the positivity that so many people have been sending, I took a deep breath and focused on maintaining forward progress one step at a time and managed to finish a full day.”

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